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.


Withnail Dusted Off For Charity

February7

BBC News Online – Monday 7th February, 2000

Paul McGann and Richard E Grant in Withnail and I

British film star Richard E Grant is to host a charity screening of his cult film Withnail and I to raise money for his former school in Swaziland.

The sold-out show in London’s West End will be followed by an auction of memorabilia from the classic movie – which follows two out-of-work actors seeking solace in drink, drugs and the English countryside.

Among the items up for grabs will be the sweeping Harris tweed coat designed by Andrea Galer and worn by Grant in the 1987 film.

Looking ahead to the evening, the 42-year-old actor said: “It will be very nostalgic, and a great opportunity to say thankyou to the people that have supported this film and this charity down the years.

“I think it will be an absolute Camberwell Carrot bonanza of an evening,” he added.

A star-studded crowd is expected to attend, including Grant’s Withnail co-star Paul McGann and the film’s writer and director Bruce Robinson.

The guests will then move on to a spectacular after-show party.

All the money raised from the event will go to the Waterford School, which Richard E Grant attended in the seventies along with Nelson Mandela’s daughters.

He describes it as an “extraordinary and visionary” school, which was founded in the 60s by an Englishman, as a direct response and protest to the apartheid regime in neighbouring South Africa.

There are now 52 nationalities at Waterford and in particular the actor praises its quest for individualism.

“I was the only one who wanted to be an actor, which in the early seventies in Swaziland was tantamount to saying you want to be an astronaut. It just was ridiculous, but the school encouraged and supported individualism.”

Sixties throwback.

The actor is now among the trustees of the Waterford school and decided the cult sixties character Withnail would be the perfect way to raise funds for the establishment.

“As it was a school created in the 60s when the ideology of ‘we can change the world’ marked a generation prior to the onset of the ‘me-for-me-and-my-money-only’ zeitgeist, I thought it appropriate to haul that last-gasp-of-the-60s reprobate, Withnail, out of the bar for one last screening”.

The appeal has attracted donations from the likes of Madonna, Phil Collins and David Bowie, and has already raised in the region of £60,000.

This money will enable more young people to attend the school and study for their International Baccalaureate, which qualifies students to attend any university in the world.

Grant hopes they will then return to Africa to use their qualifications and experiences for the benefit of their home countries.

“Post-apartheid, the need for first rate education to fill the ‘brain drain’ vacuum is all the more urgent,” says the actor.

Grant was educated at Waterford in the 1970s

Madonna is a patron of the Swaziland school

Lord Attenborough heads the school’s trustees

posted under 2000, Articles

Why I Forgave The Woman Who Deserted Me

February5

The Daily Mail, Weekend Supplement – 5th February, 2000

Richard E Grant

As a child in Swaziland, Richard E Grant was mocked over his parent’s divorce and his desire to act. But attending the school where nelson Mandela send his children taught him to overcome all this. Now, in a penetrating interview, he tells Rebecca Hardy of the bizarre and tragic events that still drive him.

Richard Esterhuysen was a rather odd, stick-thin child who played with puppets. He grew up in Swaziland in a smart house with servants overlooking the beautiful Valley of Heaven, but didn’t believe in God. Heaven and those that lived there hadn’t been kind to him. When he was just ten years old, his mother had run off to Johannesburg with a mining engineer. She’d woken him one morning to tell him she was leaving and was gone by bedtime.

He buried his pain in a fantasy world and film became his religion. The starts of the screen were his family. He yearned to be famous like them, to live in the Never-never land of happy ever afters. His father Henrik, Swaziland’s director for education, thought it was just a passing phase, like pimples. His classmates scoffed, telling him, “You’ll never make it.”

Spurred on by such taunts, revenge drove him to act. Soon, Richard had truncated his Afrikaans- sounding surname to a single letter. Then, in 1982, and shortly after his father died from cancer at the age of 51, he moved to England. He was restless, relentless, outrageous, determined in his ambition. Within five years he had become a household name, thanks to his starring role in the hugely popular cult movie Withnail and I, in which he played a desolate, drugged-up actor attempting to come to terms with the end of the sixties.

He remained angry though; angry with the mother who had left him, angry that his father should have died so young and, most of all, angry with the double standards of Swaziland’s slack white morality that allowed lazy adultery but was scandalised by divorce. The stigma of his parents’ separation was dreadful to endure as a child. Success has blunted that anger, and now, middle-age seems to have extinguished it. Richard is 42 and married to voice coach Joan Washington, with whom he has an 11 year old daughter, Olivia.

“I’m more comfortable with myself now than I’ve ever been,” he says. “When you get to your 40s you care less about what other people say about you. It’s entriely to do with age. As you get older, compassion comes hurtling through the door completely unexpectedly. It defuses revenge. I suppose you get more tolerant because you realise your own vulnerability.”

“Bearing grudges is more self-destructive than anything else. When you’re younger it’s you against the world. You think, “I’ll show them I can do this.” But after a while when you have shown them and you’re still getting employed and the bank manager isn’t burning down the front door, you can ease out of it.”

“It’s important to be able to forgive. A watershed for me was meeting the late Roddy McDowall. I interviewed him for a novel I was writing for background research. He was 70 and I wanted to find out what retired movie stars did on a day-to-day basis. He asked me how I saw myself as an old man. I’d never been asked that before. He told me the trick was not to end up bitter and twisted. He said “In this city, with the people I know, bitter and twisted is the norm.”

“Now, in my mid-40s, I see the people I meet are absolutely divided between the people who have hope and are connected to new ideas and new talent and the ones who are locked down and threatened by younger people – those that feel their sell-by date has been and gone.”

Richard doesn’t look middle-aged. His hair is cut short and gelled without a single strand of grey. He wears green combat trousers and an actor’s uniform fleece jacket. The stick thin frame is still stick-thin, but terribly youthful. His eyes are quite extraordinary; a colbalt-blue, but warm.

Richard E Grant

I meet Richard to talk about his latest project, Withnail For Waterford, a West End charity screening of the cult film attended by the original cast with an auction of Withnail memorabilia to raise money for bursaries so that children from poor families can attend his old school, Waterford Kamhlaba. He has already raised almost £50,000 from ticket sales and hopes for further donations. He has promised to respond personally to anyone who sends money. He is fuelled with enthusiasm for the project, still hugely fond of his old school. “At Waterford you were encouraged in your individualism rather than prejudiced against it. So, following theatre, music or drama was not thought of as, “What on earth are you doing?” As much as a school can form anybody, it gave me the self-confidence to go out and do something. It gave me the sense that as an individual you have the power to change your own life.”

The film industry can be a nasty, cruel business, but Richard has been heartened by the generosity he has encountered from the likes of Sir Bob Geldof, Richard Curtis, David Bowie, Lulu, Twiggy. They are friends as well, but he probably wouldn’t have known them if he’d not attended the progressive Waterford School at 14.

Founded by inspirational Englishman Michael Stern as a protest against the apartheid system in neighbouring South Africa, the emphasis was upon tolerance and humanity. Desmond Tutu and South African President thabo Mbeki sent their children there, as did an imprisoned Nelson Mandela.

“Once independence had happened in Swaziland, I was able to go to a private school. Before that it would have been seen as very wrong because of my father’s job with education in the colonial service. When I was in the government school I was teased a lot because the idea of having puppets and wanting to be an actor set me apart.”

“That’s really where the idea of revenge came from. It was particularly rough the first couple of years after my parents divcorced. I was the only kid in my year whose parents were divorced and there was a real social stigma to it. Lots of the parents had affairs, but it meant there was something wrong with you if your parents separated. “I was never beaten up but people would say, “Where’s you mum?” or “Is your mum coming back?” For a while I’d fantasise that they’d get back together. Now, the older I get the more I understand what happened. Thankfully, I’ve been reconciled with my mum over the last few years. She’s explained that she felt she had to get out. It wasn’t personal. Seeing it from an adult perspective I’ve been able to accept and forgive and take how she felt on board without bearing a grudge. I understand now that the act of leaving your partner and children is devastating on all sides. When you’re the person being left behind though, you tend to think, “I’ve been abandoned.”

“In the community I lived in there was such a pecking order as well – according to how many servants people had. We were at the top in terms of soical standing, which is why the stigma of divorce was so difficult. I was also so skinny, just like a stick insect, and I had pimples.”

Richard’s father had hoped his son would be a lawyer or a journalist. “Because I was very argumentative, he thought I should do something that allowed me to gab my way out of a situation. He knew I wasn’t going to get my fisticuffs up. I’d always talk back rather than fight.” Besides, there was no one in Swaziland who had made a career as a professional actor. The very notion was far-fetched.

“I’m just sorry he didn’t live long enough to see the kind of ongoing progress I’ve made,” he says. When Richard’s father was buried, a Swazi priest leapt down into teh grave, on top of the casket, and began to unscrew the bolts while chanting. “I’m going to raise the dead.” He saw his father’s corpse in the opened coffin. “It was insane and horrifying, but it was also funny at the same time. It was exactely the sort of idiosyncratic thing that happened in Swaziland. I remember thinking at the time, “If only he could have been here to see this.” Because, if it happened to somebody else, he would have found it terribly funny.”

“My father was an atheist. He always encouraged the notion that what is here is extraordinary and amazing, so to have an expectation that there’s something beyond it is asking a bit too much. Every morning I’d be able to look out of the window over the Valley of Heaven. It was absoluately gorgeous and he’d say, “You are not going to find somewhere else more beauitiful than this in the clouds.” Like him, I absoluately believe in the here and now. I have no expectation that there’s anything beyond. Life’s to be grabbed with every fibre of your being.”

“Life is not idyllic. There’s no such thing. There seems to be a fairytale desire for people to believe a marriage is made in heaven, that it’s perfect and you’ll live happily ever after. But the reality of life is not that straightforward. My marriage is not idyllic. I’m far too volatile and so is my wife. We argue about everything. We went to a movie the other night and had a great argument about the content of the movie and what the acting was like. We’ll argue about who is more tired than the other person or who hasn’t cooked dinner – the trival things in life.”

“Have I been temted to have an affair? I’m attracted to people on a daily basis. But have I ever had one? No. I think if you have a compatible marriage you’re not seeking it. That’s not to say you couldn’t meet someone and there’s a thunderbolt and you think, “This person has completely turned my head around. wham, bam. I’m off.” But an affair – I think if you do you get found out.”

“When I met Joan she was married and I was one of a group of ten of her students. Having a relationship with her wasn’t really something that crossed my mind. I thought she was attractive and had a beautiful voice. She was also absoluately brilliant in terms of what she did. It actually happened when I had my first private lesson with her, which concided with my discovery that she and her husband were separated. He was living in Manchester and she was in London. She was helping me with irish accents and it happened very fast. I wouldn’t have gone near her if she’d been happily married. She had a seven-year old son, Tom, and if I’d moved in on his mum and spilt his parents’ marriage up he would have hated me.”

Joan suffered three miscarriages trying to give Richard a child. They had a baby daughter, tiffany, who was born prematurely at seven months. She died the same day. It was a terrible loss; the sort that time numbs rather than heals. “I wouldn’t want what happened to us to happen to anybody,” says Richard. “But if you’ve gone through death together it reinforces your bond to that person. It isn’t something that is easily rubbed out. It just forms who you are and how you are. It’s only when you are in a crisis that you find out about yourself and those around you. You see where and who your real friends are. It’s not unrelated to fundraising for the school. People make promises and then when you actually ask: “Are you going to commit?” you very quickly sort out who is for real and who is fake.”

Richard has just finished writing a screenplay, called Wahwah, about life in Swaziland. “A disillusioned American woman once said that’s what the expats spoke, wah-wah, so it seemed ideal as a working title,” he says. He will direct the film towards the end of the year and is returning there soon to research appropriate locations. Three decades have passed since Richard Esterhuysen sought comfort in the never-never land of film when his mother deserted him. He no longer thinks like is like the movies, although movies have became his life.

“It’s been wonderful and grotesque in equal measure,” he says. “Because the cruelty is something that you’re warned about as a young actor, but as nothing compared to what it’s actually like. There are vast sums involved in making movies and the cruelty, what people do to each other to stay at the top, is dreadful. The important thing is to forgive, move on and not hold gudges.”

Donations to the bursary fund may be made to: Waterford School Trust, 13 College Lane, London NW5 1BJ.

posted under 2000, Articles

Coat Tales – The Withnail Coat

February4

The Guardian Unlimited – Friday 4th February, 2000

Attention, film and fashion fans: the inimitable silk and tweed number worn by Richard E Grant in Withnail And I is about to go under the hammer. Susannah Barron meets its maker.

As iconic screen garments go, it’s right up there with Dorothy’s ruby slippers. The Withnail coat – a long, sweeping, heathery-hued number made from soft Harris tweed – has become imbued with all the cult appeal of the film in which it appeared, Bruce Robinson’s 1987 comedy Withnail And I.

Set in the 60s, it follows the antics of two out-of-work actors who decide to take a country break. Thirteen years on, it still has legions of fans around the world, who like nothing better than to settle down with a big spliff and recite, word for word, the “fine wine and cakes” bit.

On Monday, movie buffs have the chance to bid for the original Withnail coat, as worn with such stylish nonchalance by Richard E Grant. It is coming under the hammer, along with other Withnail memorabilia, to help raise money for the Waterford School in Swaziland. Back in the 70s, Grant attended this multi-racial school for gifted children, along with Nelson Mandela’s daughters, and he has organised the auction to follow a celebrity screening of the film.

The coat was the creation of costume designer Andrea Galer, who wanted it to look as though it had come from the family attic. She based it on a 19th-century riding coat, to allow Grant ease of movement as he gallivanted around the countryside. “When shooting fish, he had to be able to tie it up,” she explains. “Or in the scene where he rubs in Deep Heat, he had to push the sleeves up and make it look like an entirely usual activity.”

The result, in tweed lined with striped Indian silk dupion (“Some hippie friend had decided to give it a lift into the 60s”) is suitably louche. “Withnail needed to look decadent,” Galer says. “It’s a coat that has a life.”

Over the years, she has fielded countless requests from Withnail fans who want to buy a replica. A couple of years ago, she produced a limited edition Withnail coat to mark the 10th anniversary of the film; today, you can buy a replica for the relatively bargain price of £295.

Fashion and film have long been linked, but Galer pushes the relationship to its logical conclusion. A fashion, bridalwear and costume designer, she develops her film clothes into full-on fashion collections then made available to the public. Until a year ago, she had a shop in London’s Belsize Park. “It drove me nuts,” she admits. Having all her samples stolen 18 months ago didn’t help: “It was very traumatic.”

These days, she takes the modern approach of putting her collections on the web. “I can’t understand why I didn’t do it earlier,” she enthuses, genuinely excited about the creative opportunities. “You can have moving images, something to art-direct.”

Log on (www.andreagaler.co.uk) and you will find clothing inspired by Withnail, plus bridal and eveningwear from more recent film projects: Channel 4’s Cinderella, shown on New Year’s Day and starring Kathleen Turner, for which Galer created a look based on 50s couture; the new film version of Mansfield Park, which premiered at the London Film Festival and opens here next month; and the 1998 period drama Firelight.

As well as the film collections, Galer produces women’s suits and eveningwear. Based on corsetry and traditional tailoring, her look translates well into film: a model of cross-fertilisation, Galer’s contemporary clothing influences her costume, which in turn has an impact on her main collections. Look at the rails of clothes in her Belsize Park studio and you can see how it works. A curvy bridal jacket, made up in a different fabric, shortened and tweaked, fits right into the world of Jane Austen. A raspberry empire-line dress, also designed for Mansfield Park, wouldn’t look out of place in a ballroom today. “That’s a dress for now,” Galer says, pointing at it with some satisfaction.

When designing the costumes for something like Mansfield Park, she will research a period thoroughly, then alter the look slightly to appeal to the modern eye. A slip dress, for example, will be cut on the bias and slimmed down at the sides for a more contemporary look – in Jane Austen’s day, women wanted to look slightly rounder than they do now.

“I’m sure that in a few years’ time, you will be able to look back and see when a dress was made,” Galer acknowledges. But, as she says: “Stars want to look attractive. Everything looks better if it flatters somebody.”

Throughout her career, Galer has fused fashion and costume. She started out making theatrical outfits, which led to her dressing the likes of Julie Christie, as well as various pop stars of the 70s. It was through Christie that she received her first film commission, designing the costumes for Nicolas Roeg’s 1973 movie Don’t Look Now. After taking 10 years out to have children, Galer returned in the mid-80s, clothing the likes of Paul Young and Dire Straits for their videos.

Then, of course, came Withnail. “It’s a bit like the Rocky Horror Show,” Galer says, reflecting on its enduring appeal. “I still find it funny.”

She already has her own outfit planned for Monday night’s auction. She will be wearing a tailored coat from Savile Row, a Withnail scarf, a pair of jodhpurs from Cinderella and a shirt from Mansfield Park. Film and fashion don’t get much more intertwined than that.

posted under 2000, Articles

Withnail for Waterford – Nikki

January23

Nikki tries to remember straight after the event.

Hey…here’s a little of what Richard said…hopefully the rest will come back to me, but if everyone there remembers something different and posts it up…you will all get the idea!!! lol

*In the Scarlet Pimpernel, Margo dies in childbirth (I was the only one who cheered here..in front of Richard, while everyone else went “ohh..no”). Chauvlein is gone, and has been replaced by another baddy, but it sounds like all the members of the league are still there……Richard also mentioned that now there will be disguises etc so there is alot of make-up.

*Olivia has fractured her arm, fell in the school playground….(I got the impression it happened on Monday) as he said he hadn’t seen her hence he left the nightclub early.

*He took the time out to go round the table and ask what we all did and where we came from but I noticedhe didn’t do names!! lol

*Oh…and in case I *forget* I got 2…yes…2….that’s TWICE I was snogged…that’s snogged by Richard. *DOMINIQUE – get those photos done!!*

I got a huge smack on the cheek (the 2nd time) I’m after ANY copies of this picture if it turns up on anyone’s camera!! Thank you…

We all yelled at the mention of the REGiment, when Richard thanked us.

We bid for photos that were suppose to sell for £250, and ended up paying £510 (yes..you read that RIGHT!!), to Richard’s horror!!! Hence he yelled for us all to stand up and took a picture!!! :)

I attacked Joan twice!! *(didn’t mean it*!!!)*

Polly snogged every famous person in the nightclub….

Dominique and I snogged Paul McGann in the nightclub……Dominique, myself and Jacki (was it you?) we tried to have a chat with Ralph Brown, but he couldn’t hardly hear anything and stood there grinning, clutching his bag to his chest going “I’ve got to go now..I’m going..” (odd fella)

Saw Martin (?) Kemp..Polly snogged him….!!

The members of the REGiment present and accounted for now go something like this –

– Neil “GET-IN-THE-BACK-OF-THE-Van”

– Carolyn *I can’t believe it’s happened*

– Polly “I snogged the lot at the club”

– Dominique “I-DEMAND-TO-HAVE-SOME-BOOZE, perferably in little whisky bottles I can leave in a MacDonalds cheeseburger box so no one will notice”

– Jackie “chocolate, BOOZE, no sleep”

– Tracey “We’re poor give us the picture” (No..I won’t forget you shouted that out!!! (in front of Richardduring the auction!) OR “does it smell of Deep Heat” to Richard as he models the coat for auction….”yes” came Richard’s reply!!

– Anna *I got the photo of your hand on his chest!!*

– Sue *didn’t take many photos at the lunch…ahhhhh*

– Ediena *I noticed you sneeked off to the toilet after he left*

– Karen *Would you like another cup of tea Father Ted*

– Annie *First to bed out of the nightclub!!*

– Nicola *I-DEMAND-TO-BE-ABLE-TO-BUY-SHOES-IN-2-HOURS-IN-LONDON-WHAT-WILL-I-DO-IF-I-CAN’T-GET-ANY?*

– Di *Supplier of Flysaucers*

There was also the small matter of few actually being able to eat….I personally went for soup. Then by 2pm Richard had gone, by 3pm we were in Haagan Das stuffing our faces with chocolate pancakes!!!!!!!!!!!


Nikki and REG and book


Nikki and REG again


REG resorts to silly faces


What else do you want me to do? asks REG


Yet another one of Nikki and REG


Aaah, I see. Nikki finally gets what she came for!

Tickets Sold Out!

January20

Much to REG’s relief, all the tickets for Withnail for Waterford have now sold out, but visit the site and make a bid for some of the auction items anyway. I think the article REG did with the Evening Standard, plus his appearance on the Big Breakfast did plenty to help in this endeavour. Well done to the REGiment for all their help getting this event promoted. It looks like being the most fantastic evening. Let’s hope we can raise lots of money for the cause!

I’ve updated a few things, but it appears I’m getting perilously close to my webspace quota. I either have to update my account or remove some items. I don’t want to have to do that, so I have to find some more coffers and upgrade the Temple.

Quite a few fan sightings, click here to read them. For a review of With Nails click here, and a place to download Curse of the Fatal Death, click here. Thanks mainly to Nikki as usual, but also Jenny for the Big Breakfast pics and the rest of the REGiment for helping out.

Howard has also written a little piece on Uncle Monty and Bruce’s inspiration. Quite an interesting story. Read it here.

posted under News
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