Explore popular quotes and sayings by Carol Thatcher.
Last updated on December 21, 2024.
Carol Jane Thatcher is an English journalist, author and media personality. She is the daughter of Margaret Thatcher, the British prime minister from 1979 to 1990, and Denis Thatcher.
You need quite good shock absorbers and a sense of humour to be the Prime Minister's child.
Unloved is not the right word... but I never felt I made the grade. Mark was a blond, very attractive little boy, and sporty, so Dad was always teaching him to play cricket on the lawn... I always felt I came second out of two.
One of my fondest memories is of our skiing trips. Mum's approach to the sport was methodical, doing all the manoeuvres correctly and carefully.
It's not always easy to make polite, lunchtime conversation with a mother who for decades has had international leaders and statesmen to engage with in potentially world-changing discussions.
As far as 'The Crown' goes I think that it is irrelevant and ridiculous that I turn up at all!
I left influencing the media to other members of my family, like my Mum.
I remember the moment it first hit me that my mother's memory was no longer the extraordinary phenomenon it had been all my life. The realisation came as a thunderbolt.
When I was a kid, I watched mainly films on TV and pop programmes like 'Top of the Pops.'
I wrote a tennis book about Chris Evert and her then-husband, John Lloyd. It was called 'Lloyd on Lloyd' and became a No 1 bestseller.
I studied law at university and wanted to go on a working holiday in Sydney. I got a job at the Sydney Morning Herald and later on a TV station, and that was that. I stayed there for four years.
That's the worst thing about dementia: it gets you every time. Sufferers look and act the same but beneath the familiar exterior something quite different is going on. They're in another world and you cannot enter.
I like being permanently single. It suits me perfectly.
When you're on the wrong side of 50 there are few opportunities for adventure. So you grab them while you can.
Any spat involving the name of my mother, Britain's longestserving Prime Minister of the 20th century, seems to have pulling power.
My mother was prone to calling me by her secretaries' names and working through each of them until she got to Carol.
There is something about my mother that drives her critics slightly potty, so they resort to wild invention to get at her.
I guess you can get politicians out of politics, but you can't get politics out of them.
A mother cannot reasonably expect her grown-up children to boomerang back, gushing cosiness and make up for lost time. Absentee Mum, then Gran in overdrive is not an equation that balances.
The idea that my mother would go around swearing after a personal setback is ridiculous.
I never had the opportunity to become high-handed, because I had to go on earning a living as a journalist. Unlike my brother, I have never made swags of cash.
My mother's early life revolved around the Methodist faith.
I never watch any movies or mini series regarding the Thatcher Years.
All my childhood memories of my mother, is that of someone who was just superwoman, before the phrase was even invented.
As a mother in the 1950s, she did not impose the same strict religious routine on myself and my brother, Mark, though we were taken to church and Sunday school.
Being the only girl in the world who can say that her mother was Britain's first woman Prime Minister is honour enough for me.
Reality hasn't really intervened in my mother's life since the seventies.
Part of my dogsbody job during the 1983 election was choosing Mum's missile-proof clothes. They had to be disposable.