I wish I'd known that one day the geek would inherit the Earth.
Keep going and don't give up. You're doing wonderfully. You'll know how to fly this thing eventually.
There is no such thing as too much swearing. Swearing is just a piece of linguistic mechanics. The words in-between are the clever ones.
I'd say, don't listen to what anyone says: you're good. Go put your anorak on. Get your thick bottle-top specs. Draw your little cartoons and your comics and keep writing to the BBC.
Real heroes are all around us and uncelebrated.
I suppose I just like being arty. That's all. Arty.
I think acting, oftentimes it's not about lines, it's about spaces in between lines and expressions on people's faces and their relationships. You can tell your own story, or a story that you're interested in, even if the lines don't necessarily point you in that direction.
Every viewer who ever turned on Doctor Who has taken him into his heart. He belongs to all of us.
I think the most extraordinary thing about fans is the level of excellence that they show in the work that they do. I mean, if you go onto the internet and see some of the fan videos that have been put together, they're just extraordinary; they could be programmes in their own right.
A girl once came to my beery flat in Kensal Green, opened the blinds and cooked me breakfast. I married her.
The older I get, the more I think lightness of touch is an incredibly difficult thing to do.
I love people where, at the end of the day, they'll pick up a paintbrush and paint clouds. They can physically make things.
I found American actors quite scary because they're brilliant actors and brilliantly funny, and they never stopped once you wound them up... off they went and they just deliver fantastic stuff.
I'm not an extravagant man. The fact that I can have a coffee out whenever I want still makes me feel grateful.
It'll be sad not to be Doctor Who anymore because that's an incredible thing to wake up in the morning and go, 'Oh, I'm still Doctor Who!' And you can go and blow up some monsters, and that's how you spend your day. And also when you walk around people don't see Peter anymore, he's not here, it's Doctor Who they see and he gets many more smiles than I do. It'll be sad to say goodbye.
My family has to be very patient living with me, if you're playing a part that's not you. You have to get it right.
I'm sure if Shakespeare were alive today, he'd be doing classic guitar solos on YouTube.
'Doctor Who' belongs to all of us. Everybody makes 'Doctor Who.'
I think that people like the idea that fans are sort of slightly eccentric and strange, but generally I've just found them very creative and warm and cheerful.
I haven't played Doctor Who since I was 9 on the playground.
One of the problems with episodic television of any color is that everything has got to be okay at the end of the episode so it can start again next week. So the events that occur are rarely life-changing. But with film, you can say that this thing only happened once; this is a major thing that happened to these people.
It's weathered many a storm, but the British film industry is, thankfully, still afloat.
I'm pretty good for an old geek.
If you actually have to engage with somebody who's superior to you and actually battle with them, struggle with them, I think it's more interesting, and funnier for the audience.
I was just interested in directing. So I just kept having a go at trying to write little scripts and get things together, and my wife just had a slip of the tongue and said, "Franz Kafka's It's A Wonderful Life" when she meant to say "Frank Capra's." There it is right there. That's a gag that we could make into something.