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.


Times Magazine

March23

The wonderful Nikki is still typing up an article from the Times Magazine, but click here to see some lovely pics from the article anyway.

posted under News

REG At The Globe

March20

March 20, 1999

Stings’ wife Trudie Styler recently organised a charity event at Shakespeare’s reconstructed Globe Theatre. The evening managed to raise a whopping £100,000. REG was one of the guests, along with Sting, Jimmy Nail, Ethan Hawk and the cast of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, to name but a few. I was kindly alerted to this event by Dave and Wendy who run Sting’s fabulous stingchronicity website, and I’ve swiped the parts of their report which relate to REG. I’m sure they won’t mind, especially if you check out their website and read the full story….here goes my snipped version.

The stage was bare apart from some wooden benches to the back, and the only instruments on stage were a harpsichord, a lute and a double bass, although a team of minstrels were in the gallery playing shwarm’s, sackbuts and cornettos. Two spotlight stands stood on the stage, but there was no amplification. The actors had to work to project themselves to all parts of the crowd, overcoming natural and man-made elements as they coped with the open air venue, jets on the flightpath to Heathrow, and even some arsehole with a mobile phone.

The bell tolled, and all of the cast, wearing brown, purple and orange monk habits walked on to the stage form both sides, up to the crowd and then back to the wooden benches. The entire cast was Sting, Richard E Grant, Jack Dee, Ethan Hawke, Vanessa Redgrave, Mark Rylance, Jimmy Nail, James Taylor, Paul Scofield, The Lock Stock Boys (Jason Flemying, Jason Statham, Nick Moran, Dexter Fletcher and Vinnie Jones), Lulu, Miranda Richardson, Imogen Stubbs, Layla Khalif, Simon Russell Beale, Lennie James, and Ian Talbot.

The first act starred Jack Dee and Richard E Grant in a comedy sketch “A Small Rewrite” written by Black Adder author Richard Curtis, where Shakespeare (REG) is harangued by his producer (Dee) because at five hours, his latest play is a tad on the long side and could do with some brisk editing.

REG then later appeared in another really funny comedy scene from “A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act 1, Sc1”, in which Jimmy Nail played Quince the Carpenter, Ian Talbot a very funny Bottom the Weaver, Ethan Hawke played Flute the Bellows-mender, REG took the part of Snout the Tinker, Vinnie Jones was Starveling the Tailor, and Sting the meek and stuttering Snug the Joiner. Mark Rylance then performed as Oberon and Puck in “A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Act V, Sc1”, before the whole cast scattered sweetpea petals over the audience.

To read the full report at the stingchronicity website, click here.

posted under 1999, Sightings

Dr Who???

March20

REG guested on the recent Comic Relief charity show. He appeared as Doctor Who in a mock -up version of the show, along with Hugh Grant (NO REALTION!!!), Rowan Atkinson and several other famous faces. According to Lesley, he looked fantastic and fitted the role of a manic, finely dressed Doctor perfectly. Remember also that Withnail and I co-star Paul McGann was really an incarnation of Doctor Who in the most recent TV movie.

posted under News

The Oxford Union Interview

March20

March 20, 1999

They seek him here, they seek him there. George Frew talks to actor Richard E. Grant

Think about it. There are very few actors who are capable of playing an 18th The Scarlet century fop…”Sink me, Pimpernel sir!”, a loveable Dickensian Cockney…”Gor bless us, everyone!”, and a garrulous hardcase Glaswegian “See you, Jimmy? You’re deid, pal!”

There are fewer still whose gallery of characters to date also include cult-status, shambling, raving alcoholics, high-heeled camp kings of fashion, the Spice Girls manager and the occasional witchfinder.

Richard E. Grant has done all this and more besides. Last seen on television in fine and dandy form as “The Scarlet Pimpernel”, he has since completed a football film called “The Match” and is currently filming “A Christmas Carol” in which he plays Bob Cratchit opposite Patrick Stewart’s Scrooge.

In “The Match”, his character is a Glasgwegian. Now most English actors couldn’t do an authentic Glasgow accent if their Equity cards depended on it, but Grant had some help from Joan Washington, his wife of 16 years, who not only happens to be Scottish herself, but is also a voice coach. The couple live in Twickenham with their ten-year-old daughter, Olivia.”

At 42, he’s an actor with a following which has grown and a career which has burgeoned since he sprang to prominence as Withnail, that wild-eyed, drunken beacon of inspiration to malcontents everywhere in “That Film”. Richard E. Grant is not without his critics, though. Some say that his acting is ‘mannered’, conveniently forgetting that certain roles call for just that quality.

More annoyingly for some, he also writes rather well, which is why he’s been at the Oxford Union as part of the city’s Literary Festival, reading from his first novel, By Design. Neither acting or writing score very highly in the safe and secure career stakes. Many brave souls who attempt either profession as the calling of their choice end up spending their nights dreaming of landing spear- carrying jobs or their days papering their front rooms with publisher’s rejection slips.

So tell us, Richard…how do you manage it?

“I think one feeds the other,” he replies thoughtfully. “In the theatre or on film sets, there is such a lot of hanging around and that is very conducive to writing. By Design is a novel about celebrity, because the behind-the-scenes stuff that goes on is such a rich source of material that it’s irresistible…so when I got the commission to write the novel, I jumped at the chance.”

Grants first stab at writing produced “With Nails: The Film Diaries of Richard E. Grant”, culled from journals he’d been keeping for 15 years, since the day he arrived in London from his native Swaziland as a 25-year-old hopeful with two suitcases and no contacts. The diaries were an instant success, both in hardback and paperback, which led directly to the commission of “By Design”.

“Writing is a lonely job,” he admits. “Six months alone in a room…I had no experience of that sort of working situation and since I’ve done it, my respect for writers has gone through the ceiling. When you tell people you’re working on a novel, they say things like ‘Oh, I could write a book’ without having any sort of idea of the discipline involved.”

“On By Design, I was working to a time slot and an advance of money and while I’m not singing the blues about that, it was tough. The publishers didn’t want more of the diaries and stipulated that for the novel, I had to come up with a five-page synopsis. I found this very difficult initially, but being forced to do it helped enormously. I had only a vague outline at first but once I had set up the characters, they dictated how it would be.”

Mention to anyone that Grant is currently filming A Christmas Carol and the chances are they’ll say: “Oh…he’s playing Scrooge, then, is he?” Which is not to say that he can’t do good guys, merely that most people seem to associate him with mad, bad or downright eccentric roles.

“I wanted to play Bob Cratchit because I knew that Olivia would be able to see me in it and I wanted to work with Patrick Stewart again after being in “LA Story” with him. And it’s good to be playing a good and decent Cockney!”

“When we were making the Pimpernel, there was no time to pontificate about it all, but we had to get the balance right. It turned out to be easier than I expected to make him a fop without getting into all that ridiculous camp stuff.”

Grant says he’s wanted to act from a very early age: ” When I was six or seven, I was given some puppets as a present and then appeared in school plays. The line through to the present day is absolutely clear.”

When he’s not acting or writing, he reads. “I’m on three books at the moment, including The Rough Guide To The Internet and Steve Martin’s book, Pure Drivel, which is very funny.” Martin is one of Grant’s Hollywood pals. When With Nails was published, the American comedian was moved to write, “You’ll laugh, you’ll cry especially if you’re in the book like I am.”

There have been tears among the laughter in the lives of Grant and his wife. In 1986, their baby daughter, who had been born premature, died within half an hour. At the time, Grant remarked: “You get round it but you don’t get over something like that. Not a day goes by that I don’t think of her, but I’m not obsessed by it.”

But these are better days for Richard E. Grant. The books continue to sell and the acting jobs keep on coming. With Nails? Sometimes. With aplomb? Always. He will always have his critics, but he will also have the success and the awards to answer them.

Take it for Granted.

George Frew – 20 March 1999.

Richard E. Grant on…

Humour:- “I love Julie Walters in Acorn Antiques and I thought Fawlty Towers was wonderful. John Cleese just made it look like so much fun to be manic.”

Money:- “It opens doors and gives you freedom to decide how you’ll go through life.”

Fame:- “It’s fickle, fabulous and very unreliable. But it really does have great plusses…people always seem happy to see you and it makes you feel less alien when you’re in a foreign country.”

Ambition:- “Like rocket fuel to an actor…you’ve got to have it. And my ambition is to write and direct a film…but not appear in it.”

Love:- “Essential. The reason we’re here. The most important thing of all.”

posted under 1999, Interviews

Comic Relief

March15

15th March 1999

REG guested on this years Comic Relief charity show. He appeared as Doctor Who in a satirical version of the show, along with Hugh Grant (NO RELATION!!!), Rowan Atkinson and several other famous faces.

According to Lesley, he looked fantastic and fitted the role of a manic, finely dressed Doctor perfectly. Remember also that Withnail and I co-star Paul McGann was really an incarnation of Doctor Who in the most recent TV movie.

This listing is from the IMDB Movie Database, and includes a review of the show.

“Doctor Who and the Curse of Fatal Death” (1999)

Directed by John Henderson

Rowan Atkinson: The Doctor#9
Richard E. Grant: The Doctor #10
Jonathan Pryce: The Master
Jim Broadbent: The Doctor #11
Hugh Grant: The Doctor #12
Joanna Lumley: The Doctor
Julia Sawalha: Emma

Other Info: Date: 15 March 1999

“In the case of Richard E Grant, he had simply no idea what he was doing. He had never ever seen Doctor Who because he grew up in Swaziland, he hadn’t read the rest of the script, he had no idea why Rowan Atkinson was turning into him and why he was turning into Jim Broadbent, what Daleks were and why there was a telephone kiosk in the corner of the room! He was absolutely confused. He just came in, did it and went away while Rowan stood by looking grumpy, then took his coat back and carried on with the rest of the show.”

posted under 1999, Sightings
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