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.


The Actor As Golden Retriever

December26

The Hamilton Spectator – 26th December, 2018

By Kyle Buchanan.

Richard E Grant backstage at “The Late Late Show With James Corden” in November. The actor is earning — and savoring — Oscar buzz for the first time in his career, for his work in “Can You Ever Forgive Me?”. Photo: Jake Michaels NYT

Who’s better suited for award season than Richard E. Grant?

It was an early November morning at a West Hollywood screening room, and the woman with the vegan-leather handbag was determined to speak to Richard E. Grant.

“Sorry, I just wanted to ask you something,” she said, weaving her way through a crowd of British expatriates who had gathered to honour their countryman’s performance in Oscar contender “Can You Ever Forgive Me?”

In that fact-based dramedy, 61-year-old Grant plays a disarming and dissolute gadfly named Jack Hock, and the way the young woman approached Grant reminded me of the way Hock sidles up to author Lee Israel (played by Melissa McCarthy) and quickly becomes her partner in a lucrative, larcenous forgery scheme.

At the screening room, the 6-foot-2 Grant, clad in a Union Jack vest, took note of his chic questioner and bent forward to greet her.
“Do you think you’re a golden retriever?” the woman asked him.

Grant blinked. As her query hung in the air, so did the handbag.

The event was organized for Bafta members, who vote on the British equivalent of the Oscars, and it was the latest stop on a promotional tour meant to propel Grant into the award-season conversation as a contender for best supporting actor. In the weeks to come, Grant would find himself nominated for a Golden Globe and a SAG Award, but on the day I shadowed him, he still wondered if all these events would amount to something. This sort of press blitz was all very new for Grant, who got his first film role in the 1987 cult comedy “Withnail & I” because an up-and-comer named Daniel Day-Lewis turned it down.

While Day-Lewis has since become an above-the-title star and the only man to ever win three Oscars for best actor, Grant found himself shaped by an acting teacher who told him he was too “lantern-jawed, tombstonefaced, and sepulchral-featured” to ever make it as a lead. Not that it deterred Grant from acting: When critics of “Withnail” used the same pejoratives to describe him, “I thought, ‘Well, at least I got the part,'” Grant said.

He has continued to work steadily since, bringing his loopy comic brio to bear in guest appearances on shows like “Game of Thrones” and “Girls” and movies that run the gamut from “Gosford Park” to “Hudson Hawk.” Still, those supporting roles are the sort of thing an actor can do for a long time without being singled out for special recognition, which is what makes this moment so sweet for Grant.

A lifelong diarist with an eye for detail, he was in his element in front of the full-house Bafta crowd, unfurling career anecdotes like a seasoned raconteur. They asked Grant about playing an alcoholic in both “Withnail & I” and “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” despite the fact that he is a teetotaller, which is mentioned so prominently on his Wikipedia page that it comes up in every interview.

Grant answered gamely that he tried alcohol once and found himself allergic to it, and besides, he learned plenty about drinking from his father, an alcoholic minister of education in Swaziland who tried to shoot Grant when the boy was 15. “He missed,” Grant said, “because he was too pissed.”

Melissa McCarthy, left, and Richard E. Grant in a scene from “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” Grant was nominated for a Golden Globe award for supporting actor in a motion picture for his role in the film. – Mary Cybulski , The Associated Press

That’s the sort of life that inspires eccentric questions, but after the Bafta panel, even Grant found himself at a loss when the woman with the vegan-leather purse asked whether he thought of himself as a golden retriever. “Because I do,” she added. “I have a golden retriever and I think they’re so super friendly with everyone.”

“I’ll take that,” said Grant, though he would later muse to me that he was far too much of a character actor to play the part of a golden retriever. “I’ve always physically felt like I’m a flamingo,” he said. “Putting my beak into other people’s stories and lives is what galvanizes me.”

Jack Hock is one of those people, and the character is far closer to being a hound than the man who portrays him: Hock is so delighted by good gossip that as he runs his mouth, he might as well be wagging a tail. Hock also has a nose for trouble and proves to be a disastrous house sitter, yet remains so endearing that Israel can’t quite shake him as her friend.

Later that day, I met Grant in his dressing room for “The Late Late Show With James Corden,” where a segment producer was giving him the run of show. “So you play an alcoholic in this movie,” said the producer, “but you’re a teetotaller in real life?” Grant nodded dutifully.

He was there with McCarthy to promote “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” but he knew that next to a box office star like her, he’d have to play the supporting role in real life. When they took the stage, Corden asked McCarthy, “Tell us mere mortals, how does it feels to be an icon?” When he turned to Grant, his first question was about playing the manager in “Spice World.”

After their segments were over, and McCarthy and Grant had been made to play a game modelled after “The Price Is Right,” Grant returned to the dressing room and sprawled out on a chair, exhausted. “James knows who I am in England, but the audience here has no idea what movies he’s talking about,” Grant fretted.

Still, he found himself amazed by the host, who projected the boundless energy of … well, a golden retriever. “He has innate confidence, and that’s an amazing thing to see in an actor,” Grant said. “He’s just so untrammeled by doubt.”

You could tell Grant was taking notes. When Corden asked how he was so good at playing an alcoholic despite decades of sobriety, Grant met his host’s enthusiasm with the zeal of someone hearing the question for the first time. I noted that Grant would probably spend the next three months delivering variations on the same answer, and only a consummate character actor could find new line readings to last that long.

“Three months?” he asked. That would take him to February and the Oscars. Grant did the mental math and smiled.

“Three months,” he said again, readying himself for the task. “I’m going to hold you to it.”

posted under 2018, Articles

Richard E. Grant On His Golden Globes Nomination And His Strategy For Selfies With Actors He Admires

December7

LA Times – 6th December, 2018

By Amy Kaufman


Melissa McCarthy and Richard E. Grant in “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” (Mary Cybulski / Fox Searchlight)

A longtime character actor known for scene-stealing performances in “Logan,” “Gosford Park” and the cultishly revered 1987 film “Withnail & I,” Richard E. Grant earned his first Golden Globe nomination on Thursday for his contribution to “Can You Ever Forgive Me?”

The story of a celebrity biographer (played by fellow nominee Melissa McCarthy) who enlists Grant’s character for help in taking a turn toward deception, the movie was directed by Marielle Heller. Below, Grant talks about the changes “Can You Ever Forgive Me?” brought to his life and being “a puppy let loose in the pet shop” about meeting actors he admires.

How are you doing?

I’m pretty astonished and thrilled. I can’t be cynical about any of this. I’ve been around for 3½ decades doing this, and I’m turning 62 in the spring. Usually the trajectory of an actor’s life after the age of 50, because we’re in such a youth-centric industry, is diminishing returns. So the fact that I went from “Logan” to “Nutcracker” and am currently shooting “Star Wars,” it’s a career the likes of which I couldn’t possibly have anticipated. Marielle taking a chance casting me was an excellent opportunity.

Why do you feel she took a chance in casting you?

The character was an American from Portland, Ore., and so I asked her if I should do an American accent. She said “No, speak as you do.” I said, “Is that because you think I can’t do it?” And she said, “No, I want you to play it as an English person.” She told me it was what she saw me bringing to the part. She had every possible choice who she could have offered the part to — an enormous star, not some English character actor.

Marielle didn’t receive a directing nomination, nor did any female director. What are your thoughts on that?

It’s very hurtful for her, but she is such a generous, kind, compassionate person that she phoned me and she sent me a video message of her walking through Brooklyn — and her delight and joy was undiluted and completely unselfish. She wasn’t at all upset she hasn’t been nominated.

Of course, it’s disappointing when you have two actors in one movie nominated [but not the director]. They didn’t do it by themselves. They had a great director.

On Twitter, you said her casting you in this film has changed your career. How so?

In a way that I couldn’t possibly have anticipated. I want to the Governor’s Ball a couple of weeks ago, and every single person in the room was somebody I had admired since the year dot. Just to be in the room with them was a great thrill for me.

Are you the kind of person who will walk up to someone you admire, or just admire from afar?

Are you insane? I’ll unabashedly go up to people. It’s the only chance I have. The worst they can do is diss you or call security. I went up to everybody from Clint Eastwood to Lady Gaga to Emily Blunt. I was like a puppy let loose in the pet shop.

Did you take selfies with anyone?

Nobody was doing it there, otherwise I would have. I would have loved to. Do people do that at the Golden Globes?

Maybe. It’s a pretty alcohol-heavy environment.

I’m allergic to alcohol, so I’ll be the most sober person in the room blaming my selfies on that.

posted under 2018, Interviews

Coping With His Mother’s Infidelity: The Diary Secrets Of Richard E Grant

January30

The Daily Mail – 30th January, 2016


Richard E Grant
‘My mother’s infidelity made me start, aged 10’

Actor, director and writer of ‘The Wah-Wah Diaries: The Making Of A Film’ and ‘With Nails: The Film Diaries Of Richard E Grant’

When did you start writing a diary?
I started after witnessing my mother’s infidelity when I was ten (Grant saw his mother make love to his father’s best friend in her car). I had no one to talk to – I’d tried God but not received an answer – so I kept a diary to try to make sense of the world.

Why do you keep it?
It has been invaluable in trying to work out how the world works; what might seem incomprehensible has a way of unravelling and resolving itself when you try to put it on paper. It’s also a way of revisiting or examining the past ‘as it happened’ as it’s written on the day things occurred so has a truth that isn’t distorted or falsified by memory.

When do you write it?
I write it almost every day on my iPhone or iPad. Before that I used a laptop, and before that – in the Jurassic Age – a typewriter.

Has it caused any embarrassing moments?
I ruthlessly detailed the staggering incompetence wrought by the producer of my autobiographical film Wah-Wah. She threatened to sue me for my honesty.

What has it taught you?
The astonishing breadth of the talented people I’ve met and worked with is so disproportionate to my teenage expectations, so keeping a diary has made the ‘unreal’ feel real. Looking back over the journals, I realise that I have either met or worked with my entire secret list of heroes.

What are your top tips?
Be yourself, be honest and be unequivocal. Don’t try to censor yourself as this makes the account instantly lose its honesty and immediacy.

Who are your favourite diarists?
Joe Orton – his candour and humour are addictive – and Kenneth Williams.

posted under 2016, Interviews

Penguin Podcast: Richard E. Grant & Phil Redmund

January12

Penguin Books UK – 12th January, 2016

Phil Redmond, the creator of Brookside, Hollyoaks and Grange Hill, turns his hand from TV scripts to his first novel, Highbridge. Phil brings with him an assortment of objects that inspired the book, including an Army ration pack and a ‘pay and throw’ phone and he discusses a variety of topics including how writing a novel differs from script writing, the impact of technology on society and the war on drugs.

[hana-flv-player video=”http://www.richard-e-grant.com/Multimedia/PenguinPodcasts/PenguinPodcastNumber10-PhilRedmund.mp3″ splashimage=”http://www.richard-e-grant.com/Multimedia/PenguinPodcasts/PenguinPodcastGraphic.jpg” width=”400″ height=”” /]

Richard E Grant invites authors, comedians, musicians, historians, actors, business leaders, philosophers and fellow actors to join him at the Penguin studios with five objects that inspired and shaped the writing of their latest book. The objects they bring to the conversation act as a diving board for Richard to delve deep into the author’s world to fully understand the origins of their story, the experiences that influenced its development and the vision for translating the story into an audiobook, excerpts of which are heard throughout the episode. Every podcast is unique as our authors shape the conversation through the objects they select to illustrate the creative process. The themes of the book provide the inspiration for wider cultural discussions.

To subscribe to the podcast, go to http://po.st/penguinpodsubscribe.

posted under 2016

Penguin Podcast: Richard E. Grant & Michael Acton Smith

December29

Penguin Books UK – 29th December, 2015

Michael Acton Smith, founder of Mind Candy who created Moshi Monsters demystifies mindfulness and talks to Richard about how it can be used to rewire our brains, change the way we see the world and help us unlock our true potential. Michael reveals what lead him to write ‘Calm’ and how mindfulness changed his life.

[hana-flv-player video=”http://www.richard-e-grant.com/Multimedia/PenguinPodcasts/PenguinPodcastNumber9-MichaelActonSmith.mp3″ splashimage=”http://www.richard-e-grant.com/Multimedia/PenguinPodcasts/PenguinPodcastGraphic.jpg” width=”400″ height=”” /]

Richard E Grant invites authors, comedians, musicians, historians, actors, business leaders, philosophers and fellow actors to join him at the Penguin studios with five objects that inspired and shaped the writing of their latest book. The objects they bring to the conversation act as a diving board for Richard to delve deep into the author’s world to fully understand the origins of their story, the experiences that influenced its development and the vision for translating the story into an audiobook, excerpts of which are heard throughout the episode. Every podcast is unique as our authors shape the conversation through the objects they select to illustrate the creative process. The themes of the book provide the inspiration for wider cultural discussions.

To subscribe to the podcast, go to http://po.st/penguinpodsubscribe.

posted under 2015
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