Peggy Stathakopoulou “After 60, we start to wonder how much resilience we have and how young we are, what has changed. I think ultimately it’s a very nice age,” says the well-known actress.
Peggy Stathakopoulou was hosted in “Studio 4” on Tuesday afternoon (20/2). The famous actress sat on the show’s couch and conversed with Nancy Zampetoglou and Thanasis Anagnostopoulos. Among other things, the three of them discussed the postgraduate studies she decided to start at the Open University of Patras and life after 60.
“I got my first degree at 40; I owed a lesson. I had arranged it with my father, but I did it also because I wouldn’t like something to remain unfinished. And I’m happy; this is very important to me,” says Peggy Stathakopoulou.
“I study History of European Civilization at the Open University of Patras.
Youth as it passes can be replaced by knowledge; for me, it’s the best botox,” emphasizes the actress.
“After 60, we start to wonder how much resilience we have and how young we are, what has changed. I think ultimately it’s a very nice age because you are liberated from many things.
You have more time and disposition to deal exclusively with yourself, to see what interests you, to fulfill some dreams that you haven’t had time for in your life,” Peggy Stathakopoulou later mentioned.
“I can no longer say with certainty what is good and what is bad. Many times something very difficult comes, which will bring you to light, but at the moment you live it, you don’t know it and you don’t see it. After 2-3 years, you think about it and say: fortunately, this came into my life because it made me take a different turn,”
Peggy Stathakopoulou declares at another point in the conversation.
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