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An acting career takes off

An acting career takes off

Budapest Times25-05-2025
It's only once the book is opened that 'With Nails' turns out to have a fuller title, 'With Nails: The Film Diaries of Richard E. Grant', so potential readers might not be wise to expect reminiscences of the usual variety, the old 'I was born in such-and-such a place on such-and-such a date, and Dad worked as a such-and-such and Mum was a such-and-such…'
Immediately after this title page comes the publisher's information, and it reveals that the book was actually first published in 1996, a bit of a long time ago when you consider that Grant has made some 60 films since then. After all, next the Contents page lists chapters on only nine films: ' Withnail and I', 'Warlock', 'Henry and June', 'LA Story', 'Hudson Hawk', 'The Player', 'Dracula', 'The Age of Innocence' and 'Prêt-à-Porter', all from 1987 to 1994.
There one other chapter titled 'More LA Stories' in which will be found further anecdotes of the Hollywood experience, pretty much a long round of parties, lunches and encounters with the colony's movers and shakers, the rich and famous, not to forget actual auditions, read-throughs and acting. Also, intriguingly, there is an 'Epilogue'. Something post-1996?
No, this latter is just a shortish note on the parallel between getting the nod that you've passed the audition and being signed to convert your private diary into a public screed. Also now, though, comes an unannounced 'Post Script', and it contains a clue that it dates not from 2025 but from 2015. It would seem that the 'Film Diaries' also had a new life then.
The 'Post Script'mentions the film 'Gosford Park', which was released in 2001, and gives the fact that Grant has been in London for 33 years, which we can work out would be 2015 because the book opens proceedings in 1985, which Grant says is three years after he emigrated from colonial Swaziland to England.
Again, we can deduce that his arrival would have been as a 28-year-old, because if we look up his life elsewhere we find that his full name is Richard Grant Esterhuysen and he was born on May 5, 1957 in the Protectorate of Swaziland. Now that's fascinating. Why Swaziland? Many famous British people turn out to have been born in India, Burma, Malaya and other colonial outposts, the offspring of administrators sent out from the home country. But Swaziland? It's a logical question when he is seemingly a through-and-through Englishman.
In the shortest of biographical notes the publisher simply informs us that 'Richard E. Grant was born and brought up in Mbabane, Swaziland', no date or anything, plus listing a few of his films and a couple of books he wrote, and that he lives in London with his family. It isn't until deep in the book that Grant, who often refers to himself self-deprecatingly as 'Swazi Boy' – such as in how did Swazi Bboy' get to be with all these film stars – opens up a little.
His father had been Minister of Education during the British colonial jurisdiction of Swaziland until Independence in 1968, after which he was made an honorary adviser. The country was called the 'Switzerland of Africa', having relative economic stability, a single-tribe population and single-language status. The Grants lived in a hilltop house overlooking the Ezulweni Valley, meaning Valley of Heaven, with a panoramic view for 60 kilometres. Swaziland is now named the Kingdom of Eswatini and it is three-quarters surrounded by South Africa.
In the chapter on 'The Player', Grant is at a party chockablock with 'names' and he spies Barbra Streisand. Getting introduced, he tells her that as a 14-year-old on a visit from Swaziland to Europe and England with his father – Home Leave as it was colonially called – they saw her 'Funny Girl', and the young Grant was thunderstruck, instantly falling in love.
Back home he wrote to her 'care of Columbia Records' saying: 'I have followed your career avidly. We have all your records. I am fourteen years old. I read in the paper that you were feeling very tired and pressurised by your fame and failed romance with Mr Ryan O'Neal. I would like to offer you a two-week holiday, or longer, at our house, which is very beautiful with a pool and magnificent view of the Ezulweni Valley.
'Here you can rest. No one will trouble you and I assure you you will not be mobbed in the street as your films only show in our one cinema for three days, so not that many people will know who you are… ' etcetera. Days, weeks, months, years he waited but no reply. Now, in a party festooned with the likes of Al Pacino, Whoopi Goldberg, Jeff Goldblum, Diane Lane, Christopher Lambert, Julia Roberts, Jason Patric, Sandra Bernhard, Joel Silver, Annie Ross, Glenne Headly, Timothy Dalton, Robert Downey Jnr., Winona Ryder and more, here she is.
He can barely speak in awe and she asks, 'Are you stoned?' He manages to tell her he is allergic to alcohol, whereupon she says, 'I know you from a movie'. This turns out to be 'Henry and June'. He confesses to the fan letter, which of course she never received, and she says she doesn't remember being exhausted then, 'must just be the usual press stuff'.
He manages 22 minutes with 'Babs' – he timed it – but knows he is just another geeky gusher. While she is an idol with a significant place in his life and experience, he of course can have none in hers. He asks if he can kiss her hand in farewell, to which she says OK and laughs, saving her from Grant's further frothings.
Grant writes how he arrived in England only to be 'marooned, becalmed, beached and increasingly bleached of self-confidence' as he embarked on his chosen career path. Unfortunately he found himself 'among the 95 per cent, forty-thousand-odd unemployed members of Equity' (the actors'trade union).
He may be exaggerating to make his point. Nonetheless, the possibility of a role in a BBC production arises. But it would be as Dr. Frankenstein's creature. And there's an audition for the panto 'Robin Hood and the Babes in the Wood'. Humiliation. Who the hell do you think you are, he asks himself? Brando? Olivier? Go back to Swaziland. Fortunately he has a loving wife for support. He changes his agent.
And then the Big Break. Handmade Films, formed by ex-Beatle George Harrison and his business partner Denis O'Brien in 1978 to finance the controversial Monty Python film 'Life of Brian', is going to make something called 'Withnail and I', about two out-of-work actors in squalid circumstances in London, and Grant lands the part of Withnail.
This black, anarchic and eccentric film is surely one of the most hilarious ever made, beloved of anyone with a twisted sense of humour, including your correspondent. Grant doesn't need to do anything, to say anything; you only need to look at him to laugh. While Streisand said she recalled him in 'Henry and June', most other people he meets loved 'Withnail and I'.
It made his career. Hollywood to Grant is 'a Suburban Babylon', 'the land of liposuction', 'the State of the Barbie'. He eats cold Chinese food with Madonna, has an odd shopping trip with Sharon Stone, works for pivotal directors Robert Altman, Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola. He talks parenting with Tom Waits. He notes the short statures of screen macho men Stallone and Schwarzenegger, the madness that was ' Hudson Hawk'…
Richard E. Grant sees himself as a grounded man minus therapist, futurist, assistant, nutritionist, manager, lawyer and publicist, whom he labels fleece merchants. Still, there's piles of pampering – luxury hotels, first-class air travel, limos, per diems. Oh God, it's all so stratospheric. No wonder he had such a dreadful time filming in lowly Budapest in 1990. Poor chap, he hated absolutely everything – the airport staff, grey high-rises, dirty factories, potholes, sludgy Danube, queues, hotel, food, thermal bath, studio. Sorry about that, sir.
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Superlatives flow for 'supergroup' but for Eric they weren't The Band
Superlatives flow for 'supergroup' but for Eric they weren't The Band

Budapest Times

time05-07-2025

  • Budapest Times

Superlatives flow for 'supergroup' but for Eric they weren't The Band

Did you see The Jam, XTC, Marc Bolan with or without T. Rex, the Sex Pistols, David Bowie, The Clash, Sandy Denny, Stiff Little Fingers, Billy Bragg, The Smiths, Siouxsie or Emerson, Lake and Palmer? If so, Richard Houghton of Spenwood Books wants your memories. This niche publisher, launched in 2021 in Manchester, UK, specialises in "People's History' books of rock bands and artists in which fans offer up their recollections of gigs and close encounters. More than 20 titles have been published so far, including The Beatles, Rolling Stones, The Who, Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix, Pink Floyd, Thin Lizzy, Black Sabbath, The Stranglers, The Faces, The Jam, The Clash, Simple Minds, Slade, Queen and Fairport Convention. And it's important to retain those memories because while it's not yet reached the stage where there are more golden-era musicians in rock heaven than on Planet Earth, it's getting there. Look at some of the toll: half the Beatles, Charlie Watts and Brian Jones of the Rolling Stones, all three of the Jimi Hendrix Experience, Freddie Mercury of Queen, Rick Wright of Pink Floyd, Alvin Lee of Ten Years After, John Bonham of Led Zeppelin, Keith Moon and John Entwistle of The Who, David Bowie, Leonard Cohen, Rick Buckler of The Jam, Christine McVie of Fleetwood Mac, Phil Lynott of Thin Lizzy, all five in The Band, three of the four Small Faces, all three Beach Boys' Wilson brothers, John Mayall, Marianne Faithfull, Jon Lord of Deep Purple, Joe Cocker, Alex Chilton…. If it wasn't age or illness, it was dodgy substances. The rock era is fading out, and so are the fans. 'Cream. A People's History' has more than 500 previously unpublished eyewitness accounts of a band that had a major impact on rock's direction even though Eric Clapton, Jack Bruce and Ginger Baker were together for less than three years, from July 1966 to November 1968, and released only four albums. In the book Houghton mentions his modus operandi , using local newspapers and Facebook to find fans and get them to come forward. He notes the occasional difficulties in confirming dates and venues for Cream, one contributor recalling how guitarist Eric Clapton told him he never knew where the band would be playing the following day. Lest anyone be unaware, Cream was guitarist Clapton who was born in Ripley, Surrey, on March 30, 1945 and is the sole surviving member, bassist Bruce born in Bishopbriggs, East Dumbartonshire, Scotland, on May 14, 1943 and died on October 25, 2014, and drummer Baker born in Lewisham, South London, on August 19, 1939 and died on October 26, 2019. 'Only' a trio, then, but all masterly musicians and few had their talent, power and influence. Often called the first 'supergroup' (a dumb, overused term – editor ), Houghton says they bridged the gap from the British blues explosion through psychedelia and progressive rock. 'Cream. A People's History' opens with short reminders that Baker and Bruce were both in Blues Incorporated in mid-1962, then in the offshoot Graham Bond Trio. Clapton's first bands were Rhode Island Red and the Roosters followed by Casey Jones and the Engineers in 1963. In October that year Clapton moved to the Yardbirds, and here we have the first actual sighting, from Valerie Dunn at the Crawdaddy Club in Richmond, London, on November 3, 1963. She chatted to them, was given their clapped-out harmonicas and played maracas with them if a broken guitar string needed replacing. Clapton, a Mod, was 'really chuffed' when she made a chamois mascot embroidered 'Yardbird' and he hung it on his guitar neck. Austin Reeve's girlfriend chatted to the Yardbirds in the interval at the Rhodes Centre in Bishop' Stortford, UK, on July 11, 1964 but Reeve was too timid to join in. Clapton 'pulled out all the stops' and Reeve saw the group several more times. Then, a significant gig when the Yardbirds played the Jazz and Blues Festival at Richmond on August 9, 1964, and Baker and Bruce of the Graham Bond Organisation were among the 'friends' the Yardbirds invited on stage to play. It was the first time Bruce had heard Clapton play, and he was impressed. Clapton joined John Mayall's Bluesbreakers and Dunn re-enters, seeing them at Klooks Kleek, Railway Hotel, West Hampstead, on May 25, 1965, when she and her friends would buy Clapton a drink. Graham Aucott also saw the Bluesbreakers, at Il Rondo in Leicester on July 23, 1965, when Clapton began with 'Hi-Heel Sneakers' and 'a good night was had by all'. Understandably, pre-Cream memories are thin on the ground, and these few are all until Eric, Jack and Ginger decided to form a band and jammed at Baker's home in Braemar Avenue, Neasden, in April 1966, then began rehearsing at nearby St. Ann's Town Hall in Brondesbury the following month. The action really begins at The Twisted Wheel club in Manchester on July 30, 1966, in what was basically a warm-up away from the expectant eyes of London. Bob Garbutt remembers it was 'brilliant' and Baker looked like the Wild Man of Borneo. The book's memories flow from the next day, after the trio played their first major gig, at the 6th National Jazz and Blues Festival at Royal Windsor Racecourse. The program listed them as simply Eric Clapton-Jack Bruce-Ginger Baker. About 15,000 attended, it rained heavily and the band had rehearsed only a few songs, so they stretched them out for 40 minutes or so. The fledgling band then wanted to do a big gig away from London, and manager Robert Stigwood booked them at Torquay Town Hall, deep in the south-west of England, on August 6, 1966 for £75. Thanks to their earlier reputations, 2000 kids packed in, a lot for a band without a record. 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Tony Loftus chatted with Bruce at the urinal in The Marquee in Soho on August 16, 1966 – 'That's my claim to fame!'; Richard Pilch was hitching 15 miles to see them at Hoveton Village Hall on November 18, 1966, and was picked up by Baker in his Rover, who was lost; Victor Foster told a couple of Cheltenham lads to 'get their own' when they asked him for a cigarette at the Blue Moon Club in Cheltenham on November 19, 1966, whereupon the volatile Baker overheard and sent him flying across the drums and smacked his head with a drumstick; Bruce, apparently angry with Clapton, threw his harmonica on stage at the Imperial Ballroom in Nelson, UK, on April 8, 1967; a woman giving birth in a venue bathroom; Baker, soloing, rushed by a guy and jamming a drumstick into the fellow's ear without missing a beat, causing the guy to collapse with blood all over him, screaming in pain. These 500-plus recollections tend to be somewhat repetitive, the great majority of fans 'blown away' as Cream stretched the limits of a three-piece band, playing out of their skins, and only occasionally tired and uninspired, going through the motions. Finally, two farewell shows at the Royal Albert Hall in London on November 26, 1968, and a short 2005 reunion. Some of the best recollections come from Cream road manager Bob Adcock who recalls those initially simpler days of just three crew, no security, no contract riders and so on. He says the real reason they split is that Clapton envied the simpler ethos of The Band, who were a group of friends. Cream were never friends, and after a gig went their own ways. Sunshine of their love? Not quite but great – still great – music while it lasted. Join the Spenwood Books mailing list for monthly newsletters –

Son recalls a Dad like few others
Son recalls a Dad like few others

Budapest Times

time29-06-2025

  • Budapest Times

Son recalls a Dad like few others

Robert Morley was a singular personality. Few actors could rival him for a good solid dose of peculiarly English eccentricity – when he appeared on screen (and no doubt on stage too) you pretty much knew exactly what you were going to get as he dominated proceedings, a blustering, pompous and overbearing character but lovable nonetheless. For us, the bushy-browed, fleshy-jowled and rotund Morley ranked alongside other mid-20th century British thespians who when they went into their particular acts were similarly offbeat – James Robertson Justice, John Le Mesurier, Wilfred Hyde-White and Alastair Sim come to mind; always fun, always individualistic, with no need to resort to clownishness. A scene-stealer supreme, could anyone possibly out-talk the quick-witted and very properly spoken gentleman Morley? What could he possibly have been like at home, off-screen, off-stage, as Dad? His eldest child, Sheridan Morley, tells us in this book, first issued in 1993. 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'Like being head of the Israeli army', Robert responded, 'and waking up to find your son is an Arab.' That was a typical rejoinder, witty and droll. In his twilight years he would become master of the television chat show, a venerable actor in the grand manner, overwhelming the host and any other guests. Rentaquote, as Sheridan calls him, a beacon of overweight oddness, a raconteur guaranteed to entertain and beloved of the studio audience and viewers. Robert was flamboyant, theatrical, larger than life. In 1975 he was engaged as a celebrity by a Yorkshire country-house hotel to tell stories to the diners and engage in light conversation. 'Is this the sort of thing you want, dears?' he asked the audience after telling a story about Greta Garbo. 'Would you like to ask some questions, perhaps?' 'Why are your flies undone?' a man in the front row asked. 'I had rather hoped', Robert replied, calmly adjusting his dress, 'that it added to the general air of informality.' 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Dame Gladys, born in Hither Green, London, on December 18, 1888 was a great beauty of her day and in demand in both Britain and Hollywood. She died in Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire, on November 17, 1971, and had married three times, first to Captain Herbert Buckmaster from 1908 to 1921. They had two children, one of whom, Joan (1910-2005), married Robert Adolph Wilton Morley in 1940. Sheridan was the eldest of their three children, and thus the third generation of this eminent theatrical family. Bare facts don't do justice to this life story, and Sheridan fully delivers in this telling of the over-the-top personality who was his father. Robert's own father 'was a man of many careers, mostly disastrous. A compulsive gambler, he lived a life of regular crisis and constant financial adventure, bequeathing to his only son a passion for roulette and the rare ability… to live on the financial edge without serious loss of sleep or nerve'. Robert's father's constant and rapid escapes from creditors bred in Robert a love of adventure and a passion for touring ideally suited to the prewar demands of a struggling actor. The boy appeared in a school pageant in Folkestone when five years old and it was after seeing English thespian Esme Percy (1887-1957) in 1921 on a tour of 'The Doctor's Dilemma' by George Bernard Shaw that he decided to act, coming to believe that theatre as an art not only reflected life but extended and exaggerated it into the areas of magic. At school Robert was tortured by military and physical activities, and didn't do much better in the classroom, leaving with a deep lifelong horror of any sort of orthodox teaching. These were some of his unhappiest years. In 1926 aged 18 he was accepted into the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art, the best of London's theatre schools, more by good luck than talent, but he quit in July 1927 to start making his living as an actor in the real world of the theatre. His distinctive physical characteristics, portly and plummy, limited somewhat the characters he could portray, and for nine long years he toured the land in a series of regional tours, hardly any of which reached London. But he relished the life and he learned, despite a six-month gap as a travelling door-to-door salesman. He began to write his own first play. Robert first gained acclaim on the London stage for his title role in 'Oscar Wilde', then successfully reprised the part on Broadway in 1938, leading to an invitation to Hollywood and an Oscar-nominated film debut as Louis XVI in 'Marie Antoinette' (1938). For 20 years after the war he was in semi-permanent residence in West End of London theatres 'in plays which only he managed to turn into two-year hits', Sheridan notes. His first great success as an actor/author was his own 'Edward, My Son' in 1947, and 'he built up a special affinity with his customers almost akin to that achieved by a great head waiter or hotel manager'. Robert was nominated for an Academy Award as Best Supporting Actor for his first American film, 'Marie Antoinette' (1938) playing the doomed Louis XVI against John Barrymore, Norma Shearer and many of Hollywood's best character actors. Sheridan begs to differ with those critical colleagues who said his father was only good at playing versions of himself in essentially lightweight material. If he rejected playing Shakespeare's Falstaff, for instance, it was not out of fear or laziness but simply because, Sheridan believed, he knew he would not enjoy it, and thus how could his audience? There came almost 100 films for the big screen and television, 30-plus plays, tours down under, a sideline as a playwright and journalist, popular advertisements for British Airways and a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE). He declined a knighthood. Robert was a good husband and father, albeit unusual, and great material for a marvellously entertaining biography that, even though presented by his son, maintains its objectivity.

An acting career takes off
An acting career takes off

Budapest Times

time25-05-2025

  • Budapest Times

An acting career takes off

It's only once the book is opened that 'With Nails' turns out to have a fuller title, 'With Nails: The Film Diaries of Richard E. Grant', so potential readers might not be wise to expect reminiscences of the usual variety, the old 'I was born in such-and-such a place on such-and-such a date, and Dad worked as a such-and-such and Mum was a such-and-such…' Immediately after this title page comes the publisher's information, and it reveals that the book was actually first published in 1996, a bit of a long time ago when you consider that Grant has made some 60 films since then. After all, next the Contents page lists chapters on only nine films: ' Withnail and I', 'Warlock', 'Henry and June', 'LA Story', 'Hudson Hawk', 'The Player', 'Dracula', 'The Age of Innocence' and 'Prêt-à-Porter', all from 1987 to 1994. There one other chapter titled 'More LA Stories' in which will be found further anecdotes of the Hollywood experience, pretty much a long round of parties, lunches and encounters with the colony's movers and shakers, the rich and famous, not to forget actual auditions, read-throughs and acting. Also, intriguingly, there is an 'Epilogue'. Something post-1996? No, this latter is just a shortish note on the parallel between getting the nod that you've passed the audition and being signed to convert your private diary into a public screed. Also now, though, comes an unannounced 'Post Script', and it contains a clue that it dates not from 2025 but from 2015. It would seem that the 'Film Diaries' also had a new life then. The 'Post Script'mentions the film 'Gosford Park', which was released in 2001, and gives the fact that Grant has been in London for 33 years, which we can work out would be 2015 because the book opens proceedings in 1985, which Grant says is three years after he emigrated from colonial Swaziland to England. Again, we can deduce that his arrival would have been as a 28-year-old, because if we look up his life elsewhere we find that his full name is Richard Grant Esterhuysen and he was born on May 5, 1957 in the Protectorate of Swaziland. Now that's fascinating. Why Swaziland? Many famous British people turn out to have been born in India, Burma, Malaya and other colonial outposts, the offspring of administrators sent out from the home country. But Swaziland? It's a logical question when he is seemingly a through-and-through Englishman. In the shortest of biographical notes the publisher simply informs us that 'Richard E. Grant was born and brought up in Mbabane, Swaziland', no date or anything, plus listing a few of his films and a couple of books he wrote, and that he lives in London with his family. It isn't until deep in the book that Grant, who often refers to himself self-deprecatingly as 'Swazi Boy' – such as in how did Swazi Bboy' get to be with all these film stars – opens up a little. His father had been Minister of Education during the British colonial jurisdiction of Swaziland until Independence in 1968, after which he was made an honorary adviser. The country was called the 'Switzerland of Africa', having relative economic stability, a single-tribe population and single-language status. The Grants lived in a hilltop house overlooking the Ezulweni Valley, meaning Valley of Heaven, with a panoramic view for 60 kilometres. Swaziland is now named the Kingdom of Eswatini and it is three-quarters surrounded by South Africa. In the chapter on 'The Player', Grant is at a party chockablock with 'names' and he spies Barbra Streisand. Getting introduced, he tells her that as a 14-year-old on a visit from Swaziland to Europe and England with his father – Home Leave as it was colonially called – they saw her 'Funny Girl', and the young Grant was thunderstruck, instantly falling in love. Back home he wrote to her 'care of Columbia Records' saying: 'I have followed your career avidly. We have all your records. I am fourteen years old. I read in the paper that you were feeling very tired and pressurised by your fame and failed romance with Mr Ryan O'Neal. I would like to offer you a two-week holiday, or longer, at our house, which is very beautiful with a pool and magnificent view of the Ezulweni Valley. 'Here you can rest. No one will trouble you and I assure you you will not be mobbed in the street as your films only show in our one cinema for three days, so not that many people will know who you are… ' etcetera. Days, weeks, months, years he waited but no reply. Now, in a party festooned with the likes of Al Pacino, Whoopi Goldberg, Jeff Goldblum, Diane Lane, Christopher Lambert, Julia Roberts, Jason Patric, Sandra Bernhard, Joel Silver, Annie Ross, Glenne Headly, Timothy Dalton, Robert Downey Jnr., Winona Ryder and more, here she is. He can barely speak in awe and she asks, 'Are you stoned?' He manages to tell her he is allergic to alcohol, whereupon she says, 'I know you from a movie'. This turns out to be 'Henry and June'. He confesses to the fan letter, which of course she never received, and she says she doesn't remember being exhausted then, 'must just be the usual press stuff'. He manages 22 minutes with 'Babs' – he timed it – but knows he is just another geeky gusher. While she is an idol with a significant place in his life and experience, he of course can have none in hers. He asks if he can kiss her hand in farewell, to which she says OK and laughs, saving her from Grant's further frothings. Grant writes how he arrived in England only to be 'marooned, becalmed, beached and increasingly bleached of self-confidence' as he embarked on his chosen career path. Unfortunately he found himself 'among the 95 per cent, forty-thousand-odd unemployed members of Equity' (the actors'trade union). He may be exaggerating to make his point. Nonetheless, the possibility of a role in a BBC production arises. But it would be as Dr. Frankenstein's creature. And there's an audition for the panto 'Robin Hood and the Babes in the Wood'. Humiliation. Who the hell do you think you are, he asks himself? Brando? Olivier? Go back to Swaziland. Fortunately he has a loving wife for support. He changes his agent. And then the Big Break. Handmade Films, formed by ex-Beatle George Harrison and his business partner Denis O'Brien in 1978 to finance the controversial Monty Python film 'Life of Brian', is going to make something called 'Withnail and I', about two out-of-work actors in squalid circumstances in London, and Grant lands the part of Withnail. This black, anarchic and eccentric film is surely one of the most hilarious ever made, beloved of anyone with a twisted sense of humour, including your correspondent. Grant doesn't need to do anything, to say anything; you only need to look at him to laugh. While Streisand said she recalled him in 'Henry and June', most other people he meets loved 'Withnail and I'. It made his career. Hollywood to Grant is 'a Suburban Babylon', 'the land of liposuction', 'the State of the Barbie'. He eats cold Chinese food with Madonna, has an odd shopping trip with Sharon Stone, works for pivotal directors Robert Altman, Martin Scorsese and Francis Ford Coppola. He talks parenting with Tom Waits. He notes the short statures of screen macho men Stallone and Schwarzenegger, the madness that was ' Hudson Hawk'… Richard E. Grant sees himself as a grounded man minus therapist, futurist, assistant, nutritionist, manager, lawyer and publicist, whom he labels fleece merchants. Still, there's piles of pampering – luxury hotels, first-class air travel, limos, per diems. Oh God, it's all so stratospheric. No wonder he had such a dreadful time filming in lowly Budapest in 1990. Poor chap, he hated absolutely everything – the airport staff, grey high-rises, dirty factories, potholes, sludgy Danube, queues, hotel, food, thermal bath, studio. Sorry about that, sir.

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