Here is the section from the original piece that was in the Sunday Times with my comments/questions in parentheses.

In 2006, they were married, and since then, the couple have never looked back, professionally or personally. You get the sense that they are really happy. At one point, Duff talks about being a big worrier - whether she's stressing about the planet, what other people think of her, press coverage or critics - all of which keeps her up at night. One way she switches off is with lots of sex. "Of course I enjoy sex, I have nerve endings," she laughs uproariously. [Okay, she's obviously responding to a specific pointed question from the interviewer that I have to think is a follow-up to the previous interview where she gave a quick off-the-cuff answer to how she stays looking so young. It's hard to imagine the interviewer wasn't sort of making her relax with 'girl talk' to get her to open up.] "I mean, who doesn't? Well, I suppose if you had five kids you might not." She pauses. "I make it a priority." She also relaxes by baking cakes, doing yoga, shopping for clothes - "on my own, not with my other half" - dining in her favourite London restaurants, like Konstam, and dancing around the kitchen.

Yet the glaringly obvious element missing from what seems a picture-perfect life is children. Is she ready to start a family? "I would love to have a baby. As soon as the big fella makes it happen, it would be brilliant," she says, pointing to the sky and looking a bit wistful. "I'm not putting it off, but unfortunately, bodies don't work that way." [Obviously another pointed, specific question. And I'm wondering about the comment that she looked 'wistful.' That's pure editorializing, and I don't think I trust the interviewer to portray her response accurately.]