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.


Penguin Podcast: Richard E. Grant & Bill Bryson

October28

Penguin Books UK – 28th October, 2015

Bill Bryson discusses The Road to Little Dribbling, his follow up to Notes From A Small Island. To tell the story of his journey Bill brings along his passport, a walking stick, a cow, Stonehenge and an ordnance survey map. Recorded with Richard E. Grant in front of a live audience at the Cambridge Corn Exchange.

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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, Penguin Podcasts

Richard E. Grant Gets Recognised For Iconic Role In Withnail And I… And The Argos Adverts

October24

BreakingNews.ie – 24th October, 2015

Richard E Grant may have a cult following – but he is just as likely to be recognised for his Argos adverts as for his iconic role in Withnail and I.

The 58-year-old played Withnail in the 1987 comedy film, but said he never knows where a fan will recognise him from.

“It’s according to what they’ve seen you in,” he explained. “You meet somebody that’s seen something from 30 years ago that you have almost no memory of, and that’s all they’ve seen you in.


Richard E Grant in Jekyll and Hyde (ITV)

“I did Argos ads, and people say – oh are you an actor? I’ve seen you in an Argos ad.

“I did a documentary series about luxury hotels for Sky Atlantic, and again that’s something that people come and either ask about, or say they’ve been to those hotels – or they want to go to those hotels – or ask, did the burger that cost $5,000 (£3,258) actually taste any good?”

However, Richard’s most famous role has not been forgotten by the public: “People shout out on a daily basis lines from Withnail and I, because it has this cult following.”

The actor, who stars in ITV’s new Jekyll and Hyde, is used to people spotting him in public.

He said: “My wife and daughter say to me ‘if you walk down the street people nudge or point or whatever’. But unless somebody does that to your face, I have no awareness of it at all.

“In America, people are much more front-footed in that they’ll go: ‘Hey! you’re that – yeah!’ Whereas in England it’s much more covert.

“I’ve walked past shop windows, looked in the window and then seen somebody go -,” he said, miming pointing. “But you don’t know whether they’re looking at the clothes, or the glass, or your bald spot.”


Richard E Grant plays Sir Roger in Jekyll and Hyde (ITV)

Richard plays Sir Roger Bulstrode in Jekyll and Hyde, a re-imagining of the classic Robert Louis Stevenson novel. In this version of the story, we meet Jekyll’s lovely grandson Robert (Tom Bateman) in the 1930s – but inside him is a monster, Hyde, who he is trying to suppress.

Richard explained of his character: “The head of the secret service, which is called MIO, which is Military Intelligence Other, which deals with all these supernatural monster, vampire characters in the story. And he spends a lot of time trying to recruit Jekyll so that he can access Hyde’s superpowers.


Jekyll and Hyde, with Richard E Grant, Tom Bateman and Natalie Gumede (ITV)

“He’s one-track-minded, thinks everyone else is useless at their jobs, has no respect for the person who is above him, and is completely obsessed with his job and doesn’t seem to have any life outside of that.”

On his own obsession – with smell – Richard said: “Everything seems completely normal to me. But I know that licking your plate and smelling everything in sight is what most people think as aberrant behaviour, whereas to me I don’t understand why everybody doesn’t do that.”

Jekyll and Hyde airs on Sunday, October 25 at 6.30pm on ITV.

posted under 2015, Articles

Dr Jekyll And (Strangely Sexy) Mr Hyde

October17

The Daily Mail – 17th October, 2015

Forget the doctor’s monstrous alter ego in the classic Victorian novel. ITV’s fantastical update has him as a handsome charmer.

• ITV offers a fantastical update on Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic
• Stars Tom Bateman as both the mild-mannered doctor and his alter ego
• Richard E Grant and Natalie Gumede star along side

By Tim Oglethorpe.

Genial young Dr Jekyll is checking into his hotel room, hoping for a little rest after travelling to London from Sri Lanka where he grew up. But when he reads a telegram he’s been handed by the bellboy, his expression changes dramatically.

His eyes become bulbous and bloodshot, the veins on his face and neck throb menacingly… and then the mayhem begins. Mirrors are smashed, the bed’s demolished, the curtains are ripped to shreds and the door’s left hanging from its hinges. Dr Jekyll has just turned spectacularly into Mr Hyde.

ITV’s fantastical update of Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic 1886 story to the 1930s, which stars Tom Bateman as both the mild-mannered doctor and his dangerous alter ego

But ITV’s fantastical updating of Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic 1886 story to the 1930s, which stars Tom Bateman as both the mild-mannered doctor and his dangerous alter ego, has one major twist. Mr Hyde is not the one-dimensional murderous monster he was in the original novel.

This Mr Hyde has superhero powers – in one of the opening scenes he lifts up a ten-ton runaway truck in order to rescue a young girl pinned beneath it. He’s also handsome and charming. By the time he leaves the hotel room after his orgy of destruction, the throbbing veins have disappeared to be replaced by a sexy darkness around the eyes.

He flirts with the chambermaid in the corridor and then makes a beeline for The Empire pub in London’s East End where, tie loosened, he knocks back the liquor and dances with the ladies.

‘Mr Hyde is the guy men think they are when they’re drunk – sexy, seductive, dangerous, attractive and invulnerable,’ says 26-year-old Tom.


Mr Hyde with Sir Roger Bulstrode played by Richard E Grant and Bella Charming played by Natalie Gumede

‘He’s the person we might be if there was no accountability, if we were behaving without limits. He doesn’t hold his tongue. I’ve been brought up to be polite and I’m not very confrontational, but even I have walked away from situations and thought, “If only I’d said or done that.” Well Mr Hyde says and does that.

‘But he’s not horrible. I want people to like him, be charmed by him and care about his fate as the story moves along. I was thinking a little bit about Heath Ledger’s Joker in the movie The Dark Knight when I took on the role, someone scary but also somebody audiences can relate to. And yes, somebody sexy too!’

A superhuman, seductive Mr Hyde is not the only twist in Charlie Higson’s ten-part series either. Best known for writing and starring in The Fast Show, Charlie realised he’d have to make major changes to give this very familiar tale (Jekyll And Hyde is one of the most filmed stories of all time) a fresh feel.

As well as moving it on half a century to a stylised 1930s London, complete with Art Deco buildings and beautiful cars with huge tailfins, the very nature of Dr Jekyll’s condition has been tweaked too. In the novel he downed a secret potion in his lab that turned him into Mr Hyde, whereas in this version Dr Jekyll has inherited some kind of rogue gene from his grandfather – the original Dr Jekyll in the novel – that’s activated by random events like the telegram.

‘I came up with the idea that the original Dr Jekyll awoke something that had been latent within him when he took that fateful potion, and that’s then been passed down the generations,’ says Charlie. ‘To begin with the young Dr Jekyll knows nothing about this “family curse” and the series is about him finding out who he is, why he is like he is.’

Charlie has also expanded the story to embrace a secret government organisation called Military Intelligence Other, or MIO, charged with the task of keeping monsters and freaks off the streets of Britain. Led by Sir Roger Bulstrode, played by Richard E Grant, it doesn’t seem to be doing a very good job as various creatures – including the Harbinger, who’s half-man and half-dog, and the Cutter, a 7ft 6in creature with a lobster claw for an arm – make their presence felt during the series. When MIO becomes aware of Mr Hyde, Bulstrode determines to capture him to harness his powers.

‘The part suited me down to the ground,’ says Richard, resplendent in Bulstrode’s three-piece tweed suit, cashmere coat and tan hat.

‘He’s a miserable old so-and-so and I love him. He’s always cross, always ordering people around. He’s the man keeping the British public sleeping peacefully at night, making sure they don’t have to worry about all the monsters out there. Charlie Higson actually created the role for himself but realised he couldn’t write the episodes and play Bulstrode, so luckily I got it.’

The story starts in Sri Lanka, then known as Ceylon, where the young Dr Jekyll has been brought up by foster parents, and some of the early scenes were filmed there. This is where we first get a glimpse of his superhuman powers when the truck crashes, pinning the young girl beneath it and Jekyll realises he has the strength to lift it and rescue her.

‘We used a crane to lift the truck, but as I was filming the scenes the locals who’d gathered to watch couldn’t see the crane, which was obscured by the truck, and thought I really did have superhuman powers,’ laughs Tom. Jekyll then heads to London when the family solicitor asks him to come and sort out his late grandfather’s affairs: the telegram that transforms Dr Jekyll into Mr Hyde in the hotel after his arrival tells him his foster parents have been murdered in Ceylon.


Richard says that his part of Bulstrode ‘suited him down to the ground’

Of course there’s romance too – for both Jekyll and Hyde. The sober doctor is instantly attracted to a beautiful young woman named Lily Clarke who he meets when he first arrives in London, while Hyde enjoys passionate clinches with Bella Charming, the glamorous landlady of The Empire played by 2013 Strictly Come Dancing runner-up and former Coronation Street star Natalie Gumede.

‘Bella finds Hyde irresistible, although she’s more than a match for him,’ says Natalie. ‘She’s one feisty East End landlady, but I haven’t had the chance to say, “Get out of my pub” yet.’

It will take a superhuman effort from Tom to carry the series – Jekyll & Hyde will pretty much succeed or fail on his ability to convince as the two main characters. ‘It was important to get the transformation right, to make that bridge from Jekyll to Hyde work,’ he says.

‘I had around 45 minutes between scenes where I was one and then the other, and I just had to feel the transformation taking place. There was no formula for doing it. Of course the make-up helped and I listened to what I call my angry music when I was preparing for a scene as Hyde, or a scene as Jekyll when he’s coping with the fear and panic that comes from being taken over by Hyde.

‘I wanted to do as many stunts as I could too as they’re so much part of Hyde’s character. There was a scene on the first day of filming where Hyde jumps off a 23ft wall on to concrete and I said to my stuntman Sam, “You can have that one!” But other than that, it was nearly always me doing the stunts. There’s a huge bar room bust-up in the first episode and I was involved in that for three solid days.’

It’s a first leading part for Tom, the son of two teachers and brother of an identical twin called Merlin. He’s had supporting roles in TV dramas Da Vinci’s Demons and The Tunnel but is best known for playing Shakespeare in last summer’s West End stage hit Shakespeare In Love. But according to Charlie Higson, he was far and away the best choice to play Jekyll and Hyde.

‘I think we saw every sexy young male British actor there is for the role and they were nearly all good at Dr Jekyll, the part that’s terribly nice and posh, but none of them could do Hyde. When they had to be genuinely dangerous they weren’t convincing. But Tom completely nailed it – he even scared me!’

ITV is banking on Jekyll & Hyde being a monster hit, investing a small fortune in bringing creatures such as the Cutter to life using prosthetics and the latest CGI techniques. They took over two studios in East London for six months and built six permanent sets, including a laboratory full of test tubes and chemistry books, and rooms in Dr Jekyll’s palatial London home.

The series will aim to capture the family audience the BBC bagged with Merlin and Atlantis and ITV did with dinosaur fantasy drama Primeval. But it’s darker than those shows. Perhaps a bit too dark? ‘I don’t think children will be put off by the darker elements, they love all that stuff,’ says Charlie.

‘I write children’s horror books and they can be brutal. I never want to patronise kids, they want something more grown-up and I give it them, as I have with Jekyll & Hyde. There’s enough of a fantasy element to the series, and we don’t do squirting blood or torn-off limbs.

‘I’ve always said it’s good to scare children in a safe way. Fear is thrilling. We all remember TV shows that terrified us as kids that we really enjoyed. I hope Jekyll & Hyde terrifies and delights viewers of all ages.’

Jekyll & Hyde begins on Sunday 25 October on ITV.

posted under 2015, Articles

Better Than Lighting Fluid! – Some Random REG/Jack Pictures

October16

Twitter.com/RichardEGrant – 16th October, 2015

Here is a collection of recent photographs from Richard’s Twitter feed. Enjoy!


REG found this ‘cheeky’ welcome sign when he was invited to the opening ceremony of re-furbed John Bell Croyden pharmacy on Wigmore St.


Jack Perfume included as one of 3 Cult Fragrance Brands of the Future by the Sunday Times Style Magazine.


REG on a day out in Ludlow with his olde mucker Bruce Robinson.’Here Hair here’ haha.


REG “Crinkled up and silvering on top”, smiling away the last day of summer holidays. Time to return to the coalface of Show Biz!


Lunching like a perfumed ponce at the aptly named La Ponche in St Tropez.


Eating a fish feast on a jetty on the cote d’azur.


If you’re in Terminal 5 at Heathrow you can find Jack Perfume opposite Jo Malone in Duty Free.


‘Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy’. Blown away by the Divine Miss M backstage.

posted under 2015, Sightings

Richard E. Grant Drops In On Tenby Whilst Filming In The County

October15

Tenby Observer – 15th October, 2015

“We’ve gone on holiday by mistake!”

Who spotted ‘Withnail and I’ star Richard E. Grant in Tenby this week? He’s been in Pembrokeshire filming ‘Their Finest Hour And A Half’ – a World War Two era comedy and tweeted a picture of himself at Castle Beach yesterday and one of the harbour with the tag “Blue skies in Tenby this afternoon. Wales the beautiful.”

Based on the novel by Lissa Evans, the film tells the comical story of a disparate group of people brought together in Norfolk to make a British propaganda film. Richard E Grant’s co-star Bill Nighy has also been spotted dining in Tenby over the weekend, when he returned to The Blue Ball Restaurant on Upper Frog Street for a meal on Saturday.

posted under 2015, News
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