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.


Bonnie Proud After Her 14-Year-Struggle To Make A Film

August6

News24.com – Wednesday 6th August, 2004

She has worked for more than 14 years to make her dream, of shooting her own film, come true – it took years of seeing doors shut in her face and donations falling away, hard work and cold calls to sponsors – but in the end, it was the support of friends and family that pulled her through.

Bonnie Rodini recently completed the film, The Story of an African farm, based on the book by Olive Shreiner, telling the story of life on a Karoo farm in 1870. The film is focused on the first half of the book.

“If we put the whole book in the script, it would have made the storyline incredibly thin, the characters would not have been able to develop satisfactory,” she says.

Bonnie is the speaker at the DistrictMail/Ster Kinekor’s first ever Art Film Festival launch on August 5. The film will be screened to invited guests.

She entered the film for the European Union Film Festival in June where it was screened around the country, to gauge the public’s response. She says, “They loved it, cheering and applauding at the end of every screening.”

The project started many summers ago when she packed her bags for New York, dreaming of a career as an actress after two years as a dancer at The Ballet Company. She studied acting, lived there for five years, but had bad luck with acting. “I did, however, have an amazing break on the production side”.

Bonnie says she worked as assistant to the British producer, James Dearden, who made A Kiss Before Dying, in 1991. She tried to convince him to write the script for Shreiner’s enticing book, but “I was short of about one million dollars – that is what he gets for writing a script!” He encouraged her to write it herself. She bought a book on scriptwriting, started writing and soon sent him the first draft. She says the feedback was very positive, she incorporated his suggestions and finished the script.

“I cooked dinner for my flat mates one night in exchange for their reading the script back to me and giving criticism and input.” Her long path to raise the money began.

“I had no real income, came back to South Africa with my flea market jacket and Woolies pants hoping to look like a businesswoman and searched for sponsors. I waitressed, cleaned apartments and knocked on every possible door.

But in the course of the eight years since I had started out, things had changed, companies shifted their focus and I found myself back at square one more than once.”

Eventually she raised enough money with the help of a group of investors and the Industrial Development Corporation, setting in motion the pre-production stage.

She needed a well-known actor to give the film the necessary credibility, she says, but a low budget didn’t give her much hope. She and James Dearden decided on Richard E. Grant, a South African-born actor who lives abroad, for the part of Bonaparte Blenkins.

Some time later, Grant happened to be visiting SA. Bonnie says, “I heard that he was staying in a hotel in Cape Town, left messages for him until he called back, he read my script and said he would star in it.”

Challenging task

Later, more hiccups followed though, even while they were already shooting things did not run smoothly, but she persevered. Finding the right location to shoot was a challenging task. With the help of Rose Willis – a woman from Beaufort West whom, Bonnie says, knows the Karoo like the back of her hand – they found a farm near Matjiesfontein similar to the one Shreiner describes in her book.

“Even the struggling sunflowers she described, were there,” says Bonnie. A quick word with her New York friends – the original script readers from 14 years ago – brought them out to help with the restoration of the farm buildings. The work went on for 10 weeks and they helped as unpaid volunteers.

A camp was set up close by for make-up, wardrobe and Richard was happy to ride an old bike between the camp and location. When the crew was not shooting, they lived in Matjiesfontein.

Six weeks later, the shooting was done, three months later the editing completed and the marketing of the film had to start.

As can be expected, there remain parts of the film she continues to rework in her mind. In retrospect she would have loved to change the film’s opening shot, mainly because strong wind made shooting difficult.

“I wanted it longer, but we had to edit a lot, as the helicopter was struggling in the wind.”

Bonnie says making this film was no easy task. The book is well-loved in this country and as her first attempt at a film was hugely intimidating. “I always kept people’s expectations in mind, trying to keep the balance and giving attention to the unsaid.

“Sometimes the stress takes over the feeling of accomplishment, but with the screening tonight (Thursday) and with the opening drawing closer, I am beginning to feel excited, but anxious too. I would like one million South Africans to see this film, to support South African films more.”

Bonnie and her brothers and friends launched a marketing strategy at the recent film festival in Cannes, France. No South African films had been selected for this year, but with determination, nearly 300 people saw the Story of an African Farm.

She now battles for funds to do the same in Venice and New York at other film festivals. As for the second installment of the book, Bonnie has already been examining it.

“It will be a different film, hectic, sad and dark. It would be beautiful and heart-wrenching, but very different and maybe not as commercially viable as the first part.”

The festival is on at the Mall until August 19. Readers can win tickets to the once-off screening on Thursday of “The story of an African farm”. Phone 853-3232 on August 5 between 15:00 -15:15 to stand a chance of winning. Winners will be notified.”

posted under 2004, Articles

Wah-Wah Wraps Up – Now Paris Bound

July31

Latest email from REG:

“WAH-WAH wrapped on Sunday the 25th July in Swaziland and proved to be the most extraordinary and creatively intense experience of my life. Writing and directing this film is a lifelong dream come true and we were blessed with incredible luck, good weather and a perfect cast – Gabriel Byrne, Emily Watson, Julie Walters, Nicholas Hoult, Miranda Richardson, Celia Imrie, Julian Wadham, Fenella Woolgar, John Matshikiza, Olivia Grant, Sid Mitchell, Zachary Fox, Caroline Smart, Ian Roberts, Michael Richards, John Carlisle, Sindy Nxumalo, Mathakoza Sibiyu, Cass Mamba, Zoe Dean-Smith and Mark Elderkin.

After five years of planning and endless financial stops and false starts, it was completed on schedule and will be released in 2005. I start the editing in Paris on the 10th of August.

We were hugely facilitated by the King of Swaziland, King Mswati III who gave us permission to film in the Kingdom. Returning “home” to make the film proved to be an astonishing emotional “journey”.

I have kept a diary of the entire process from the first script pitch meeting five years ago to the final wrap day last weekend which will be published in the new year.

Apologies for being so out of the loop with regard to the website, but the filming has taken up every nano-second of every day these past six months. Hope all is well?

Cheers and chin-chin
richard”

I for one look forward to reading more on Richard’s exploits during the making of the film. As always stay tuned!

posted under 2004, News

Art Film Festival Opens With “Story Of An African Farm”

July30

Source Unknown – Friday 30th July, 2004

The Helderberg’s first ever District Mail Art Film Festival takes place in conjunction with Ster-Kinekor Theatres at the Somerset Mall from Friday, August 6 to Thursday, August 19. The festival kicks off on August 5 with a gala evening for invited guests and the screening of The Story of an African Farm, telling the story of life in 1870 in South Africa on a farm in the Karoo. Fat Tant Sannie (Karin Van der Laag) looks after her charges, the sweet Em (Anneke Weidemann) and the independent Lyndall, (Kasha Kropinski). It was Em’s late father’s dying wish. Gentle Otto (Armin Mueller-Stal), the farm manager, runs the farm and cares for Waldo, his son.

Waldo (Luke Gallant) is bright and is busy designing a model of a sheepshearing machine that he hopes will make them all rich. Things change when the sinister, eccentric Bonaparte Blenkins (Richard E Grant) with his bulbous nose and chimney pot hat arrives. This stranger believes that Tant Sannie is wealthy – after all she owns a farm – and it’s not long before he’s thrown the narrow-minded, but simple woman into an amorous whirl. His motives are all too obvious to the children and he makes enemies of them. Worst of all, he connives to get Otto fired by lying to Tant Sannie. Otto returns to his room where he dies.

The festival line-up includes Lost in Translation, 21 Grams, In America, Evelyn and more. Tickets can be booked at the Mall’s box office. See the programme on www.sterkinekor.co.za

posted under 2004, Articles

“Regency House” For Aussie Fans

July27

ABC TV is airing the first episode of “Regency House Party” on Sunday Night (1st August) at 7.30pm. Richard narrates the series, which is about a group of people who “go back” to regency times and dress up exactly as they did at the house parties of the era. Apparently the main aim of the guests involved is to find romance during the excercise.

posted under 2004, News

(Almost) Front Page REG

July22

Some of you may have noticed that the very latest entry of the REG News now appears on the main “Welcome” page of the site (after the “splash page”) where the more general site news used to appear. As the “Welcome” page had not been updated since October 2003 I thought it would make more sense for that page to be refreshed along with the main news page. That way the site looks much more current than it previously has been.

On the subject of site updates work is still progressing along slowly but surely. At the moment we’re testing alternate navigation designs and trying to get them to “fit in” with such a large and comprehensive website. It’s proving difficult to get the right mix of design elements without having the site looking too much like a large corporate website or a magazine style site – not that we have anything against that, as such.

The quest continues…

posted under 2004, News
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