I had prostate cancer. It was rather painful and, in many ways, life-changing.
'Skyfall' was marvellous, the best Bond film ever made.
Everybody seems to live rather well down here in Monaco!
I enjoy being a highly overpaid actor.
Peter Sellers was a solitary character, always preferring to hide behind a mask, and consequently, you never really got to know the real Sellers.
I've learnt that through life you just get on with it. You're going to meet a lot of dishonest people along the line and you say good luck to them. I hope they live in comfort. Then I start sticking more pins in their effigies.
It's easy to sit in relative luxury and peace and pontificate on the subject of the Third World debts.
I said I did not know enough about UNICEF to handle a press conference and she said they would not want to talk about it they would only want to talk about films.
I've not done badly for a boy from Stockwell, where I used to gaze at the silver screen in wonderment, little realising I'd be a part of this magical world.
Many take the roles home with them and live the part. I'm quite happy to leave mine at the studio and return home as I left: simple old Roger Moore.
When I was playing James Bond, it was the best job in the world. I mean, it was hard work, all that filming and travelling and tedium on set, but I earned a lot of money, and it was not a taxing job. I just had to say, 'Shaken, not stirred.'
The fact of the matter is that most actors are shy people.
Working with UNICEF made me grow up and recognize how fortunate I am.
I'm often asked, 'Who has you worked with who you really thought was great?' and I think Eleanor Parker was the first and one of the only who was a really accomplished actress, a really caring actress, who was most unselfish, and I was secretly in love with her.
Kristina has been to the Maldives but never to Venice, and I have been to Venice but never to the Maldives.