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biography | filmography
Tall, gangly, and possessed of a frenetic intensity that lends
itself to the highly eccentric and often borderline insane characters
he plays, British actor Richard E. Grant is nothing if not one
of the more distinctive performers to have gained celluloid immortality.
His wild eyes and high-strung demeanor occasionally giving him
an
uncanny resemblance to a meerkat on speed, Grant has been delighting
and shocking observers with both his on- and off-screen persona
since his 1987 breakthrough in Withnail & I.
Born
Richard Grant Esterhuysen on May 5, 1957, in Mbabane, Swaziland,
Grant had a somewhat distinctive upbringing, thanks in part to
his father's job as the Swazi Minister of Education. His parents'
divorce when the actor was 11, for example, was the source
of a fair amount of scandal in South Africa. For his part, Grant
knew early on that he wanted to be an actor, something that
was
fueled by an infatuation with Barbra Streisand and a steady
diet of movies. He followed the career of Donald Sutherland with
particularly
rapt attention, as, like Grant, Sutherland was tall, thin,
long-faced, and hailed from the middle of nowhere.
After studying English
and Drama at Cape Town University, where he co-founded the multi-racial,
avant garde Troupe Theatre
Company, Grant headed for London in 1982. He was greeted by
a period of unemployment and frustration that lasted for almost
five years. The actor eventually began finding work on the
stage, and in 1984 was dubbed by Plays and Players magazine
as "most promising newcomer" for his performance
in Tramway Road at
Hammersmith's Lyric Theatre. Ironically enough, given his years
of struggle, it was Grant's portrayal
of a bitter, pill-popping, unemployed actor in Bruce Robinson's
black comedy Withnail & I that
finally put him on the map. The film was a genuine cult classic,
and Hollywood soon came
sniffing around, if only to cast Grant in the 1988 demons-on-the-loose
flop Warlock. The
following year, the actor again tapped into his reserves of
unpleasantness for Robinson, starring as a
toxic advertising executive who develops a talking boil in
the satirical How to Get Ahead in
Advertising.
Grant's hilariously vile characterization was considered by
many to be the highlight
of the film, and further paved the way for greater industry
appreciation. Grant subsequently earned recognition on both
sides of the Atlantic, thanks to a number of diverse and often
peculiar roles in films
of widely varying quality. Particularly memorable during the
early to mid-'90s were portrayals Anais Nin's well-intentioned
but dull husband in Henry & June (1990), the evil billionaire
Darwin Mayflower in the spectacularly disappointing Hudson
Hawk (1991), an overly insistent screenwriter in Robert Altman's
The Player (1992), high society lounge lizard Larry Lefferts
in Martin Scorsese's The Age of Innocence (1993), and an outrageous
fashion designer that Grant described as a "male Vivienne
Westwood" in Altman's disastrous Pret-A-Porter (1994).
Despite
his eccentric persona, Grant has time and again proven himself
more than capable of essaying straight man roles, as
he demonstrated in such films as Jack and Sarah (1995), in
which he played a grieving widower; The Portrait
of a Lady (1996), in which he had a small but memorable role as one
of Isabel Archer's most ardent suitors; and the made-for-TV The
Scarlet Pimpernel (1999), which cast him as its titular hero.
He has also continued to shine in films that impress upon
his
comedic abilities, as evidenced by his role as Sir Andrew
Aguecheek in Trevor Nunn's Twelfth Night (1996) and his portrayal
of
a disgruntled advertising man in A Merry
War (1997) (otherwise
known as Keep the Aspidistra Flying), a satirical comedy
based upon a novel by George Orwell.
By Rebecca Flint
Source: All Movie Guide
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