Hugh Grant: Hugh & cryHe finds acting dull and isn't keen on being photographed with his girlfriend. So how does that explain the v. spiteful headlines that have plagued one of the few genuine Hollywood stars that we can call our own?By Neil Norman
When Hugh Grant took
umbrage at the intrusion by showbusiness hacks and paparazzi during the
premiere party for
It was at Grant's insistence that the Marie Curie Cancer Care charity received the benefits of the Bridget Jones premiere as he lost his own mother two years ago to cancer, and the evening was a great deal more than usually important to him. In addition, as those who attended the premiere and the party had paid handsomely for their tickets, he ensured that there was no roped-off VIP area, no separation between the stars and the public. Grant is a movie star who doesn't behave like one: there are no entourages, no bodyguards, no Winnebago moments. Yet he still comes under attack for being an overpaid, overprivileged, undertalented pain in the derrière. No wonder he wants to retire. "Who is he hurting to deserve this kind of attack?" asks Colin Firth, his co-star. "He is that rare thing - a true film star who doesn't take himself too seriously," says Emma Thompson. "I've made four films with him and I would be very upset if he gave up." He has certainly made
a prat of himself in the past - the Divine Brown incident being the prime
example - and he has always managed to talk his way back into popularity.
Yet there is an underlying sensation expressed by those who dismiss him
as a one-trick pony that he has somehow cheated his way to stardom, that
he is little more than a foppish airhead who got
Luck came in the shape
of Four Weddings and a Funeral, Richard Curtis's small British comedy that
made the fortunes of
"It wasn't my writing
that made Hugh into 'Hugh'," says Curtis, who reminds me that they had
auditioned a large number of
Since then, Grant has become the only young British male movie star worthy of international recognition. He cracked Hollywood and endeared himself to international audiences with a particular persona that is more David Niven than Cary Grant; he possesses a charm that is actually heightened on the screen. The Hugh Grant role is one that deviates very little from the floppy-haired, self-effacingly witty, stammering, oh-so-English chap who is just the right side of sensitive. "His skills and qualities
are in short supply," says Stacey Snider, chairman of Universal Pictures,
no less. "He brings so much intelligence to his preparation. On top of
that, who can deliver a frigging line like him?" Sandra Bullock, his co-star
in Two Weeks Notice, agrees. "Everything that happens to Hugh appears to
be an accident that he is experiencing for the first
To cite the Hugh Grant blueprint - that he always plays the same stereotype - as an example of his limitations as an actor is folly. This is a persona that has been thrust upon him. Once audiences have identified a movie star with a particular screen persona, it is brutally difficult to persuade them of alternative aspects. In fact, close study reveals a wealth of tiny nuances within each one that shade and alter the basic formula for each film. "Acting is not always
about trying to find an entirely different character to perform," explains
Colin Firth. "What you are
The pivotal role in Grant's career was Will in About a Boy when - inhabiting a character that was probably closest to himself - he managed to shade his HG persona several degrees darker. Will was not a lovely, funny, endearing man. He was a serial shagger, a selfish layabout aimlessly living a life of hedonism and moral irresponsibility. When recollecting Grant's
roles, few cite his work in Maurice, The Remains of the Day, Bitter Moon,
Small Time Crooks or his turn as the sleazy theatrical manager in An Awfully
Big Adventure, none of which fits the blueprint of the Hugh Grant
The off-screen HG is
almost as well "known". Hugh the fun-hungry party animal is not the first
movie star to be caught
The $64,000 question
is whether Grant harbours higher aspirations or simply wants to lie back
and enjoy the fruits of his
"I think he is very self-critical indeed, and I suspect it is therefore not easy for him to change profession," says Richard Curtis. "But I think he might be in the mood now to try some other things." Grant is nothing if not adventurous, even in his personal life. His admitted predilection for pornography, for sexual gossip, for partying and serial flirtation is the indicator of a Peter Pan-like adolescent in a man's body. While he evidently takes his work very seriously, he is still a fun guy to be with when filming ends. He also displays traits of a closet exhibitionist: he likes sex and likes people to know he likes sex. It is almost as if he were fighting the traditional image of the uptight, anal Englishman; as if, by teasing the public and toying with the Hugh Grant image he will retain a vestigial sense of mystery. It is by no means unusual
for movie actors to create the carapace of a persona to protect themselves
and to project an
There remains an unadulter-ated,
almost childish glee in Grant's reaction to the world. Witty, sharp and
intelligent, he is the
But there is a late-flowering
maturity in evidence. His pronouncements that he may retire from acting
and do something
"I particularly think
he's specifically acting older well," observes Richard Curtis. "He's not
hanging on to his youth. He is
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| Stars rally behind
Hugh Grant:
[Hollywood News]: London, Nov 14 : British tabloids have been trashing Hugh Grant after his scuffle with the paparazzi, but fellow actors Colin Firth, Sandra Bullock and Emma Thompson have rallied behind him. "He is that rare thing - a true film star who doesn't take himself too seriously," Thompson was quoted as saying in the Independent. Following his refusal to pose with his millionaire girl friend Jemima Khan at the premiere of "Bridget Jones: the Edge of Reason", British tabloids have derided Grant as an overpaid, under-talented actor. Pointing out that Grant ensured the premiere's benefits went to the Marie Curie Cancer Care charity, co-star Colin Firth said, "Who is he hurting to deserve this kind of attack?" Grant stoked speculation about his future by declaring acting bored him and that he was in semi-retirement. Emma Thompson, his co-star in "Sense and Sensibility" told the Independent: "I've made four films with him and I would be very upset if he gave up." His "Two Weeks Notice" co-star, Sandra Bullock, said Grant's talent is rare and natural. "Everything that happens to Hugh appears to be an accident, which he is experiencing for the first time," Bullock was quoted as saying. Grant's trouble with the media is not new. The tabloids had a field day in 1995 when Los Angeles police arrested the British actor with streetwalker Divine Brown. --Indo-Asian News Service
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