I always start a play by calling the characters A, B, and C.

My first play was 'The Room', written when I was twenty-seven.

I don't idealise women. I enjoy them. I have been married to two of the most independent women it is possible to think of.

Clinton's hands remain incredibly clean, don't they, and Tony Blair's smile remains as wide as ever. I view these guises with profound contempt.

All I can say is that I did admire 'The Lives of Others', which I thought was really about something and beautifully done.

I think that NATO is itself a war criminal.

There's a tradition in British intellectual life of mocking any non-political force that gets involved in politics, especially within the sphere of the arts and the theatre.

One's life has many compartments.

Analysis I take to be a scientific procedure. What I do is creative. It doesn't spring from the same part of the mind.

A short piece of work means as much to me as a long piece of work.

All that happens is that the destruction of human beings - unless they're Americans - is called collateral damage.

Beckett had an unerring light on things, which I much appreciated.

I also found being called Sir rather silly.

I could be a bit of a pain in the arse. Since I've come out of my cancer, I must say I intend to be even more of a pain in the arse.

I don't think there's been any writer like Samuel Beckett. He's unique. He was a most charming man and I used to send him my plays.

I found the offer of a knighthood something that I couldn't possibly accept. I found it to be somehow squalid, a knighthood. There's a relationship to government about knights.

I think it is the responsibility of a citizen of any country to say what he thinks.

I was brought up in the War. I was an adolescent in the Second World War. And I did witness in London a great deal of the Blitz.

If Milosevic is to be tried, he has to be tried by a proper court, an impartial, properly constituted court which has international respect.

Most of the press is in league with government, or with the status quo.

Occasionally it does hit me, the words on a page. And I still love doing that, as I have for the last 60 years.

One is and is not in the centre of the maelstrom of it all.

There are some good rules and there are some lousy rules.

There is a movement to get an international criminal court in the world, voted for by hundreds of states-but with the noticeable absence of the United States of America.

While The United States is the most powerful nation the world has ever seen, it is also the most detested nation that the world has ever known.

Iraq is just a symbol of the attitude of western democracies to the rest of the world.

It was difficult being a conscientious objector in the 1940's, but I felt I had to stick to my guns.

I wrote 'The Room', 'The Birthday Party', and 'The Dumb Waiter' in 1957, I was acting all the time in a repertory company, doing all kinds of jobs, traveling to Bournemouth and Torquay and Birmingham.

Quite often, I have a compelling sense of how a role should be played. And I'm proved - equally as often - quite wrong.

I left school at sixteen - I was fed up and restless. The only thing that interested me at school was English language and literature, but I didn't have Latin, and so couldn't go on to university. So I went to a few drama schools, not studying seriously; I was mostly in love at the time and tied up with that.

I was told that, when 'Betrayal' was being produced by one of the provincial companies in England, the two actors playing those roles actually went into a pub one day and played that scene as if it were really happening to them. The people around them became very uncomfortable.

I think plays have nothing to do with one's own personal life. Not in my experience, anyway. The stuff of drama has to do, not with your subject matter, anyway, but with how you treat it. Drama includes pain, loss, regret - that's what drama is about!

I used to get up at five in the morning and play cricket.

Cricket, the whole thing, playing, watching, being part of the Gaieties, has been a central feature of my life.

The only theatre I ever saw was Shakespeare.

A few friends and me used to go and watch Bunuel, Carne, Cocteau... Cocteau and Bunuel were surrealism. And I was very excited by that. 'Un Chien Andalou', especially.

George W. Bush is always protesting that he has the fate of the world in mind and bangs on about the 'freedom-loving peoples' he's seeking to protect. I'd love to meet a freedom-hating people.

One should also remember that the U.S. is the biggest exporter of torture weapons in the world, though the U.K. is not far behind in the league table. We never stopped, even under Robin Cook's supposedly ethical foreign policy.

All I'm saying is that there are many different kinds of political theatre and many plays I greatly admire: 'Antigone,' 'Mother Courage,' 'All My Sons.' But, if I tackle a political theme, I have to do it in my own way.

Sometimes you feel you have the truth of a moment in your hand, then it slips through your fingers and is lost.

I am absolutely not saying that Milosevic might not be responsible for all sorts of atrocities, but I believe that what's been left out of public debate and the press is that there was a civil war going on there.

I find the whole Blairish idea more and more repugnant every day. 'New Labour': the term itself is so trashy. Kind of ersatz.

I certainly feel sad about the alienation from my son.

Things like Abu Ghraib and even Guantanamo are not new things: there are many precedents.

There was one man in the Labour government, Robin Cook, whom I had a very high regard for. He had the courage to speak out and to resign over Iraq. He was an admirable man. But resignation over a matter of principle is not a very fashionable thing in our society.

I've said it before, and I'll say it again. I've written 29 damn plays. Isn't that enough?

I don't make judgments about my own work, and I don't analyze it; I just let it happen. That applies to everything I've done.

I do tend to think that I've written a great deal out of my unconscious because half the time I don't know what a given character is going to say next.

I'm always the interrogator. When I was an actor in rep, I always played sinister parts. The directors always said, 'If there's a nasty man about, cast Harold Pinter.'

The effect of depleted uranium, used by America in the Gulf War, is never referred to.