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| • | "In her hand is a lit Silk Cut held in front of her like a shield ... The way she stubs out one cigarette as soon as she takes her seat and then immediately rips the Cellophane off a fresh packet", Sunday Times (UK), Aug. 16, '98 |
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| • | "Over black coffee and cigarettes in an Edinburgh caf", Scottish Herald (UK), Mar. 28, '00
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| • | "'You can't say I don't do my best for you,' says the stick-thin cigarette smoking Scot who conducts the play publicity game with some aplomb", Northern Echo (UK), Apr. 20, '00 |
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| • | "she gives a throaty, cigarette-tawny laugh", Irish Times, Apr. 22, '00 |
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| • | "it's not as if I meet many women who actually don't want to have children these days. It's normally babies, babies and more babies. 'Oh, but I would be like: 'I don't care if it's naughty, run to the corner shop and get mummy 20 Silk Cut',' Redmond explains jovially while sipping her coffee. ... She is off to have a fag, get some lunch and have a nap", The Mirror (UK), Nov. 25, '00 |
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| • | "What can't you do without? 'Nicotine. I gave up smoking for a year and a half but started again while playing a character who smoked'", The Scottish Herald (UK), Oct. 27, '01
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| • | "Siobhan Redmond stubs out a cigarette with a bright red and white spotty shoe ... her 'love affair with nicotine'", Scotland on Sunday (UK), Dec. 29, '02
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| • | "Even her attitude towards smoking is just a little bit cheeky. She gave up only once, because she wanted to be able to do a speech for A Midsummer Nights Dream without getting breathless. Its typical that it was acting that prompted this. 'I know its tempting fate, but I'm only concerned about it as far as my work goes. I think if I want to die in a smelly heap, thats my right. As the late Bill Hicks used to say to the non-smokers in the audience: you're going to die too' ", Scottish Sunday Herald (UK), Oct. 17, '04
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