Quotes from Alan Bennett


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We started off trying to set up a small anarchist community, but people wouldn't obey the rules.


All knowledge is precious whether or not it serves the slightest human use.


I'm all in favour of free expression provided it's kept rigidly under control.


Life is generally something that happens elsewhere.


Your whole life is on the other side of the glass. And there is nobody watching.


Feeling I'd scarcely arrived at a style, I now find I'm near the end of it. I'm not quite sure what Late Style means except that it's some sort of licence, a permit for ageing practitioners to kick their heels up.


Full-blooded romantic love I wouldn't be able to write about.


I have no nickname, as there has never been any need for one.


I've been very lucky in everything, really - in my career and in finding someone to share my life with, and in not dying.


Closing a public library is child abuse, really, because it hinders child development.


I always like to break out and address the audience. In 'The History Boys', for instance, without any ado, the boys will suddenly turn and talk to the audience and then go back into the action. I find it more adventurous doing it in prose than on the stage, but I like being able to make the reader suddenly sit up.


I'd somehow always thought of the classics of literature as something apart from me, something to do with academic life and not something you enjoyed.


Cancer, like any other illness, is a bore.


I don't want to see libraries close; I want to find local solutions that will make them sustainable.


I'm more socialist certainly than New Labour - I'm very old Labour, really.


My films are about embarrassment.


I can't complain that I've had a public all through my writing life, but people don't quite know what I've written. People don't read you too closely. Perhaps, after I've died, they'll look at my stuff, and read it through, and find there's more in it. That may be wrong, but that's what I comfort myself with.


Sometimes, particularly in summers in New York, I have tried to write in shorts or with no shirt on and found myself unable to do so, the reason being, I take it, that writing, even of the most impersonal sort, is for me a divestment, a striptease, even, so that if I start off undressed, I have nowhere to go.


Those who have known the famous are publicly debriefed of their memories, knowing as their own dusk falls that they will only be remembered for remembering someone else.


If you think squash is a competitive activity, try flower arranging.