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- <text id=94TT0448>
- <title>
- Apr. 25, 1994: Cinema:Not Just Another Pretty Face
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Apr. 25, 1994 Hope in the War against Cancer
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CINEMA, Page 87
- Not Just Another Pretty Face
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>On screen and off, Hugh Grant drips charm, but he has a wicked
- side too
- </p>
- <p>By Ginia Bellafante--Reported by Georgia Harbison/New York and Barry Hillenbrand/Dublin
- </p>
- <p> There he was preparing to cavort in the buff with Andie MacDowell.
- For a seasoned, swaggering movie heartthrob, that scene might
- have been an irresistible chance to show off, but for Hugh Grant
- the occasion proved mortifying. "The first time I took my shirt
- off on the set," he says, referring to the filming of Four Weddings
- and a Funeral, "the make-up artist asked, `Do you want definition
- painted in?' What was even more tragic is that I would have
- liked it but could not face having it painted on in front of
- everyone else. I'm still getting over that."
- </p>
- <p> A 33-year-old Londoner, all beguiling smile and self-deprecating
- wit, Grant is the leading man of the moment. Four Weddings,
- a British romantic comedy, has become a surprise hit, earning
- more money per theater than any other current top-grossing movie.
- In the film, Grant plays Charles, a shy, befuddled single guy
- who is unable to commit to a woman. He falls for a beautiful
- American (MacDowell), and when he finally manages to reveal
- his true feelings to her, he does it by declaring, "In the words
- of David Cassidy--when he was with the Partridge Family--I think I love you."
- </p>
- <p> Presumably less equivocal in real life, Grant has been dating
- a British actress, Elizabeth Hurley, for seven years. He continues
- to live in the un-swanky neighborhood of Earl's Court in London;
- she lives in Los Angeles. Lovable guy that he is, Grant buys
- clothes for Hurley and sends his finds west. "I've become rather
- worryingly interested in women's clothes," he says. "I find
- myself buying Vogue for pleasure. I think in a year's time I'll
- be wearing them."
- </p>
- <p> The son of a schoolteacher mother and carpet-salesman-turned-artist
- father, Grant graduated from Oxford University with a degree
- in English. After a stint in repertory ("I was bored playing
- the tree that waved in the wind and the fourth angry peasant"),
- he wrote and performed in satirical revues. Grant's drollness
- led James Ivory to cast him in Maurice, the director's adaptation
- of E.M. Forster's somber novel about homosexual lovers. Ivory
- had wanted to bring a dash of humor to the film, and he thought
- Grant could provide it. Maurice was Grant's first major film
- role, and it had the unanticipated result of turning him into
- a huge star in Japan. There were even two books about him published
- there. "For a few years, I was getting sacks full of origami
- and very sensitive letters which said I have sensitive eyes
- and a kind face," he says. "Little did they know I wanted their
- money, not their love." To Grant's dismay, Maurice pegged him
- for dramas, and he wound up in a variety of serious Eurofilms
- including Merchant-Ivory's Remains of the Day. "If they would
- only give me something lighter," he recalls saying to himself,
- "I'd be better." Finally, Grant's amusing performance in Roman
- Polanski's Bitter Moon brought him to the attention of Four
- Weddings director Mike Newell and led to his screen break in
- a real comedy.
- </p>
- <p> In the Polanski film Grant played a stodgy Englishman who is
- all too fascinated by an acquaintance's lurid sex tales. Like
- this character, Grant may appear proper, but he has a devilish
- streak. Four Weddings producer Duncan Kenworthy says Grant is
- "like the naughty boy telling wicked tales out of school." Indeed,
- when talking about Andie MacDowell, Grant is quick to point
- out that he watched her dribble tea on her Chanel jacket. "To
- my eternal delight, that's how she became known, as `the dribbler.'
- " But Grant's gossipy sarcasm is apparently not always that
- innocuous. "I am capable of being really quite nasty,'' he confesses.
- Mike Newell would agree. "He has a view of people which can
- be very, very cruel if he wants to be. He is a very bright man.
- He will not suffer fools gladly." A detached quality is evident
- in conversation with Grant: his dressing room may be littered
- with clothes and old letters, he may mock himself endearingly,
- but he nevertheless has a manner that is controlled and self-contained.
- </p>
- <p> Newell is taking advantage of Grant's less sunny side in An
- Awfully Big Adventure, a period film in which Grant portrays
- a somewhat mean-spirited and domineering actor-director. "It's
- a bit upsetting," jokes Grant, "that Mike Newell cast me in
- Four Weddings because he thought I was a nice, fun-loving kind
- of guy. By the end of six weeks, he was ready to cast me as
- my unpleasant real self." The question, though, is whether or
- not moviegoers will take warmly to any exhibition of Grantian
- unpleasantness. At his most attractive, Grant exudes the vulnerability
- of someone unaware of his own prodigious appeal. He takes to
- the dance floor in Bitter Moon, for example, and displays the
- awkwardness of a man who thinks he looks like Bill Gates. In
- the Australian erotic romp Sirens, supermodel Elle Macpherson
- spends a good deal of the time languidly sucking her fingers
- in front of Grant's character, but he barely notices. "He's
- got a skill that no one else has at this point," says Duncan
- Kenworthy. "He's found something that's gone from the movies:
- the intelligent comic leading man." Some would like to keep
- him that way.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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