Former Doctor Who star Peter Capaldi has said he turned down joining The Celebrity Traitors because he did not want that "level of exposure".
In a discussion about the pressures of fame and his career, The Thick of It actor told the BBC's Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg programme that he was asked to take part in the all-star version of the BBC's reality TV show The Traitors UK, but he said no.
Asked why, the 67-year-old Scottish actor said: "Because I think there's a level of fame that... I think it propels you into the public eye, at a level of exposure that I don't really want.
"I like doing, you know, it's like doing my music things - it's very difficult for people in that business to understand that you want to keep it small."
He continued: "People keep saying to me, 'Why don't you do a bigger tour, or why don't you do a bigger release, or why don't you promote this more?'
"And I don't... I'm not doing it to be famous."
On his previous leading role as The Doctor, the Glasgow-born actor said he had "a little regret" when asked if he left the long-running BBC sci-fi show too early.
He explained: "It's great fun being Doctor Who, but the pressure of it is quite intense.
"You're sort of on all the time and you don't want to disappoint anyone because even though I'm not Doctor Who, if people are meeting me, they'd rather meet the version of me that is Doctor Who."
"So, you try not to let them down, right?" asked the host.
"Yeah, because I'm quite miserable and melancholic, really," Capaldi joked.
He added: "And that was, that was one of the big changes in my life, I guess, which happened quite late, was I'm quite miserable really, but I thought, 'You can't be miserable if you're Doctor Who'.
"You can't because you would disappoint people, so I have to become cheerful all the time."
The first series of The Celebrity Traitors aired on the BBC last autumn, with its nail-biting finale hitting a peak of 15.4 million viewers, according to the broadcaster.
It featured a star-studded cast including actors Celia Imrie and Nick Mohammed, singer Paloma Faith, author and actor Stephen Fry, broadcaster Jonathan Ross, and comedian Alan Carr, who went on to win as a Traitor.
The spin-off series, hosted by Claudia Winkleman, brought in an average audience of 14.9 million people during its run - the biggest UK TV audience of 2025.
Source: Press Association