I do like to keep my face moisturized even when I'm not wearing make-up, but I don't use too many products.

You have to eat well, drink enough water and get enough sleep to look your best, and no fancy creams will substitute that.

I have months where I go to the gym all the time, but sometimes I choose long walks instead.

I love ice-skating but I'm not very good at it.

I like to have things around me that I love. However, I'm not a hoarder and get rid of everything I don't need.

I recycle as much as I can but I'm not an eco warrior.

I can't stand the smell of beer.

Jimmy Akingbola, Ed MacLiam and Hugh Quarshie are all so fit!

Every time I tell someone that I'm doing 'Spooks,' they're like, 'Wow!' That's a guaranteed reaction. It's such a high-end show, it's so sexy and slick and smooth.

If I'm in the wrong, I'll always say sorry, but sometimes it takes a while.

I travel a lot for work, so downloading books is easier than carrying them around.

I have more than 100 pairs of Jimmy Choos and I feel very guilty about it.

My character in 'Primeval' is a bookworm but she is very sexy.

I'm going to hide - I always do on my birthday, I never celebrate birthdays.

But I find it so difficult to go out and be like 'Hey, I'm a sexpot.' At home I'm just a mum with food down her top!

I've got a scar on my shin from when I got shot in New York when I was 17. I was outside a McDonald's and somebody shot a gun from a car, and the bullet grazed my leg.

I'm over trying to be younger or look younger.

I never enjoyed school and I was never that good at school so leaving wasn't the biggest thing, but the social aspect of school, leaving your friends, you lose contact with them a bit and now I have more friends at the race track than the friends I keep in touch with at school.

I'm a fighter, I'm a winner, and I'm not interested in just battling my team-mate for the back of the grid.

I think Weetabix and full-fat milk is what it is all about.

Well, it's looks like I've a love-hate thing going on with Monaco.

I will be unhappy if I know I have not accomplished something I should have done that was possible.

I can't remember what made my dad take us karting for the first time, I can't remember really. I was into motorsport by then and I knew everything, and every driver, it was around 2009, 2008. That's when I first properly knew about Formula One. Those were the days.

Even though I had won in other categories, I didn't have any expectations when I came into F1. Qualifying fifth, finishing sixth? I didn't expect it.

I am absolutely my own biggest critic.

Confidence is always a good thing to have going into the weekend. Especially where it's quite difficult to put the lap together.

I probably work harder, putting in a lot of time and effort, than a lot of drivers because all I think about, and all I do, is to do with racing, trying to make myself a better driver.

I'm an all-or-nothing kind of guy, I guess.

Of course it would be nice for everybody and myself if we could win but we can still have a personal or a team win if we achieve a target that is effectively a win for us.

I don't think there's any point going for second or third.

I want to go down in the history books with what I've achieved.

I turned away from bikes when I got a bambino kart for my seventh birthday and started doing some karting, just around some cones at home, but I didn't think at that point I knew I wanted to go into F1, it was more just for fun.

I started off riding motorbikes and at that point my hero was Valentino Rossi.

The 'Pro-Sim' is pretty much the best simulator you can buy, because of the steering motor and the pedals. The force feedback we get through the steering is pretty much exactly the same as what we get in the actual car in terms of how heavy it is.

I started off with sim driving, playing 'Gran Turismo,' and my Dad had some sort of Logitech steering wheel with pedals for the PlayStation 2.

The biggest difference in the wet between F2 and F1 is that there's so much more power in F1 as being on the throttle earlier has a bigger advantage.

When I was five - it's not even bad - I stole a sweet from the sweet shop.

I've been away since I was pretty much eight, traveling to the car tracks, and then going to Europe and traveling more.

I used to watch some F1 races but I was never straightaway thinking 'that is what I want to do.'

F2's much harder physically on the arms and almost on the whole body than F1 is.

To be announced as a race driver for McLaren is a dream come true.

McLaren were one of the first teams I liked and supported.

I definitely wasn't anything special when I first started but I think I adapted quite quickly into racing and it became a bit better slowly. All of cadets, the first four years of karting, I only won one proper race, one! Which was the British Open Championship at PFI and I started 21st and I won.

Sometimes I'm a bit under-aggressive and sometimes a bit over. But I think it's good to have both.

I need to do well and show I'm a worthy driver in F1.

In karting, you turn up and drive, look at the data and go home. But I like doing more, learning about the engines and how to make them go even better.

In the ideal world, if I was perfect, I'd be able to beat every teammate that I have, in every race.

You can only get to a certain point when you feel confident with the simulator and it always changes when you get to the track and you actually drive it for real for the first time.

The McLaren prizes can only help me in my quest to ultimately reach Formula One.

The first time I used a simulator was in 2014 when I was competing in the Ginetta Junior Championship.