Richard E. Grant – Official Website

ACTOR…DIRECTOR…AUTHOR…LEGEND!>>>>REG Temple

Welcome To The REG Temple

The REG Temple is the official website for actor, author and director Richard E. Grant.

Richard has appeared in over 80 films and television programs, such as Withnail And I, The Scarlet Pinmpernel, Jack & Sarah, L.A. Story, Dracula, The Hound Of The Baskervilles, Gosford Park & The Iron Lady. In 2005 he directed his first major release, Wah-Wah.

This website is unique in that it has been run and maintained by volunteers and fans since 1998. For more information on its origins, please click here.


Waterford Charity Details

September14

Due to the ongoing interest in Waterford I thought it would be an idea to repeat the address to which people can send donations.

All cheques should be made payable to The Waterford Bursary Fund and addressed to:

Waterford School Trust
13 College Lane,
LONDON NW5 1BJ

As all money is converted into Rands it is probable preferable to send cheques in your local currency – after all, why pay two sets of conversion fees to the banks?

One last note, if you expect a reply don’t forget to mention REG – and also a SAE wouldn’t go astray either. Someone has to pay the postage after all.

Waterford is much more than a charity REG supports, as Richard is actually one of the patrons of the charity, and quite possibly the only one who actually attended the school. Other patrons include Lord and Lady Attenborough and Michael Heslop. It’s full name is Waterford Kamhlaba. It is a "school" in Mbabane for students ages 11-19. REG attended it after Swaziland gained it’s independence and his father was no longer the Minister of Education. It is a private school as opposed to a public one.

In an interview published in the Daily Mail a couple of years ago, Richard promised to personally reply to anyone who made a donation in his name. Obviously he’s a man of his word and he still honours this commitment.

If you want to read a response that a REGiment fan received from the honorary treasurer of the trust, Michael Jarvis, then click here.

If you want to know more you can go to http://www.waterford.sz.

posted under 2001, Charity

Theo Fennell Jewelry Launch

September12

2001

Richard and Joan appeared with Theo Fennell, the Jewelry Designer, at the launch of his new collection held at the Collection Bar Restaurant in Chelsea.

posted under 2001, Sightings

Various Pics, Artwork And DVD Stills

September11

Scullyx69 has sent a drawing to be put up on the site along with some pics from Henry And June.

Stezi tells me that you can check out various DVD pics of Richard along with other British actors such as Anthony Hopkins, Alan Rickman, Gabriel Byrne, Ralph Fiennes (and more) at http://members.tripod.com/~stezi_lopez/stezi.htm.

posted under News

The Burns Night Supper

September11

2001

Richard and Olivia attended the Burns Night Supper recently at London’s St Martins Lane hotel in aid of Sargent Cancer Care for Children. Here is a pic of them at the event.

posted under 2001, Sightings

Withnail And Him

September10

Mirabellalife.com – 2001

By K.J. Elsdon

Swaziland was a popular long-weekend destination during the apartheid years, when South African citizens could let loose their frustrations in this friendly, non-racial country. Now it’s perhaps better known as the birthplace of Richard E. Grant, one of the most versatile and talented actors to emerge from the southern hemisphere.

Born Richard Grant Esterhuysen in Mbabne on May 5th 1957, the man who would achieve international stardom as Withnail wasn’t geographically well situated for stardom. His father, Henrik, was the Swazi Minister of Education and the young Richard enjoyed a privileged colonial upbringing. However, when he left school a move to another country was inevitable. Despite the staunch anti-apartheid stance of his family, the most financially viable option for his tertiary education was South Africa, so he became a student at the University of Cape Town at a time when many of his fellow students were aiming well beyond the safe, old-fashioned drama preferred by the Nationalist government. In fact the list of Grant‚s fellow alumni reads like a “Who’s Who” of contemporary South African theatre.

In his second year at UCT he helped to found the Troupe Theatre Company, which was considered revolutionary in its day because it was non-racial and questioned the political status quo. Like many students of his day, Richard was strongly opposed to apartheid and was known as “a bit of a leftie” but was never a radical, preferring to channel his anger into productions which were frequently over-ambitious, but never complacent.

When his father died of cancer at the age of 51 Richard, who had always harboured ambitions of making a name for himself in Europe, felt as though he had no reason to remain in southern Africa. His mother had left home after an affair with a mining engineer some years previously and his relationship with his brother Stuart, who regarded his older brother as overly theatrical and therefore effeminate, was unsatisfactory. Some years after Richard became a household name with projects like Withnail & I and How to Get Ahead in Advertising Stuart, who by then had qualified as an accountant, married and moved to Johannesburg, would grant The News of the World an interview in which he made a string of poisonous allegations about his brother.

Having successfully relocated to the U.K. Richard found that the money that he had inherited from his father cushioned him from the worst of the deprivations suffered by many “resting” actors. It’s rumoured that he first consulted top vocal coach, Joan Washington in 1982, to rid him of a South African accent, but whatever the reason for their first encounter the pair eventually married in 1987, the year in which Richard enjoyed his first and greatest success as the imperious slob, Withnail.

In 1985 Richard was elated to be offered a part in a BBC film about the advertising industry called Honest, Decent & True in which he starred with Gary Oldman, who would become a close friend. Much to Richard‚s frustration the screening date was continually delayed, which made it much more difficult for him to persuade casting agencies to take him seriously.

Eventually he was asked to audition for an untitled project by ex-actor Bruce Robinson who had previously been nominated for an Oscar for his screenplay, The Killing Fields. This was to be Robinson’s directorial debut and the script, which was partly autobiographical, concerned a pair of impoverished drama students, Withnail and Marwood, who were eking out a life in a squalid flat in Camden Town. The film had “cult classic” written all over it, a fact which Robinson constantly reminded his somewhat dubious cast, when their enthusiasm for trudging around the freezing sets clad only in threadbare underwear began to wane. On its release Richard had the rare distinction of becoming an overnight star. Withnail, with his overbearing, yet neurotic personality and superb command of language, was the broken-down toff that most students wanted to resemble.

From the humiliation of attending auditions for cigar adverts, Richard E. Grant found that successful actors are invited to participate in projects. It’s thanks to his lifelong skills as a diarist that fans were given a behind-the-scenes passport to projects such as the ill-fated Hudson Hawk, Bram Stoker’s Dracula and The Player, Robert Altman’s critique of the Hollywood system. With Nails, the collection of Richard’s coruscatingly witty film diaries received glowing reviews by book and film critics and encouraged a new flood of people to watch his films.

Considering that his looks are less than traditionally handsome, Richard E. Grant has attracted a solid fan base of devoted women who correspond via the internet and call themselves “the REGiment”. From teenagers to middle-aged mothers, these benevolent fanatics swap information about Richard’s latest TV and film appearances and donate money to the Waterford School Trust, which was set up to provide bursaries for needy students wishing to attend Richard’s alma mater.

Despite claims that behind the facade of charm lies a darker and less approachable man, he goes out of his way to maintain contact with the REGiment, participating in internet question and answer sessions and, after his recent West End appearance in the Morecombe & Wise pastiche The Play Whatt I Wrote, invited several members to meet him backstage after the show.

Although he‚s perhaps more popular with the REGiment for his TV appearances as the Scarlet Pimpernel, Grant has appeared in many high quality movies, including Mountains of the Moon, Henry & June, The Age of Innocence, Prêt-à-Porter, Jack and Sarah, The Portrait of a Lady and, more recently, Gosford Park.

Reports claim that his long-standing friends tend to have keen brains rather than being in the forefront of the Hollywood power structure, so Grant prefers to rub shoulders with Steve Martin, Gary Oldman, Sandra Bernhard and Hugh Grant, leaving the company of Steven Spielberg and George Lucas to more fanatically ambitious actors.

His old friend from Waterford, the South African actor Stephen Jennings says, “The paradox of Richard, which is a great part of his charm, is that he cares deeply about what people think, and at the same time doesn’t give a damn if you’ve got a proclivity for biting wit, you can’t afford to.”

If his adoring REGiment is in any way representative of the opinion of thousands of fans, the man who is Withnail has nothing to worry about.

posted under 2001, Articles
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