Diane Cilento was an Australian theatre and film actress and author... (wikipedia)
You never came home for lunch: you just stayed doing, playing, having fun, surfing, running round.
Very quickly, without really looking back or trying, I was just suddenly lifted into another sphere.
I spoke French a bit, and I could speak a bit of this and that, and when you were taught those things by people who couldn't really do it, you can do some pretty wonderfully, imaginative horrific things to teachers.
I got through my teen years by being a bit of a clown.
I sort of was good at writing essays. I was never very good at mathematics, and I was never very good at algebra. I loved science, but I wasn't sure of it.
I was often very, incredibly naughty, and if I didn't come home at tea time I used to be sent to bed without any dinner. But people used to bring me things: I was better fed in bed.
Blank House was exactly a nice empty sheet where nothing was accountable because you were so naughty that you were in Blank House.
If there was a distraction I'd get up and jump out the window. I was quite out of hand. In schools like that I don't think they expect that girls are going to behave in such an outrageous fashion.
Both my parents were doctors, and my mother had her surgery in the house. There were six children.
I had a place in England and was commuting from England to Australia, which is pretty stupid, but after two years I sort of knew what I wanted to do, more or less.
Once, the parental bed collapsed because all the children sat on it at once.
I never used to sleep much. I think we all go through a bit of a time like that where we rage about. If we don't, I don't think you've ever really lived.
I didn't know what to do with myself. I wasn't excited by the teaching of the school. If they'd been intent on really teaching you things, I would have been a little more attentive.
The best part of learning any profession, when you're really going through those huge stretching escalated times of learning and energy, is when you want to do it so much.
The most surprising thing for my mother and father was when I was actually earning more money than them by the time I was about 18. They thought I was going to be the ne'er do well, who they'd have to keep worrying about.
I don't think in my family anyone looked after anyone. It didn't matter how old they were.
I had a quick ear and could pick up languages.
I learnt the theory of movement, which I still teach sometimes. I was very, very ambitious to learn a skill.
I was a hard worker, and I always knew my lines.
My father said, If you want to do acting, you have to be successful, which is a silly thing to say.
My mother felt it was time that I had some parental control, so I went off to America and went to New York.
Suddenly I had a contract and I was earning lots of money.
When I did Taming of the Shrew, I was very tired, and I decided to have a holiday and make a documentary.
At boarding school you had to wear your name across your chest and your back, and obviously I had a pretty funny name. It wasn't Brown or Smith or Hughes.
If you were in the film industry at that time, you were always picked up by directors who were much older. You were whisked about and shown things. I did work very hard though.
If you've got a lot of children, I think you let the other children bring them up more and you just sort of step in and do stuff like every now and again.
I was always a bit flighty, I suppose.
I did comedy Francaise acting. When I was in a play with Michael Redgrave, I learnt to take the stage and have control of what I was doing.
My mother and father came from that idealistic age, when they were brought up to believe that they should be working for the good of mankind.
It was a very odd household, because the grandmothers were so different. Both of them had their own pianos. So it would be duelling pianos by grandmothers.
Any woman who marries an Italian must accept the undeniable fact that she has also married his mother.
Wherever the wings of love take me, that is my flare path and my way.
When I was in New York I fell madly in love with an Italian and got married. I couldn't get out of it, and that's when I got a bit ill.
Everybody keeps talking about whether they had a happy childhood or not. I can't remember being unhappy. I think I probably was.
You had to to sort of work your way into some sort of clique, and I had no intention of doing that. So I just sort of was funny.
I've always had a lot of energy. I was up and about and raging around all the time. And I did get tuberculosis out of it, finally.
There was that thing of girls. Girls don't have to do anything. Little blondie pretty girls don't really have to know anything much.
There were huge big bands like Count Basie, and I used to go from the theatre to Birdland, and they all knew me. I loved the big band sound.
I believe academics think that if the child doesn't go to university, they aren't really a serious person and not worth paying the money for.