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.


Richard E. Grant To Join ‘Downton Abbey’ For Season 5

February14

HitFix.com – 14th February, 2014

The ‘Gosford Park’ star isn’t the only one who will be joining in

By Liane Bonin Starr

While some of us will forever remember Richard E. Grant from “Withnail and I,” he’s moving into far tonier role. The actor (who has also appeared in classy stuff like “Gosford Park” and “The Age of Innocence”) is set to join the cast of “Downton Abbey” for the show’s fifth season. He’s not the only one, either.

While Grant will be playing the role of Simon Bricker, who visits Downton Abbey as a guest of the Granthams, Anna Chancellor (“The Hour,” “Four Weddings and a Funeral”) will be taking on a role as Lady Anstruther. Also on deck will be Rade Sherbedgia (“Eyes Wide Shut,” “24”) as a Russian refugee.

Returning guest cast member Dame Harriet Walter will reprise her role as Lady Shackleton,
along with Peter Egan, returning as Lord Flintshire.

“Masterpiece” Executive Producer Rebecca Eaton says, “We look forward to introducing these new characters to our ‘Masterpiece’ audience. They will make a wonderful addition to the beloved Downton Abbey ensemble.” In other words, no clues as to what the new characters will be doing.

Downton Abbey’s Executive Producer Gareth Neame, the Managing Director of Carnival Films, says, “We are delighted to welcome these talented actors to the world of Downton. The characters they play are set to bring yet more excitement and intrigue to the show.”

The good news is that all our favorites will be back (so, hopefully, no horrible car accident or postpartum deaths). The new season will feature returning stars Maggie Smith, Hugh Bonneville, Michelle Dockery, Elizabeth McGovern, Jim Carter, Penelope Wilton, Phyllis Logan, Samantha Bond, Laura Carmichael, Lily James, Allen Leech, Brendan Coyle, Joanne Froggatt, Lesley Nicol, Sophie McShera, Rob James-Collier, Ed Speleers, Kevin Doyle, Raquel Cassidy, David Robb, Tom Cullen, Julian Ovenden, Daisy Lewis, Douglas Reith, Jeremy Swift and Andrew Scarborough.

The fourth season of Downton Abbey, which concludes on February 23, hit a new record high in the U.S. with its Season 4 opener, averaging 15 million viewers, an increase of 39 percent from the Season 3 opening episode. The show’s third season became the highest rated TV drama in PBS’ history and reached over 24 million viewers, a 7 million increase on Season 2. Downton Abbey is now one of the highest rated dramas on American Television.

Are you excited about Richard E. Grant joining the show?

posted under 2014, Articles

Richard E Grant At The 2014 South Bank Sky Arts Awards

January27

British actor Richard E Grant arrives for South Bank Sky Arts Awards 2014, held at the Dorchester Hotel in central London, Monday, Jan. 27, 2014. (Photos by Joel Ryan/Invision/AP)

posted under 2014, Sightings

Diary Of A Perfumed Ponce – Part 2

January27

Originally published in the January 2014 edition of British GQ.


Image by Nikita Andrianova

PART TWO

Richard E. Grant
(Or the A-Z of how I got set up in the Scent business)

January 2012 – No sooner landed back from the Caribbean with Anya Hindmarch’s encouragement to ‘Go for it’ ringing in my cranium, than the harsh winds of Hounslow and the cold reality of actually getting ‘started’ in the perfume business, came doubt-filling and scuppering my resolve. Not unlike a holiday romance where your entire future is romantically mapped out, then disintegrates within nano-seconds of landing on home turf. But being Anya, before I’d even emptied my suitcase, ‘ping’ goes my iPhone with an email ‘introducing’ me to Independent British Perfumer Lynn Harris of Miller-Harris, who kindly agrees to meet me.

Tube to Notting Hill and head for Lynn’s shop, feeling like a fraud every step the closer I get. She is as open and generous with her advice and time as you’d never expect a total stranger to be. Seated in her basement ‘laboratory’, she details the rudimentaries of getting started and is visibly relieved that I am not intending to make a celebrity scent. ‘Passion is everything’.

It’s like a game of ‘Snakes and Ladders’ where, with my first throw of the dice, I’ve zoomed from Start to the top of the first ‘step’ getting expert advice and being taken seriously, surprised that Lynn doesn’t dismiss my beginners ideas outright. Be ‘patient and resolute’, as it’s a treacherous ‘market’ to manoeuvre through. Feels like taking baby steps into a ‘business’ which at this point is as invisible as scent itself.
Catapulted back into the last century when I confessed to my music teacher/mentor that I wanted to become a professional actor, fully anticipating a Panto chorus of ‘Oh no you don’t!’

April 2012 – ‘Marigay meet Richard, Richard meet Marigay’ is how Anya’s next magic wand email intro goes. Ms Mckee is the head buyer of all things Beauty related at Harrods and as immaculately groomed and business-brained as you’d expect her to be. Works a 60 hour week, is Exocet -missile focussed and within my ten minute meeting, which has taken almost as many weeks to secure, Marigay details what sells, what doesn’t, the costs of hiring staff and a ‘stand’ in the perfume department and suggests I meet Roja Dove, the scent Supremo who has his own bespoke Emporium on the fifth floor. Everything about her office is uber-efficient and chic-assistant-scheduled-to-the-second and I can’t help feeling like a country bumpkin flattening my nose to the glass wall of a corporate world I will never earn entry to.

Took a deep breath on my way out and ventured into Roja Dove’s Lalique glass and chandeliered luxe perfumery that looks like Ali Baba’s cave of gleaming treasures. A Rolodex of dollar signs scrolls cartoonishly across my eyeballs prompting a tiny voice to whisper up from nowhere – ‘You have no backer, no production company, no distributor, no retailer, no business plan, no hope, boy!!’ This horribly familiar yo-yo of hope and doubt is swathed aside by Marigay who intro-emails me to Roja within minutes of leaving her office. ‘Yes, I will help you in every way I can. Let’s meet’. Before we do so, we back and forth emails with an immediacy and familiarity as if we’d known each other forever. Meet for dinner in Mayfair where he lives. At fifty five, billiard bald, and coutured from collar to calf in velvet with diamond rings on every other finger, Roja is a walking-talking-perfume-lexicon with an encyclopedic knowledge that he is willing to share.

Impeccably well spoken and mannered, he is unequivocal about the David and Goliath nature of the business world and pin points what kind of ‘market’ I am aiming for – ‘Niche or Mass? Bespoke or ‘Boots’?’

Am taking notes as fast as I can with the challenge of getting my ‘greys’ around all the practical aspects of bottles, packaging, tops, atomisers, labels, licences, base oils, patent application for the name, up down and sideways.

No sooner has this list unravelled, than Roja asks me to note all the smells I love or loathe, topped off by an hour long Olfactory tester session.

He opens a series of upright cases that are a ‘library’ of tiny tubes which he ‘blind’ tests me on, writing down every response to assess my ‘nose buds’.

It’s the sniff-equivalent of twenty Christmas dinners and for a ‘Smellaholic’, sheer nirvana.

He concludes that, possibly because I’ve never smoked nor drunk, my schnoz is ‘fresh, clear, pure and obsessed’. Haha!

‘Go to Grasse!- as soon as possible – to Robertet who produce the purest and best perfume oils available to properly immerse yourself”.

Even though warned otherwise, I’ve fixed on an image of the Provencal hillsides all flowered-up and Timotei advert scented.
Mais non Monsieur!

Roja has arranged for an private tour and before my wife and I have even got out of the rental car, the perfume saturated air is overwhelming. The factory machinery is part Dickensian, cheek by jowelled with 21st transforming tons of petals via a Dr Seuss-ish hiss and steam process that produces drumfuls of perfume wax. All described in epic techno-detail to which our heads nodded, like dashboard dogs. Meeting a professional ‘Nose’ whose job it is to mix and create new perfumes convinces me that this is exactly what I want to be doing. Headed home feeling frisky as a pair of whippets!

posted under 2014, Articles

Diary Of A Perfumed Ponce

January25

Originally published in the December 2013 edition of British GQ.


Image by Nikita Andrianova

PART ONE

Richard E. Grant
(Or the A-Z of how I got set up in the Scent business)

Two Boxing Days ago, whilst holidaying in the Caribbean, I had my nose in a Gardenia bush when fellow house-guest, Anya Hindmarch – handbag and accessories design supremo – asked whether I intended ‘Seeing someone about this?’ ‘This’ being my lifelong obsession with smelling everything in sight. ‘Do you mean seeing a ‘Shrink’?’

She laughed and said ‘No, I meant creating a perfume’.

In that instant I realised that I’d been hoping someone might ask me, for as long as I could remember. Tantamount to an epiphany, because as Anya fired her question, I knew that if anyone was going to be able guide me, she was the perfect ‘fit’. Having started up her own business at the age of 19, buying bags in Italy and then deciding to design and get them made herself, she forged a business now worth millions with shops across the planet.

Anya – my-impromptu-start-a-business Fairy Godmother effectively waved her magic wand AKA iPhone at me and said take a seat. ‘What will your perfume smell like, look like, feel like and who is it aimed at?’ All asked with ‘Do-re-mi’ directness. ‘What’s taken you so long?’

Felt impelled to confess that as I got 4% in my Maths Mock ‘O’Level in 1973, the prospect of trying to start a fledgling business with this ‘numeric disability’ had Kiboshed my ambitions ever since.

She chuckled this aside and declared that ‘Passion is everything. You can’t really fake it, and as you are so passionate about perfume, this will carry you through, all the way!’. Echoing the cover blurb for the ‘Joy of Sex’ manual that came out in the 70’s.

In the spirit of which she asked – ‘So when did this obsession begin?’ Her genuine interest unleashed a mini-monologue-confessional that came hurtling out just above a murmur.

‘Nine years old, growing up in Swaziland, I dreamt of making the perfect perfume by combining Gardenia flowers and rose petals in a jam jar of boiling water, melted sugar, sealing the top, shaking it up and burying it in the ground for a week. Regrettably when I dug it up, ‘Big Stinko’ was the nostril curling result. Tried using cold water instead, forgoing the sugar. The result was even more rank. Producing ‘Stink Bombs’ wasn’t what I had in mind, but they did prove their worth when playing ‘War’ for bombarding the ‘Enemy’ with putrid-slime-water filled balloons.

The decimation of the flower garden and parental complaints about their sons returning home stinking of pond weed, put a swift full-stop to my olfactory bomb making activities. What it didn’t do was stop my lifelong obsession with smelling everything and secretly dreaming of working out how to trap that elusive Gardenia in a bottle. 55 minus 9 = Go on- you do the maths -that’s how many years it’s taken me to diarise this ‘beginning’!

‘What is it about the Gardenia?’

‘Smells to me like the Holy Grail of scent – an inhalation of which never ceases to induce a sensory rush that’s sort of like an Ecstatic Orgasmatron’.

‘You sound like Austin Powers?’

‘I know. I’ve no shame! I read that smell is the shortest synaptic leap in the brain to our memory and every time I stick my nose into a Gardenia, I feel like I’m nine years old again and living in Africa. The five years ago I was at a friend’s wedding anniversary in Tuscany and danced with a woman whose neck brought me to a standstill, mid-boogie. ‘What perfume are you wearing?’. Fought to suppress an overwhelming impulse to lick her neck, like a preparatory vampire. She handed me a tiny half filled glass tube of perfume oil as surreptitiously as a drug deal, and said ‘It’s yours to keep’. And ‘drugged’ I surely was. The sexiest scent I had ever smelt and the closest approximation to trapping the elusive Gardenia-in-a-bottle I’d yet come across. I’d discovered that it’s one of the few flowers that’s proved impossible to extract naturally, so it’s always a chemical concoction. ‘Where can I buy this?’

My stranger laughed and said –‘A little store in Malibu’.

‘Coup de foudre’ – aka ‘Love at first sight’ or in my case ‘smell’, seriously wobbled my marriage vows that night as I struggled to separate the scent from the stranger who now seemed an earthly Aphrodite.

But, but, but – steady the buffs, boy! – Bruce(Withnail and I) Robinson, my Svengali and mentor is wont to quote T.S.Elliot’s –

Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the shadow

Instead of leaving my wife, I knew then and there that before my days were done, I had to try and make my boyhood dream become a middle-aged man’s reality. But what about that measly 4% for Maths and dismal 26% for Chemistry?’

Anya torpedoes these doubts with – ‘You don’t need to be a bean-counter to go into business or be a rocket scientist to make perfume. There are people who can do all that for you. What they can’t do is match your passion for perfume. I am going to draw up a list of people for you to meet back in Blighty’.

Grabbed, hugged and swirled Ms Hindmarch in that Caribbean evening air like a man possessed. Half an hour later, she handed me the contact details of names to get me started.

‘But I’m just an actor’ doubts began yo-yoing out of my mouth, which Anya instantly ‘corked’ with – ‘ So worst case scenario is that you end up with a loft full of unsold perfume bottles which you can give to all your friends till the day you drop, but at least you will have tried’.

Her Hindmarch iron-willed, smiling assurances brooked no doubt. Challenging me to the equivalent of a Medieval joust: Time to get your armour on, Swaziboy. Mount up, charge and tilt at full speed ahead!’.

posted under 2013, Articles

Smells Like Doobie

January23

www.timeslive.co.za – 23rd January, 2014

By Pearl Boshomane

How does one star make a fragrance stand out in the oversaturated world of celebrity perfumes? By making it marijuana-infused, of course.

Legendary Withnail and I actor Richard E Grant, born in Swaziland and educated in South Africa, has collaborated with UK department store Liberty on a unisex fragrance due out in April.

Grant told The Daily Telegraph the idea came from his friend, designer Anya Hindmarch, after she noticed him smelling plants.

He said: “I always have 100 things on the go. I’ve been working on the perfume for two years, being taught at the knee of ‘a nose’ in Paris.”

The fragrance, called Jack, has notes of lime, clove, mandarin, tobacco and marijuana.

The bottle design will be British-inspired: it will come in “pillar-box red casing and feature vintage bunting calico”.

The world of celebrity fragrances is lucrative. Sky News has estimated the fragrances rake in £3-billion a year. Stars ranging from Rihanna and Taylor Swift to Bruce Willis and Michael Jordan have lines (Willis has just released his third fragrance, named Personal Edition).

Style Caster reports there were 85 celebrity fragrances launched in 2012 alone. Beyoncé, said Sky, can charge more than £2-million (about R38-million) to create a perfume using her image and brand.

Stars have long been great ambassadors for fragrances. Chanel No 5’s classic status was associated with screen icon Marilyn Monroe, and in the 1950s Givenchy created a fragrance for Audrey Hepburn. Elizabeth Taylor’s perfume, White Diamonds, made £46-million in 2011, the year she died.

posted under 2014, Articles
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