Maggie Smith: 'If there’s an old bat to play, it’ll be me'

MAGGIE SMITH: 'IF THERE'S AN OLD BAT TO PLAY, IT'LL BE ME' A rare interview with the star of 'Downton' and 'The Lady in the Van'

As 'Downton Abbey' draws to a close, revisit a rare interview its biggest star gave on set

Maggie Smith rarely gives interviews. In the week that Downton Abbey's last-ever series episode is broadcast, and she reprises on screen her role in Alan Bennett's The Lady in the Van (pictured below with Alex Jennings), theartsdesk revisits an encounter that took place in Highclere Castle in 2010. It was the only interview Dame Maggie gave that summer apart from one – which took place just before – to Julian Fellowes.

The Dresser, BBC Two

Ian McKellen is a stormin' Norman in starry yet patchy adaptation from the stage

The prospect of Ian McKellen and Anthony Hopkins acting together for the first time in their storied careers in Richard Eyre's BBC adaptation of The Dresser was one of those mouth-watering propositions to sit alongside DeNiro and Pacino on screen in Heat and the stage reunion of Dames Maggie Smith and Judi Dench in The Breath of Life.

10 Questions for Actress Jane Lapotaire

10 QUESTIONS FOR ACTRESS JANE LAPOTAIRE Veteran actress on returning to the stage

Veteran actress on returning to the stage in the RSC Histories

Jane Lapotaire's distinguished career on stage and screen was cut short in 2000 when she collapsed in Paris with a massive brain haemorrhage. She was giving a Shakespeare masterclass at the time and now, 15 years later, at the age of 70, she is once again acting on stage in Shakespeare.

Perspectives: War Art with Eddie Redmayne, ITV

PERSPECTIVES: WAR ART WITH EDDIE REDMAYNE, ITV Oscar-winning actor proves that he did learn something as a Cambridge art history student

Oscar-winning actor proves that he did learn something as a Cambridge art history student

The country is groaning under the weight of commemorations, exhibitions, publications and programmes all marking significant anniversaries of World War One, but the underlying message – lest we forget – remains as potent as ever, perhaps even more so in these tumultuous times.

'Most of the time I play complete losers'

'MOST OF THE TIME I PLAY COMPLETE LOSERS' From the archive, an encounter with Hugh Bonneville as one of his finest roles at last appears on DVD

From the archive, an encounter with Hugh Bonneville as one of his finest roles at last appears on DVD

The world now knows him as Lord Crawley, stiff-backed in white tie and tails, regimental garb or, for relaxation, tweed. But before he became the face of Downton Abbey – and of bumbling institutional incompetence in Twenty Twelve and W1A – Hugh Bonneville could be seen in roles of considerable depth and range, including a moving Philip Larkin and a brutish husband in the BBC's Daniel Deronda.

theartsdesk Q&A: Actress MyAnna Buring

THE ARTS DESK Q&A: ACTRESS MYANNA BURING The Swedish-born doctor's daughter on her rapid rise

The Swedish-born doctor's daughter on her rapid rise from 'Kill List' and 'Twilight' to 'Downton', 'Ripper Street' and Jimmy McGovern's 'Banished'

There came a moment, around three years ago, when MyAnna Buring suddenly seemed to be in everything. "I'm so sorry!" she shrieks (ironically) when I point this out to her. She had given warning of her arrival by appearing in Ben Wheatley's Kill List and, rather more prominently, as Tanya (who as you'll know was a vegetarian vampire from the Denali coven) in the concluding pair of Twilight films.

The South Bank Show: Mark Rylance, Sky Arts 1

THE SOUTH BANK SHOW: MARK RYLANCE, SKY ARTS 1 Lord Bragg explores an actor's life

Lord Bragg explores an actor's life

Going into this programme, it dawned on me that I knew next to nothing about Mark Rylance's background – where he came from, who his parents were, what he does in his personal life. Having reached the end credits I was little the wiser, other than having learned that he has a wife called Claire, since none of it fell within the purview of Melvyn Bragg's interviewing.

Oscars 2015: Birdman soars, Boyhood plummets

OSCARS 2015: BIRDMAN SOARS, BOYHOOD PLUMMETS Flattest ceremony in years honours 'Birdman', Eddie Redmayne and Julianne Moore

Flattest ceremony in years honours 'Birdman', Eddie Redmayne and Julianne Moore

I hope someone by now has told Neil Patrick Harris how to pronounce David Oyelowo’s surname, but if anyone wants to see how not to host an Oscars, Harris’s stewardship of the 87th annual Academy Awards can provide that service in spades.

Expendables III

EXPENDABLES III Stallone's gang of geriatric mercenaries still haven't lost their stomach for the fight

Stallone's gang of geriatric mercenaries still haven't lost their stomach for the fight

There was a brief moment back in the day when Sylvester Stallone thought he ought to be a serious actor (remember Cop Land?), but posterity will surely recall him as the King of the Franchise. As if Rocky and Rambo weren't enough, the 68-year-old Stallone is now enjoying a major string of paydays with The Expendables, and this third instalment will merely whet the global appetite for more.

10 Questions for Actress Celia Imrie

CELIA IMRIE 10 questions for the versatile actress and author

The versatile actress and author celebrates the act of stepping into the unknown

Celia Imrie is admired and loved as a comic actress. Her conversation, just as much as her performances, is full of her trademarks: sudden darting looks, alertness, natural timing, changes of register. They will all be in display in her cabaret show Laughing Matters.