Dame Joanna Lumley has revealed why she wonât be planning her own funeral as she opened up about turning 80 next year.
The British actress admitted she is âconscious of growing olderâ and doesnât like to shy away from the difficult subjects including death.
Joanna insisted she âdoesnât want a memorial serviceâ however, her conductor husband Stephen Barlow, 71, who she married in 1986, has told her it will be his and her son Jamieâs decision, as she will be gone.
Speaking to Hello! the Wednesday actress said: âIâve spoken to my husband and he said, âLook, your own funeral has nothing to do with you. Youâre not even going to be at the funeral, youâll be gone, so you can say what you like about whateverâ.
âSo I said, âBut I donât want a memorial serviceâ.
âAnd he said, âThatâs going to be up to me and Jamie if weâre around. Thereâs no point in saying, I donât want one, because youâd have gone, darling, youâd have goneâ.â

Dame Joanna Lumley has revealed why she wonât be planning her own funeral as she opened up about turning 80 next year

The British actress insisted she âdoesnât want a memorial serviceâ however, her conductor husband Stephen Barlow, 71, (pictured) has told her it will be his and her son Jamieâs decision
Joanna shares her only child, son Jamie Lumley, 57, with photographer Michael Claydon, who she remains friends with.
She married her first husband, scriptwriter Jeremy Lloyd, in 1970, but the pair divorced after a year.
The much-loved actress married her second â and current â husband Stephen in 1986, and they remain as happy as ever.
Joannaâs son Jamie is living in Scotland with his writer wife and their two daughters.
It comes after Joanna announced the return of the beloved BBC comedy Amandaland â and filming kicked off last month.
The actress, who plays protagonist Amanda Hughesâ (Lucy Punch) mum Felicity in the hit show, has confirmed that the beloved programme will be back for a Christmas special this year.
Amandaland hit screens on BBC One in February this year and it was confirmed the following month that it would be back for a second.
It follows the life of a recently divorced mum called Amanda who is trying to juggle looking after her children, a new relationship and friendships with the parents at her kidâs school.

She said: âIâve spoken to my husband and he said, âLook, your own funeral has nothing to do with you. Youâre not even going to be at the funeral, youâll be goneââ; pictured 2015

She added: âSo I said, âBut I donât want a memorial serviceâ, and he said, âThatâs going to be up to me and Jamie if weâre around. Thereâs no point in saying, I donât want one, because youâd have gone, darling, youâd have goneââ; pictured with son Jamie
Speaking on the Chris Evans breakfast show, Joanna said: âIâm just about to start another series of Amandaland which was the spin-off from Motherland, which was a gorgeous, wild success.
âClever, clever Lucy Punch. Weâre just about to start seven more episodes and one is a Christmas special for this year.â
Amandaland is written by Holly Walsh, Helen Serafinowicz, Barunka OâShaughnessy and Laurence Rickard.
The show is directed by Simon Bird and Alyssa McClelland.
It stars Lucy Punch as Amanda Hughes, Joanna Lumley as Felicity Sanderson, Phillippa Dunne as Anne Flynn, Samuel Anderson as Mal, SiobhĂĄn McSweeney as Della Fry, Rochenda Sandall as Fi and Ekow Quartey as JJ.
The comedy is a spin-off of popular sitcom Motherland, which ran 19 episodes across three seasons between 2016 and 2022.
Motherland was created and written by Sharon Horgan, Graham Linehan, Helen Serafinowicz and Holly Walsh.
It followed the lives of a group of parents whose children all attended the same school.

Joanna shares her only child, son Jamie Lumley, 57, with photographer Michael Claydon, who she remains friends with and married current husband Stephen in 1986
Anna Maxwell Martin played protagonist Julia Johnstone, Diane Morgan played Liz, Paul Ready played Kevin Brady and Tanya Moodie played Meg.
Lucy and Philippaâs alter-egos also starred in Motherland.
Since the first series aired back in January, Amandaland has averaged 6.4million views and has become the BBCâs second biggest comedy launch.
Despite being a success, it has faced mixed reviews from fans with some feeling it lacked the same charm as the original and questioned why the BBC didnât just continue the beloved series instead.
However Daily Mailâs Christopher Stevens rated it five stars and praised the show for its compelling acting and quirky storylines.
The BBC has now confirmed that Amandaland will run for a second series after being overwhelmed by the response from fans.


