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.


British Airways Olympic Film Boy Unveiled

March22

22nd March, 2012

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Here is a sneak preview of the British Airways-sponsored short film Boy, starring Timothy Spall, which will be shown onboard in the run-up to London 2012. The film forms one strand of the airline’s Great Britons programme, which it has been running as part of its sponsorship of the Olympic and Paralympic Games.

BA ran a competition to find British talent in three areas – film, food and art – with the winners of each section having their work showcased by the airline.

Screenwriter Prasanna Puwanarajah won the film selection with “Boy”. Over nine minutes, without any dialogue, it tells the story of a carpenter, played by Spall, who works at the Velodrome in the Olympic Park and is trying to come to terms with the loss of his cyclist son.

Boy will be shown onboard the airline’s long-haul flights from April to September, and BA estimates that as many as six million passengers will see it. A behind-the-scenes documentary will also be shown at the pre-opening of the Olympic ceremony.

Puwanarajah was mentored during the process by actor Richard E Grant. The film was directed by Justin Chadwick – whose credits include The Other Boleyn Girl and Spooks – with cinematography by Danny Cohen, Oscar-nominated for his work on The King’s Speech.

At the screening Grant praised the screenwriter’s “succinct, focused” story, saying he was “far ahead of everyone else” who had entered. “It just got you,” he said. “It went through the judges like an electric current.”

Puwanarajah said he wanted to write a film “about the transformational experience of living in London during the Games”. “I’m interested in the impact the act of putting on the Olympics has on a city,” he added. “My take on it is that the Olympics is about people’s own personal experiences.”

Spall said the “incredibly truthful” script was what persuaded him to get involved. “A huge amount of the entries were about a granny and a 16-year old on a council estate,” he said. “This told a story that was so personal – everyone has experienced loss. There’s a lot of razzmatazz around the Olympics, good and bad, but to make this so personal and human is so rare, and so British.”

Luisa Fernandez, BA’s global sponsorship manager, said the Great Britons scheme was “all about helping talent to take off”. She said: “We wanted to create a life-changing experience for three individuals and showcase their work on an international stage. It wasn’t about making a commercial advert for BA but about creating a platform for Prasanna. I feel we’ve found an incredibly talent screenwriter.”

The other two winners of the competition are Michelin-starred chef Simon Hulstone, who has worked with Heston Blumenthal to create a “bold British menu” to be served onboard – and artist Pascal Anson, who has designed a dove-inspired livery to be featured on nine of BA’s aircraft, with mentorship from Tracey Emin. The livery will be unveiled at Heathrow airport on April 3.

Fernandez said Hulstone had “taken inspiration from British Airways’ menus from 1948 [the last time London hosted the Olympics] and given them a modern twist”.

The winners’ work will be on show at “Flight BA2012”, a pop-up venue the airline is setting up in London’s Shoreditch, which will be open on selected weekdays between April 4 and 17 (see online new March 9).

Fernandez said of the airline’s overall sponsorship efforts: “We wanted to stand out from the other Olympic sponsors – we’re the British flag carrier and we have a global platform which we can use to showcase talent. We wanted to demonstrate our leadership in the UK market. It’s about getting people to consider British Airways more – we call it ‘bringing the love back’.”

The video below is a behind-the-scenes “Making Of” of Boy.

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Visit greatbritons.ba.com for more information.

Report by Michelle Mannion

posted under 2012, News

Richard E. Grant & The History Of Safari For Aussie Viewers

December23

ABC1 Website (Australia) – 23rd December, 2011

Australian fans will get the chance to see Richard narrate The History Of Safari on ABC1 on Monday, 2nd January 2012.

In this two-part series, Swaziland-born actor Richard E. Grant traces the safari experience in East Africa from its roots in the Arab slave trade through the decadent era of the big game hunters to its transformation into modern eco-tourism.

Along the way he discovers how the history of safari is also the story of the troubled economic development of East Africa.

The dramatic landscape is home to a rich variety of wild creatures but this amazing natural resource has proved to be both a blessing and a curse.

The History of Safari shows how, for 100 years, the region drew big game hunters looking for adventure and riches. Ironically, as ivory traders and trophy hunters decimated Africa’s wildlife, they also introduced the first conservation rules in order to protect their ‘sport’.

These often larger-than-life characters inspired novels and films, encouraging figures like Theodore Roosevelt, Ernest Hemingway, Winston Churchill and the British Royal family, to travel to East Africa to bag the ‘big five’ – lion, elephant, buffalo, rhino and leopard. Now taking the form of expensive eco-tours rather than hunting trips, the modern safari continues to drive the economies of countries like Tanzania and Kenya.

Richard learns that, ultimately, the history of safari reflects our attitudes to big game, travel, colonial inheritance and Africa itself.

As stated earlier, Part one airs at 8:30pm, Monday, January 2 on ABC1

posted under 2011, News

Richard E. Grant’s Wig Woes

December12

Virgin Media – 12th December, 2011

Richard E. Grant was forced to dye his hair blonde for his part in ‘The Iron Lady’.

The esteemed actor plays the role of government minister Michael Heseltine in the forthcoming biopic about Margaret Thatcher – which stars Meryl Streep as the iconic British leader – but was upset when he was one of the only actors who didn’t get to wear a wig.

He said: “Everyone else had wigs, but for some reason they wouldn’t give me one. I said, ‘Look, he’s got more hair at 80 than I had when I was 20.’ But they said, ‘No, you’ve got to dye it.’ ”

Richard admits unlike Heseltine – who was long rumoured to have held feelings for Thatcher – he did not find the Conservative leader sexy because he reminded him of his old schoolteachers.

He said: “To be attractive you have to have some sense of humour, a sense of irony or self-deprecation.”

“I was tortured at school by female biology teachers and she reminds me of them.”

“I know some people say she’s sexy, but I’ve never got sex appeal off her.”

The full interview with Richard E. Grant appears in the January issue of Reader’s Digest, in shops from December 19th.

posted under 2011, News

Trailer: The Iron Lady – Alternative Trailer

December8

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posted under 2011, Trailers

The Iron Lady – Featurette

December7

EmpireOnline.com – 7th December, 2011

Behind the scenes on “Maggie The Movie”

Written by Ali Plumb

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Making a biopic (of sorts) about a person as divisive as Margaret Thatcher is no mean feat.

A tip of the cap then to Mamma Mia director Phyllida Lloyd for bringing us The Iron Lady, with Meryl “I’ll have an Oscar with that” Streep playing Maggie herself.

To show a little bit more about how it was done, here’s a featurette that shows a few things from behind the scenes, from thre Parliament scenes to, well, you’ll have to find out for yourself really.

In other words, if you’re a die-hard Thatcher-loather, you may want to click away now. But if you’re interested in an upcoming film about Britain’s first female Prime Minister, then this’ll be right up your alley.

The Iron Lady is out in cinemas in Britain on January 6.

posted under 2011, Articles
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