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enjoy touring again. I think it's thetime of life where you should only do what you want to do. And that's what I talk about on stage, looking back over the last few years.""There are things you can never plan, like appearing on Strictly Come Dancing, although I always wanted to write as I got older, so I have achieved that."His show is half stand up and half "more daring and some audience participation". He's never lost his love of rifling through the handbags of women in the audience. He did it as the Joan CollinsFan Club and continues to do it now."It's really a means of improvisation and you don't know what you're going to find in a handbag,"he says. "Diaries are always good and I notice that a lot of women have hundreds of dirty hankies. I go for bulging handbags because they always have plenty in them."There is a script, although not always apparent, and areas he knows he's going to visit and needs to do in a certain order for technical reasons. There's a structure, not a completely aimlessramble, he assures me."I found it tough being back on tour to begin with because I'm not working on the cabaret circuit. There's no way of trying out new material.It's two hours of new material, and it's sink or swim."The difference this time is that there's only him on stage "so I'm a bit more exposed and I think it's grown up a bit".AWAY from the spotlight, he's moved from the city to the country, a subject that features in his stage talk. "The rustic life, having chickens and just going a bit feral, really," he says.He doesn't have a farm so much as a house with a garden and animals. "I'm surprised I didn't do it before because I'm not that sociable.I'm not out on the town every night. I suppose I was in my 20s and 30s."But living in the country has improved my quality of life. That's a benefit of getting older, you do what you want. It all just happened at the same time just when you feel like doing something,you can."Those who go to see his stage show have grown up with him. "What I've noticed is there's a real history between me and the audience.They've been before and say, 'you picked me out of the audience in 1985' and now they're there with their children. I feel an