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Sigourney Weaver won’t retire from acting: ‘I enjoy it more now than ever’

Sigourney Weaver
ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images
Sigourney Weaver
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Sigourney Weaver’s still a working girl — and plans on keeping it that way.

The “Alien” and “Working Girl” star, 72, shared in a new interview with Interview Magazine that she intends to keep the grind going, age be damned.

Asked by Elizabeth Banks whether she has any plans to retire in the near future — despite having five projects in the pipeline — the native New Yorker said: “I would hope not, because I probably enjoy it more now than ever.”

Sigourney Weaver
Sigourney Weaver

“I’m fine that I might be the oldest person on the set,” continued Weaver.

While she often adjusts to “a period of “Oh my god, it’s happening again,” the three-time Oscar nom said that feeling doesn’t hold a candle to “the joy and the explosion of letting this person out to live.”

That, said Weaver, is “the most exhilarating thing in the world.”

A graduate of Yale School of Drama, where she was classmates with Meryl Streep, Weaver made her stage debut in 1973 and was first seen on the screen in 1970, with a role on the series “Somerset.” She made her big screen debut as one of the women dating Woody Allen’s Alvy in the now-controversial writer-director’s seminal romantic comedy, “Annie Hall” in 1977.

Weaver last year talked to the Daily News about revisiting a “disappearing” version of the Big Apple in the film adaptation of “My Salinger Year,” in which she played a fictional incarnation of J.D. Salinger’s literary agent.

Filming the movie “was just one of the greatest experiences I’ve ever had,” Weaver said at the time.