About Kevin Whately: Kevin Whately is an English actor.
I'm fascinated by politicians, because I suspect the huge majority of them go into it full of ideas and for the best possible reasons but end up being hijacked.
I never have liked detective dramas. I try to watch all of them to see what's going on, but I don't like them.
The more telly you do, the more it feels like a factory.
My mum Mary was always a bright, confident and fiercely independent lady.
You can't converse with Alzheimer's sufferers in the way you do with others; the dialogue tends to go round in circles.
I wish people would take more care of the countryside.
I wanted to be a stage actor but I got stuck on television. It took a couple of years to get used to.
I've been going to Bamburgh for holidays since I was a child.
Before my mother's diagnosis with Alzheimer's, I had heard of the disease, but hadn't known anyone who had suffered from it.
With all the lines I have to learn for TV scripts, I don't think I have any problems with forgetfulness - that's brain exercise enough for me.
Walking is my main method of relaxation. I don't go over my lines or try to solve the world's problems, I just enjoy the scenery and the wildlife.
My family have been around Northumberland for five generations.
People think I'm thick because of the characters I play. I think I'm brighter than the characters. Well, I hope I am.
I'm very good at being out of work.
With something like cancer, there is a feeling that you can fight it in some way or control your response to it, but with dementia there is the fear of losing control of your mind and your life.
Being a grandparent is whole new phase in your life.
With your own children, you love them immediately - and with grandchildren, it's exactly the same.
From the time you are a tiny baby, a parent's love is usually unconditional. Whatever you do, your parents think you are the tops, but when their memory goes, you stop recouping the love you've put in.
I'm not interested in more money for the sake of it.
Dementia is often regarded as an embarrassing condition that should be hushed up and not spoken about. But I feel passionately that more needs to be done to raise awareness, which is why I became an ambassador for the Alzheimer's Society.