Withnail dusted
off for charity

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