London:
British actress Elizabeth Hurley's son wants to follow in the footsteps of his mother to become a star.
The brunette beauty's eight-year-old child Damian, whose father is her ex-lover Steve Bing, is constantly begging his mother to resurrect her movie career so he can gain experience on a film set to help him fulfill his dream, ShowbizSpy reported online.
"Damian adores being photographed in fact he likes anything to do with showbusiness. He's written his first screenplay called Escape! and many pop songs which he performs on the dining room table, singing into a hairspray can," Hurley said.
"He spends hours trying to persuade me to do movies again so I can take him out of school to be tutored in my trailer. Needless to say, this is not going to happen," she added.
The 45-year-old star, who is married to businessman Arun Nayar, has now retired to life on a farm in Gloucestershire with her family which has given her more time to spend with her son.
"Damian gets virtually all my time when he's not at school. Unless there's an emergency on, I try not to work between picking him up from school and bedtime. We do piano and guitar practice, the dreaded maths homework, supper, bath, reading and bed together seven nights a week," Hurley said.
The brunette beauty's eight-year-old child Damian, whose father is her ex-lover Steve Bing, is constantly begging his mother to resurrect her movie career so he can gain experience on a film set to help him fulfill his dream, ShowbizSpy reported online.
"Damian adores being photographed in fact he likes anything to do with showbusiness. He's written his first screenplay called Escape! and many pop songs which he performs on the dining room table, singing into a hairspray can," Hurley said.
"He spends hours trying to persuade me to do movies again so I can take him out of school to be tutored in my trailer. Needless to say, this is not going to happen," she added.
The 45-year-old star, who is married to businessman Arun Nayar, has now retired to life on a farm in Gloucestershire with her family which has given her more time to spend with her son.
"Damian gets virtually all my time when he's not at school. Unless there's an emergency on, I try not to work between picking him up from school and bedtime. We do piano and guitar practice, the dreaded maths homework, supper, bath, reading and bed together seven nights a week," Hurley said.