I get a lot of nutters in my audiences.

I love to watch birds and wildlife.

I am pretty laid-back as a parent, but I do like a lot of activity. So I am constantly suggesting things to do that involve some physical activity: cycling, mountain biking and paddleboarding.

The two worst enemies of comedy are lack of sleep and not having had a decent meal.

I'm an omnivore, although I am trying to eat less meat. I went vegetarian for about two years, then I suddenly got a craving one morning and that was it.

The point with me is that it's always been, even with the stand-up, that the music has to be right. You have to take it seriously. You have to try and play it as faithfully as possible. That way it helps the comedy. Rather than just playing it in a silly way.

Having a break from comedy is quite good.

Comedy can be quite all consuming at times, and if you're not careful you end up doing a tour, then a DVD, then another tour then a DVD. Suddenly the years have just flown by.

If you really push yourself you can perhaps achieve something you didn't think you could.

Fatherhood made everything more straightforward. I was relieved that no longer did I have to agonise over what meaning I had in my life.

People perceive me as this kind of hippy intellectual, reflecting and communing with nature or in a pyramid somewhere chanting. Really, no. I love speed, fast things, quad and road bikes, and bombing down a mountain.

I grew up in a little town between Bath and Bristol with my parents and grandparents in the same house. It was rural and idyllic.

My earliest memory is feeling soil between my fingers when I was around three years old.

I discovered I'm 60 per cent Viking. Well, more Danish, I suppose. I'm also two-and-a-half per cent Neanderthal.

As a young man, the temptation was to drink the minibar dry. I did all that - now I prefer to get outdoors.

I used to live on a houseboat near Hammersmith Bridge.

London is a great place to be over Christmas.

I'm a worker bee, I like to have a schedule, I like to have a place to be, and a time, and a schedule - it just makes sense to me.

I think for many people, they think that being in drag means you want to be a girl. Being trans and doing drag is completely different.

I think it's great that 'Drag Race' is mainstream.

I laugh at myself on a daily basis.

Shockingly, I'm pretty normal.

I don't dream. I'm not a person who makes a list of things that need to happen in my life. It just evolves, and you roll with the punches.

Things in life just happen and then you make the best of the situation and you keep moving.