Generous, funny and nervous about his stutter - when I interviewed Sam Neillpublished at 09:14 BST
Lucy Hockings
Chief presenter, BBC News

I met Sam Neill at the London premiere of Hunt for the Wilderpeople in 2016.
New Zealander's love this movie, it's funny and warm - "a small film with a big heart", Sam later told me.
We spoke about home and I asked him if he'd come into the studio for an interview. He hesitated. Live television makes me nervous, he told me, because of my stutter.
He came anyway and was generous, funny and without affectation. He told me about the movie, his admiration for the director of Wilderpeople, Taika Waititi, and how he'd just spent time on the set of his new movie, the Marvel blockbuster, Thor, Ragnarok.
What struck me was how little interest he seemed to have in celebrity. He said he wasn't a Hollywood star, just a New Zealand actor who worked there from time to time.
His favourite thing was escaping to his Two Paddocks vineyard in Central Otago, where the phone stopped working at the gate.
And when the interview finished and we were off air, he told me he always watched BBC News in hotel rooms around the world and loved hearing my accent - it reminds me of home, he said.















