I went to London in the '70s and also visited Madame Tussauds there. At that time, the only Indian figure that was exhibited there was of former Prime Minister Indira Gandhi's.
We believe it is important to have an organisational link in London, still the world's premier maritime centre.
London is one of the most exciting cities in the world, with a melting pot of cultures and diversity.
The Metropolis should have been aborted long before it became New York, London or Tokyo.
Most cities have a centre surrounded by suburbs, but London has numerous centres: it's the model of a twenty-first century metropolis.
I do think about moving out of London a lot, whether that's L.A., whether that's Margate with half of the other Hackneyites.
For a kid in London, Hollywood seems like such a mythical place.
I worked in rep for six years, then I came to London and to the National Theatre. What's better than that?
I saw 'Othello' at the National Theatre in London, and it was so stunning. I was so moved. It's beautiful.
There's this idea that it has to be made in London. But we've got everything up here, and if you've got comics who are gifted because of where they're from, you shouldn't drag them away from that natural resource.
When I was studying in London, I worked part-time as a waitress. I was teaching drama to kids. I did a lot of odd jobs to pay for my studies.
London and L.A. are two opposites - I like the difference.
London is a fantastic creator of jobs - but many of these jobs are going to people who don't originate in this country.
I'm originally from Phoenix, Arizona, but I've fallen in love with London.
It's one of my biggest internal struggles - the whole schooling system in London and the fact that my kids are going to a posh school. It freaks me out.
I grew up abroad, and when I first passed through London in the 1970s, it seemed a drab and provincial place.
One of London's massive strengths is its sporting prowess, its great football teams.
In London, it's quite a rarefied activity to be on an analyst's couch.
McDonald's, Barbie - they're all icons, recognizable from London to Timbuktu.
In London, before I set out, I had paid one shilling; another was now demanded, so that upon the whole, from London to Richmond, the passage in the stage costs just two shillings.