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TIME: Almanac 1990s
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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>