
The Absolutely Fabulous actress will be celebrating her 80th birthday in just days, on May 1. Last year, she insisted she had no plans to retire, saying âIâll be here when Iâm 90 â as long as I can speakâ.
However, she has now admitted she thinks about dying, telling Radio Times: âI think about dying every day because I think about living every day and I canât see them as separate.
âIt seems to me completely normal to be born, to live and to die. It doesnât seem like an insult or a loss or tragedy, itâs just what happens.

âI donât think we should see it as this colossal enemy. Iâve thought it would be nice to see it as a friend whoâs waiting around and you never know when the friend is going to come through the door, so you mustnât be cross or sad about it.
âYou hope it wonât be now, because you have lots to do and things you still want to see, but maybe you get to the time when you feel bloody awful and alone and hurting all the time and then you might think, âIâd like to go now.ââ
Dame Joanna also referenced her friend Dame Esther Rantzen, who has terminal cancer, and has been campaigning in support of the Assisted Dying Bill, having previously stated that she had joined the Dignitas assisted dying clinic in Switzerland.

Dame Joanna admitted she would consider it a ânice thingâ for some people, adding: âIâd love to have it in the arsenal, should the time come that I just go, âThis is too bloody awfulâ.
âIt would be so nice not to have my family sent to prison for helping me go.â
She went on to say sheâs âalways longedâ to be older, adding that she âshall clearly make 90â and âcanât waitâ.
The New Avengers star has previously echoed those sentiments about assisted dying, saying she would consider voluntary euthanasia if she were at a point where she couldnât look after herself.

When asked about the bill, which was passed by MPs last year but stalled in the House of Lords, she told Saga magazine: âPeople are terribly anxious about it and think one may be coerced (into voluntary euthanasia).
âBut Iâm saying this now when nobodyâs coercing me, donât let me turn into somebody who doesnât recognise the people I love most, where Iâm having a miserable time.â
She added: âWhen I get to the stage where I canât speak and have to be fed, that wonât be me any more, and thatâs when I wouldnât mind saying farewell.â


