Thursday, September 29, 2022

EVENT UPDATE : BFI LUMINOUS GALA .. THE LONDONER HOTEL LONDON .. SEPTEMBER 29TH 2022 ..

Photo .. David Benett / Getty / BFI

 

One of Joan favourite events to attend is the BFI'S Annual Luminous Gala which this year was held at The Londoner Hotel in Leicester Square... Joan & Percy were joined at the event by her brother Bill and his always glamorous wife Hazel..

LUMINOUS is the BFI’s biennial fundraising gala, an unforgettable evening of film-inspired celebration to raise essential funds to support the next generation of UK filmmakers.

The proceeds from this auction will support the BFI’s specialist courses, workshops, masterclasses, nationwide festivals, and mentoring for young people who want to build a career in film. 

What you see on your screen today will shape what you see on the big screen tomorrow.

Photeo David Benett / BFI  Bill & Hazel Collins


Monday, September 26, 2022

PHOTO FLASHBACK : FOR JOAN.. BEAUTY IS ONLY SIN DEEP!


 Always a popular choice for a post is Joan's glamorous and dramatic mini series 'Sins' from 1985 and this rare photo features Joan checking her makeup before shooting a scene set at the Venice carnival ball.. The fabulous image included is one of the main photographs used in promotion for the series..

Monday, September 19, 2022

PRESS UPDATE : VOGUE USA .. SEPTEMBER 19TH 2022 ..


'Dame Joan Collins Has Seen It All'
By Keaton Bell
September 19th 2022 ...

For someone who has every press clipping, talk show appearance, and magazine cover with her visage neatly archived in the basement of her London estate, Dame Joan Collins doesn’t consider herself a particularly nostalgic person.


“I don’t think I live in the past,” she recently told Vogue. “Although I do have a lot of fun anecdotes about it.”

In This Is Joan Collins, premiering this week on Turner Classic Movies, the British icon opens up like never before. Having already published six memoirs (with a seventh in the works), Collins is hardly a stranger to sharing the dishier details of her life. But while a number of production companies had approached her over the years about making a documentary, she had little interest in watching old costars sing her praises.

“I didn’t just want a bunch of talking heads saying, ‘I sure loved making that picture with Joanie in nineteen so-and-so,’” Collins says. “How dull would that be?”

     Collins with employees at Idlewild International Airport in 1956.  Photo: Getty Images

The only star in This Is Joan Collins is—appropriately—Collins herself. Making extensive use of her aforementioned archive, the documentary follows her one-of-a-kind journey from working with Bette Davis and Gregory Peck as a rising Hollywood starlet, to acting opposite killer ants as a washed-up B-movie queen, to becoming an even bigger star than before as Alexis Carrington on the ’80s megahit Dynasty. Narrated by Collins in peak, bitingly funny form, it’s one of the most purely entertaining celebrity documentaries in recent memory.

For audiences less familiar with Collins’s biography, This Is Joan Collins also shows just how intertwined she is with Hollywood history. Touted as everything from “Britain’s bad girl” to “England’s answer to Ava Gardner” upon her arrival in America in the 1950s, Collins was quickly signed under contract by 20th Century Fox and, at the peak of her film career, fronted big-budget titles like The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing and The Opposite Sex. Both in the documentary and in casual conversation, Collins has a way of tossing off asides that make you sit up a little straighter: “I met Joan Crawford once and she was terrifying—and not beautiful at all,” for instance, or, “When I got engaged to Warren…” as in Beatty.

A publicity photograph of Collins from the early ’50s.  Photo: Getty Images

Collins has long understood that subtlety is a waste of time and flavor. Ahead of the U.S. premiere of This Is Joan Collins (which will be available to stream on Watch TCM through October 20), the grande dame caught up with Vogue to chat about how the documentary came together and share stories from seven decades in show business.

Vogue: You’ve told your life story from various angles in your memoirs, so why make a documentary?

Dame Joan Collins: Well, I thought somebody was gonna do it eventually, so it might as well be me. Several people have already made documentaries about me who just went to the filing cabinets of tabloid papers and pulled out the most tawdry clippings. But these two wonderful women, the producer [Karen Steyn] and the director [Clare Beavan], came to me with their offer, and I thought their ideas sounded original. They said, “We want you to be the one to sit and watch the film once we’ve done the final cut,” so that I could make any comments I like about the documentary or my life. We spent about six months talking through the ins and outs of my life. I gave them total access to my archives, filled with thousands of photographs and hundreds of hours of footage of my films and things like my Johnny Carson appearances.


Collins gracing the cover of Picture Post magazine in 1954. Photo: Getty Images


How was the experience of going through your archives and reliving so many of your memories and experiences?

I still feel like that 20-year old girl leaving her family and friends 7,000 miles away to go chase her dreams in Hollywood. I’d never been before, and didn’t know a single soul except for a makeup artist on one of my first films, Land of the Pharaohs. I was not aware at that time of how brave that really was. When I look back at all those parties and premieres I went to, I think about how I wasn’t quite aware of how extraordinary it was that I got to work with Bette Davis or be the lead in a Fox picture. I just sorta got on with it—that’s always been the way I live. I just get on with it.

At one point in the documentary you say, “If Fox couldn’t get Susan Hayward or Gene Tierney, they got me.” How would you characterize your position in Hollywood then?

I never really analyzed it, to be quite honest. But if you had a good figure and a certain look in your eyes, you were immediately characterized as a vamp or a glamour girl. None of that ever really bothered me because I always knew who I was.


Collins at a party in Los Angeles in 1956.  Photo: Getty Images

You also discuss your experiences navigating predatory men within the industry. The “golden age of Hollywood” still has this false sense of purity around it, but how commonplace was sexual harassment in that era?

It was endemic. Any young woman coming to Hollywood at that time probably expected to experience some kind of sexual harassment. I had a very smart theatrical agent for a father who warned me about men in show business. I think I was able to cope quite well, but I had a couple of close calls with producers who were notoriously dreadful toward young girls. I met Marilyn Monroe when I first went to Gene Kelly’s house, and she warned me to be careful of the “wolves at the studios.” I told her, “Oh, I think I can cope with wolves; I’ve been in the English film business since I was 17!” She just looked at me and said, “Well, these studio bosses are different, honey. If they don’t get what they want, they’ll drop your contract without a second thought.” It was unavoidable.

Did you ever feel like your career was tampered with because you refused these producers’ advances?

Oh, I know perfectly well that it was. One of my big bosses at the studio was very cunning. He cornered me at a party once and said, “If you’re nice to me, you can have your pick of the litter at Fox.” I just laughed and said, “That’s a very nice offer, but I’m here with my agent, so I’ll just go talk to him about it.” He was shocked. What young women had to put up with in show business was absolutely repulsive, so I’m so glad that #MeToo has come along and tamped it down at least a bit.

The documentary mentions a lot of the A-list names you’ve encountered throughout your career. Was there one in particular that lived up to every glamorous expectation you had of them? 

Elizabeth Taylor. I met her very shortly after I came to America, when she was going out with Mike Todd. I had dinner with her and my boyfriend at the time, who was a friend of hers, and I just thought she was fantastic. Not only stunningly beautiful but also so funny and down-to-earth. She was one of the greats. I’ve always admired her, and I was honored to have done her last movie with her.


Collins, Elizabeth Taylor, Shirley MacLaine, and Debbie Reynolds in These Old Broads, a made-for-TV movie (penned by Carrie Fisher) that aired on ABC in 2001. Photo: Getty Images


I was going to ask about These Old Broads in a bit—it’s probably my favorite film of yours.

It’s cute, isn’t it? But I kept telling Shirley MacLaine, who was more involved with the production, “Why are you calling it These Old Broads? Why not These Fabulous Broads?!” I’ve always been told that the word old is a big no-no for cinemagoers and TV viewers. Plus I think we all look pretty good in that film. And it was so much fun to make.

There was so much shared Hollywood history on that set between you, MacLaine, Taylor, and Debbie Reynolds. Do any particularly fond memories come to mind?

Well, I’d known Debbie for a long time, and of course I met Elizabeth during those first couple years in Hollywood. And Shirley was almost my sister-in-law because I was engaged to her brother, Warren Beatty [in 1960]. At one point during filming, when I was sitting in the car with her, getting ready to film, she said, “So Joan, tell me—how was my brother?” I just looked at her and said, “Overrated.” It was only a joke, but we had a good laugh about it.


MacLaine and Collins in 1958. Photo: Getty Images


Back to my original question: If Elizabeth Taylor lived up to every expectation, was there anyone who disappointed you?

Yes, there were quite a few, I have to say. I don’t think I’ll go into the specifics because I don’t like to dabble in negativity. But some of the male actors I worked with in my earlier films were very cold. I was 20 and they were usually 45, so there was just no connection. I adored Farley Granger in The Girl in the Red Velvet Swing, but unfortunately there were problems with some other actors.

I recently watched the HBO docuseries about Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward and learned that you made a film with them. How was that experience?

They were great friends of mine and really fought for me to be in Rally ’Round the Flag, Boys! Paul wanted me, but the studio wanted Jayne Mansfield because they said, “Brunettes aren’t funny.” Paul insisted and said, “Actually she’s very funny, and you have to cast her.”


Collins with Paul Newman in the 1958 film Rally ’Round the Flag, Boys! Photo: Getty Images

I’m a Gregory Peck fan, so I’m curious what it was like working with him in The Bravados.

Well, I got to know Gregory and his wife [Veronique Peck] better much later, about 20 years after we made The Bravados. But at that particular time he was much older than me and there was no chemistry between us. I know his character is supposed to be upset because his wife had been raped and murdered, but I played a woman he had a relationship with, and that didn’t really come across onscreen. It felt stale.


Gregory Peck with Collins in a scene from the 1958 film The Bravados.  Photo: Getty Images


You briefly mention in This Is Joan Collins that you were an early investor in the L.A. disco scene. I’m dying to hear more about that.

I knew a lot about discos because I started going to them in London when I was 16, although back then they were called jazz clubs. I used to go to the Daisy in L.A. and the Tramp in London, which my sister owned with her husband. [In 1968] my then husband, Anthony [Newley], and I helped open this fantastic discotheque called the Factory. It was the most fabulous building in West Hollywood and operated as a private club, so members had to join, and the wait list was massive. Every single night you’d see somebody eye-popping—Barbra Streisand, Marlon Brando, Sammy Davis Jr.; Bobby Kennedy was there all the time. But like most discos, it became overpopulated and lost its charisma very quickly. It closed in about six months.

Did you ever make it to Studio 54?

I went once and didn’t really like it. There was a lot of marijuana going around, and I’ve never been interested in drugs. Back then I preferred whiskey, and now I’m more of a wine or martini person.


Collins was briefly engaged to Warren Beatty in 1960, before his breakout performance in Splendor in the Grass. Photo: Getty Images

Did working on this documentary make you reconsider any past choices? Personal or professional?

Quite a few things. Mostly turning down movies because the men in my life didn’t think they were good enough. Warren convinced me to turn down Sons and Lovers. The producer at Fox kept begging me to do it and he said, “This is a great role! You’ll get nominated for an Oscar!” I didn’t do it because I was in the thrall of a new love with Warren. Eventually Mary Ure took the part, and guess what? She did get nominated for an Oscar. So that was a very stupid thing for me to do.

I also thought I could’ve fought more to make residuals from Dynasty. Aaron Spelling’s lawyers came to me at one point and said, “Sign this document saying you’ll get so-and-so amount a week in salary and give up all of your rights to residuals.” When I asked why, they told me that serials like Dynasty don’t typically produce much residual income. I said I didn’t believe them, but they kept saying, “Well, John [Forsythe], Linda [Evans], and the rest of the cast have all agreed.” So there was really nothing I could do and I had to just go along.


 Linda Evans, John Forsythe, and Collins in a promotional image for Dyansty’s fourth season in 1983. Photo: Getty Images


I read that you also fought for a raise once your character was shown to boost the show’s popularity. How did it feel to go up against the network at a time when there wasn’t as much transparency around issues like pay equity in Hollywood?

Dynasty became one of the most popular series of all time and made the network billions—and I mean billions. You have no idea. And when I asked the network to put me closer in salary to John, they simply refused. When I kept asking why, they said, “Because he’s an actor, and you’re an actress. End of story.” You really had to fight to be heard in those days.

What do you hope viewers take away from This Is Joan Collins, be they longtime fans or people new to your story?

Well, I’m very, very pleased with the film and think it’s extremely entertaining, so I can only hope that others feel the same. It shows a side of me that I think much of the public could never visualize. I don’t think many people can picture me as a young pregnant woman dancing with my then-husband Anthony Newley or strolling with my children through Central Park. It’s not that I wanted to prove anything, but this felt like a chance to show people who the real Joan Collins is.

This Is Joan Collins premieres on TCM September 20th.




Sunday, September 18, 2022

TV ALERT : AN EVENING STARRING JOAN COLLINS .. TUESDAY SEPTEMBER 20TH 2022 .. TCM USA .. 8PM ET ...


 


For those who have TCM in the USA can enjoy an evening with Joan on Tuesday September 20th to celebrate the screening of her unmissable new documentary film 'This Is Joan Collins'.. As well as a screening of the new film, you can also watch two of Joan's memorable Hollywood films.. The 1955 Fox release 'The Girl In The Red Velvet Swing' which also stars Farley Granger & Ray Milland and is based on the life of Evelyn Nesbitt, the infamous Gibson girl. Also screening is the glamorous MGM release 'The Opposite Sex' a remake of the classic 1939 film 'The Women' starring Joan Crawford & Norma Shearer.. Joan plays the role of Crystal Allen, played by Joan Crawford in the original.. There is also a new interview with Joan, exclusive to TCM..

 You can join in all the fun at 8pm ET!



PHOTO FLASHBACK : FROM THE STUD... BY INVITE ONLY ...


 This rare shot features Joan on set of the 1978 smash hit film 'The Stud' with co-star Oliver Tobias.. Also featured is a rare invitation to the London premiere.. 

Saturday, September 17, 2022

PHOTO FLASHBACK : JOAN'S AN ONSET BROAD! ..


 A film very popular with Joan's multitude of fans is the wonderful 2001 tv movie 'These Old Broads' in which Joan starred with Debbie Reynolds, Shirley MacLaine and Elizabeth Taylor. This rare photo features Joan shooting a scene with co-star Peter Graves.. 

Thursday, September 15, 2022

PRESS UPDATE : THE SPECTATOR .. SEPTEMBER 16TH 2022 ..


 

  Memories of PRINCESS ELIZABETH        By JOAN COLLINS...

I am completely and utterly devastated by the passing of our wonderful, inspirational Queen, as I’m sure are so many in our fair isles. It is the end of the brilliant Elizabethan era. I was so proud to have been part of her last Jubilee. After being driven along the circuitous pageant route around London, I finished up seated in the Royal Box, waving at Her Majesty in what would prove to be her last appearance on the balcony of Buckingham Palace, where she sparkled in emerald green.

This brought back memories of May 1945, when we were all celebrating the end of the second world war. My father drove his Riley Saloon as close to the gates of Buckingham Palace as was allowed, so that my mother, my sister Jackie and I could wave to the royal family while surrounded by cheering crowds. Princess Elizabeth was in her ATS uniform and seemed to be just as excited as everyone else.

The first time I became aware of the two young princesses was when my mother found an old book about King George VI’s accession, which featured cardboard cut-out figures of the entire royal family. They were impressive in their crowns and ermine robes. Studying and playing with these books was once an extremely popular pastime for British children. There were pages and pages of cut-out outfits to put on the little princesses, so you could change their costumes at will. Every manner of outfit, from dressing gown to riding habit to evening dress, was there and I diligently cut out and kept, in a cigar box, a wardrobe fit for a princess. It provided hours of fun in those pre-TV, pre-smartphone and pre-gaming days.

Then the most glamorous event in postwar austerity-riddled Britain was announced – the engagement of Princess Elizabeth to the dashing blond god Prince Philip. I went into overdrive with the scissors, cutting and pasting every photograph, postcard, picture and press clipping of the young couple and pasting them into a scrapbook. Excitement was at fever pitch, especially in the fourth form at Francis Holland, where we would swap scrapbook items with each other. We all cherished these scrapbooks and kept on filling them with more and more memorabilia until the magical wedding day in Westminster. Princess Elizabeth was movie-star glamorous in her exquisite Norman Hartnell gown, and everyone at school had a crush on Philip.

I followed the Queen’s life with great interest and was simply struck dumb with admiration when I met her for the first time at the London premiere of Dr Dolittle. She seemed quite interested in how the filmmakers had constructed the iconic ‘pushmi-pullyu’. ‘It looked so real, almost as real as the other animals,’ she quipped.

With Tommy Steele & Richard Chamberlain Romeo & Juliet Premiere 1968 London


Since then, I have been fortunate enough to meet and be presented to her about a dozen times. Each time, she appeared genuinely glad to see me, flashing that brilliant smile. I was always struck by her sense of style and colour coordination in her outfits. From the girlish, wasp-waisted twentysomething to an elegant older lady, she always looked perfect for the occasion.

What I always admired was the depth and breadth of her knowledge, and her ability to spend time conversing sincerely with each guest. At a reading of Pygmalion during a Bafta evening at Buckingham Palace, we reminisced about the various iterations of this play and who had played the roles over the decades. Her Majesty was completely in control of her facts, and thankfully my knowledge of my profession did not let me down. The evening was quite casual, and it was the first time I met her with a glass in her hand (which I noted was just plain water).

When the Queen granted me my OBE, she was congratulatory (and perhaps slightly complicit?) when she remarked that I deserved the accolade, having been an actress ‘for many decades’. I smiled, remembering her mother saying to me at a premiere that they watched Dynasty every week. ‘And do you hate me, ma’am?’ I enquired. ‘Oh no, we all LOVE you,’ she replied. I do hope that her daughter did too.

What other leader would get tributes on a such a global scale upon their death, with the Eiffel Tower, Washington Monument and even the Vegas strip paying homage? She was an absolute star, a ‘one of a kind’ and, in the true meaning of the word, unforgettable.


Sunday, September 11, 2022

PHOTO FLASHBACK : SHOOTINGS A SIN FOR JOAN AND JAMES IN VENICE! ..


 One of most glamorous mini series of the 1980's is Joan's epic Sin's in which she starred as the business woman Helene Junot.. The 1985 production also starred Gene Kelly, Marisa Berensen, Lauren Hutton, Steven Berkoff, Capucine, Timothy Dalton and in these rare shots James Farentino.. The photos feature Joan and James shooting the closing scenes of the show in Venice..

Saturday, September 10, 2022

PRESS FLASHBACK : OPTOMETRY TODAY .. NOVEMBER 2018 ..

 


As I featured some shots of Joan promoting her range of eyewear earlier, here is an interview from 2018 regarding the range...

Me and my glasses

Comfort, colour and detail

The actress Joan Collins on loving bling, wearing frames in Dynasty and designing her own eyewear collection with Atlantic Optical..

By Andrew McNeil..     


How many pairs of spectacles and sunglasses do you own?

Too many to count. I have glasses for all occasions from social events, casual weekends and fun. I love sunglasses and it’s wonderful that people are becoming more and more aware of damaging UV rays. Sunglasses should not just be seen as a fashion accessory; they are there to protect your eyes from harmful sunshine. I always advise family and friends to invest in good sunglasses too.

Can you describe your favourite pair?

I love some bling, who doesn’t? My own Joan Collins Collection has some beautiful crystals and colours, and my favourites are definitely my own.

What frame shapes, colours or styles do you usually go for?

I love to mix shapes and colours to the outfit I’m wearing. I know I have a unique situation in that I have so many of my own styles to choose from. My advice for ladies is to always remember to go for a style that compliments your own face shape and remember skin tone, choose warm colours, never cold or draining – go for colour girls.

How long have you worn spectacles for, and what prompted you to go for your first eye test?

I have worn glasses for many years. I was an avid reader as a child, which has continued all through my life. I love the written word either through reading or writing books myself. I think glasses came into my life in my 30s when I started getting tired eyes – little wonder though with the amount of scripts I was reading.


How many pairs of spectacles and sunglasses do you own?

Too many to count. I have glasses for all occasions from social events, casual weekends and fun. I love sunglasses and it’s wonderful that people are becoming more and more aware of damaging UV rays. Sunglasses should not just be seen as a fashion accessory; they are there to protect your eyes from harmful sunshine. I always advise family and friends to invest in good sunglasses too.

Can you describe your favourite pair?

I love some bling, who doesn’t? My own Joan Collins Collection has some beautiful crystals and colours, and my favourites are definitely my own.

What frame shapes, colours or styles do you usually go for?

I love to mix shapes and colours to the outfit I’m wearing. I know I have a unique situation in that I have so many of my own styles to choose from. My advice for ladies is to always remember to go for a style that compliments your own face shape and remember skin tone, choose warm colours, never cold or draining – go for colour girls.

How long have you worn spectacles for, and what prompted you to go for your first eye test?

I have worn glasses for many years. I was an avid reader as a child, which has continued all through my life. I love the written word either through reading or writing books myself. I think glasses came into my life in my 30s when I started getting tired eyes – little wonder though with the amount of scripts I was reading.

Do you wear contact lenses?

Yes, sometimes I do, especially when I’m working and the character doesn’t wear glasses.

Who is your eyewear collection designed for?

My eyewear collection is designed for the stylish, elegant and mature ladies market. We have always focused on comfort, colour and detail. The beautiful Swarovski crystals really lift the gorgeous soft colours we bring to the collection. I love the “look” we have in my collection and its success is based on over 30 years of design experience.

Have you ever had to wear glasses for a role?

Occasionally, and only when a character I was playing required them. Alexis in Dynasty had some really strong, almost masculine frames once, but I think that was to frighten the men.

What did you consider when designing your eyewear collection?

I am a big people watcher. I love style, trends and colours. Jayne (Smerald, director of Atlantic Optical) and I have regular meetings and plan our style direction and colour trends for the forthcoming seasons. We are always aware of comfort and fit, which is so important.

What are your top tips for choosing the pair of stylish frames?

Look at your face shape and remember to choose a shape that compliments your look. I always take a friend and have a great time trying different shapes on and working out which colours work – hopefully your friend will say what doesn’t. Your optician can be a great help in guiding you through all the choices that are now available. I am happy sticking to my own range, which covers all my own needs and moods.


TV UPDATE : TV UPDATE : PIERS MORGAN UNCENSORED ... JOAN REFLECTS ON THE QUEEN .. SEPTEMBER 9TH 2022 ..



Joan on GMTV earlier in the week..
As the sad news has been announced of the death of The Queen, Joan made an appearance on Piers Morgans show on Talk TV to reveal her memories of Her Majesty.. You can view the interview above! 

Friday, September 9, 2022

PHOTO FLASHBACK : JOAN'S GOT AN EYE FOR PROMOTION...


 One of the most popular celebrity brand of Eyewear through the 90's and up to recently has been Joan's range of eye glasses and sun glasses.. She and the company Atlantic Optical has won many awards for the very extensive range. These rare shots feature Joan promoting the line at an Optical Fair in New York in the 1990's...

Wednesday, September 7, 2022

PRESS UPDATE : SAGA ... SEPTEMBER 2022 ..

 


Grande Dame Joan Collins...

At her St Tropez home, Dame Joan Collins discusses The Queen, shunning one-night stands, and wanting to be a boy. By David Wigg.

She’s one of the world’s most glamorous women and, as she poses for our photoshoot at her stunning St Tropez home, she radiates old-school Hollywood stardom. So it’s surprising to hear that in her early teens Joan Collins loathed her developing feminine curves and longed to be a boy. ‘I remember going through puberty at 14 and hating the way my body was changing,’ she confides. ‘I hated everything that was happening. So I rebelled and wore boys clothes. I wore corduroys and scraped my hair back. I even went to football matches with my father.’

So when did she change her mind about wanting to be a boy? With a smile, she says, ‘I think when I went on holiday to France when I was around 15.’ When she discovered boys? ‘When they discovered me!’ she laughs.

Since then, her striking beauty has famously caught the eye of many of the world’s most desired men. Frank Sinatra asked her to fly to Hamburg to have dinner with him, but she turned him down as she did Dean Martin, Richard Burton and the US senator Bobby Kennedy.

‘Frank Sinatra is not and never has been interested in talking about anything other than himself,’ she witheringly writes in her latest bestseller, My Unapologetic Diaries. Her unflinchingly honest book gives a glimpse into her impossibly glamorous social life between 1989 and 2009 when she rubbed shoulders with Sir Roger Moore and Princess Diana as well as Frank, whom she’d first met in the early Sixties. ‘Sinatra was known for being a one-night stand and I’ve never done that,’ Joan confides. Of Bobby Kennedy she says, ‘I remember dancing with him at this nightclub called The Factory. I would never have considered dating him, but he was charismatic.’




Joan has dedicated her book to her fifth husband Percy Gibson and reveals in it how they met in April 2000 when she was touring America in the play Love Letters, for which he was the company manager.

The couple fell madly in love, despite more than a 30-year age gap – he’s now 56 and she’s 89 – and defied sceptics by recently celebrating their 20th wedding anniversary. ‘I’m so lucky’, she whispers to me. ‘He takes care of everything. He takes care of my children and all our finances. He’s the love of my life. It’s a great marriage, a great relationship.

‘Of course, we have our little spats like other couples might do, but we’ve both got our safe spaces. He has his office at home, I have my walk-in closet. And separate bathrooms. We’re really lucky. I realise most people can’t have two bathrooms.’

Given that Joan has a life that’s busier than most people’s half her age, Percy doesn’t notice the age gap at all. ‘I think what is important is not age, but how you look, feel and behave,’ says Joan, who says she still thinks of herself as a 40-year-old woman. In fact, she believes it’s ‘tremendously rude’ to ask a woman her age or discuss it. ‘My mother’s generation never did it,’ she says. ‘But you know, people have been calling me an older woman since I was 38!’

Having battled against the ageist attitudes of film and TV companies, she does think the tide is now turning as older women are increasingly being cast in leading roles. ‘I think maybe at last producers and directors have realised that, if they are going to be showing real life in the movies, then they are going to have to have people who are older. Look at Helen Mirren and Judi Dench – they are far more popular than me,’ she says modestly.

But Joan has plenty of projects in the pipeline herself and has no plans to retire. ‘People say, why don’t you put your feet up? I do put my feet up and I don’t do anything I don’t enjoy,’ says the actress (she prefers not to be called an ‘actor’), who recently filmed the medieval drama series Glow and Darkness alongside Jane Seymour, and the movie Tomorrow Morning, out now.

She says her secret to looking as good as she does, aside from eating well and exercising regularly, is simply ‘having great parents who gave me good genes’. She also doesn’t smoke, avoided drugs or drinking excessively, and moisturises ‘all the time’. She adds, ‘I never put my face in the sun. I only allow my body and legs to tan.’

Joan always gets plenty of time in the sunshine as she spends each summer in her picturesque St Tropez villa where our Saga photoshoot took place. She and Percy share three homes – they also have residences in London’s Belgravia and Los Angeles – but Joan’s home in the south of France is the one she describes as ‘paradise’, and we can see why.

The stunning villa is perched on a hill with breathtaking views of St Tropez and the Mediterranean Sea and is so tucked away that Percy has to come and meet us en route to guide us down the dusty off-road track that leads you there. The villa, decorated in Provençal style, has a beautiful garden leading down to an infinity pool and a long, elegant outdoor dining area. As Joan poses for our photoshoot on a seat in her garden, wearing a designer leopard print dress and statement jewellery, it’s obvious she is blissfully happy here. ‘One of my great joys is entertaining at the villa – we have wonderful lunches and dinners. It’s freedom, fun, joy and friends,’ she says.

She’s also hosted numerous friends at the villa, which she bought after touring in the play Private Lives in 1990. She first fell in love with St Tropez after holidaying with Natalie Wood in 1970 and visitors to her villa have included Julian Clary, artist Tracey Emin and Liza Minnelli.

Although Joan clearly loves her life with Percy, she’s had more than her fair share of heartache in the past. One of the first men she fell for in Hollywood was Warren Beatty, whom she dated for 18 months after meeting him at an LA party in 1959.

They got engaged in 1960 and she became pregnant but decided to have an abortion as she felt it was too early in her career to start a family. So why did they break up? ‘Everything has an ending – apart from Percy and me. I was only 27 and he was three years younger and it wasn’t working any more. His need for sex several times a day wore me out,’ she recalls.

‘But really it was because he made me turn down several movies, including Sons and Lovers. It was stupid of me not to have done it, but you make mistakes. Show me a person who hasn’t made a mistake and I’ll show you somebody who hasn’t lived.

‘The next offer I got was with Bob Hope and Bing Crosby in The Road To Hong Kong. He said, “You can’t do this. It’s absolute crap.” I said, “Well, I’m doing it” and off I went.’

Prior to her romance with Warren, Joan had married film idol Maxwell Reed in 1952 when she was just 19. The couple split up after four years and in 1963 she went on to marry Anthony Newley, and have two children, Tara and Alexander (known as Sacha), but that marriage ended in 1970. She then married Ron Kass in 1972 and they had a daughter, Katyana (Katy), before splitting up in 1983. She will only refer to her fourth husband, Peter Holm, as ‘The Swede’. ‘That was a momentous mistake,’ she says of the marriage in 1985 that lasted just two years.

In between marriages she worked hard to combine being a single parent with a demanding film career. ‘My children mean so much to me. But it was very hard,’ she recalls.

Of course, Joan’s career took off in a big way when she landed the role of the scheming and powerful Alexis Carrington in Eighties soap Dynasty. So convincing was she that she’s been inextricably associated with the shoulder-pad wearing diva ever since. ‘People enjoy this fantasy that I am a super-bitch because of Alexis,’ she says. ‘I think it’s utterly ridiculous that powerful, resilient women are portrayed as dangerous, whereas in my experience it’s the predatory men who are the real threat.’

Aside from playing Alexis, Joan has appeared in more than 70 films, hundreds of TV shows and starred on both the West End and Broadway stage. Auditioning in those pre #MeToo days, sadly she was subjected to unwanted advances from some studio bigwigs, including one producer whom she was shocked to find lying in the bath after he summoned her to meet him in New York to talk about a film role. ‘He invited me to jump in and I turned on my heels and got out of the building as fast as I could,’ she says.


Joan with Jackie & Brother Bill..


As well as being a successful actress, Joan is also a bestselling author of 17 books, not quite as many as her late sister Jackie, who had written 32 books before she died in September 2015. A series about the glamorous sisters, called Joan & Jackie, is currently in development in which two young actresses will play Joan – one as a small girl and then another as she arrived in Hollywood.

Jackie only told Joan she had stage 4 cancer weeks before she passed away at the age of 77. ‘I was tremendously upset for about three months. I cried every day,’ says Joan. ‘The reason I was shocked was that our mother died of breast cancer in 1962 when she was in her fifties. I can’t tell you enough how important it is to have mammograms every year and be checked regularly. Jackie knew she had a lump and she thought it would go away. She would be alive today if she had gone to a doctor earlier. Oh, don’t make me cry…’ she says welling up with tears.

Months before losing Jackie, Joan had received one of the biggest honours of her life when she was made a dame and this June she was delighted to take part in the Platinum Jubilee Pageant to celebrate The Queen’s 70 years on the throne. ‘She is a wonderful woman,’ says Joan of The Queen, whom she’s met several times. ‘She’s inspirational. She’s terribly easy to talk to and terribly interested. It’s the sort of conversation you could have with your next-door neighbour.’

Soon we’ll see Joan playing The Queen’s late aunt-in-law, Wallis Simpson, whose relationship with the Duke of Windsor scandalised the Royal Family and led to his abdication. She’ll star in In Bed With the Duchess, written by her friend Louise Fennell. ‘I play the Duchess of Windsor from the time that the Duke died right up until her death. It’s a fabulous story,’ reveals Joan. And with her infinite reserves of energy, naturally she can’t wait to get working on it.

My Unapologetic Diaries by Joan Collins (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, £9.99) is out in paperback now