Showing posts with label Notting Hill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Notting Hill. Show all posts

Monday, March 13, 2017

Behind the scenes of Comic Relief’s Love Actually: Andrew Lincoln’s creepy cards return

GUARDIAN
 Tom Lamont
Sunday 12 March 2017 10.00 EDT Last modified on Sunday 12 March 2017 20.10 EDT


Being on the set of a Richard Curtis film is very like being in a Richard Curtis film. Everyone is good-looking and brisk and witty, here in the borrowed London townhouse where the 60-year-old director is shooting a short sequel to his movie Love Actually. Outside in the real world people are angry, at odds, ever more polarised. On Curtis’s closed set, a dungareed world of Lillies and Berties and Cols and Ems, trays of brownies circulate and the chat is about who slept with who once but stayed friends. Hugh Grant is present, roaming around and given licence to be caustic and urbane: “If anyone needs me I’ll be in my lair.” Otherwise the prevailing spirit is level-headedness and sympathy. “Richard likes it,” an assistant says to me, “when people are nice to each other. Plum?”

Curtis is making this short followup to Love Actually in aid of Comic Relief and Red Nose Day, causes he co-founded in the 1980s. Many of the actors from the original have agreed to return, including Grant, Colin Firth, Keira Knightley, Bill Nighy and Liam Neeson; charity tempting them back, after 14 years, to Curtisland, that preposterous and seductive fantasia-Britain that was established in a trilogy of famous romcoms: Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994), Notting Hill (1999) and Love Actually (2003). Of the three it was the last, a multi-narrative soup of soppy vignettes, written and directed by Curtis, that went on to have the most prodigious afterlife. Love Actually is now broadcast on TV with metronomic, Bond-movie regularity. In a single week last winter more than 1m copies of the film were sold on DVD in the US. At around the same time, in the UK, Love Actually was voted by the Radio Times “the nation’s favourite Christmas movie”.

On the set of the sequel, Firth ponders the movie’s substantial modern viewership and positions it in the culture somewhere alongside The Sound of Music. Grant, when asked to account for Love Actually’s enduring popularity, assumes his role as resident cynic and grumbles: “It’s unaccountable.”


Grant sips water and tries to catch his breath. He’s just shimmied his way around a bit of the set made up to look like 10 Downing Street, a grand marble staircase behind him hung with photographs of former prime ministers. His photo is among those on the wall, the actor today reprising his role as the Blair-ish PM who in the original film put aside duties of state to woo his secretary, played by Martine McCutcheon. Such is the power of love in a Richard Curtis film that Grant had to dance out his romantic vigour by wiggling up and down the halls of Downing Street to a Girls Aloud song. There’s another dance in the sequel. As with most of the new scenes in Curtis’s followup, an incident or encounter from the first film is referenced, with some sort of twist catching us up on what has happened to the character, a decade and a half on.


Curtis has Grant say something like this when they shoot a press conference scene, next. The fictional PM is asked to give the public his view on the future of world affairs, and with implausible but seductive simplicity (that patented Curtis mix) Grant insists: “Good’s going to win, I’m actually sure of it.” They do the line a few times before an assistant yells for a cut and everybody breaks for lunch. Lamb wraps.

There was a scene in Notting Hill, which also starred Grant, during which his character went along to a movie shoot: he got placed on the sidelines with a pair of headphones so that he could listen in on the actors’ dialogue. In this way he accidentally heard them mutter bitchy secrets to each other. It happens to me in eerie replication one day. A scene is being reset and a prominent actor fills the waiting with wicked chat. There is a dig at an absent castmate. Then the actor ranks by merit some of the films they have made since the last Love Actually, the one they had to be talked into, the “pay-day”. Blushing, absolutely fascinated, I listen for as long as decency and personal ethics allow before turning the volume down.


So there is a little darkness in Curtisland, after all. Commentators on the outside would suggest it has always been there. When Love Actually celebrated a 10th anniversary in 2013, various critical reappraisals appeared. Persuasive cases were made about the movie’s shaky treatment of women, especially. By this point I’d seen Love Actually enough times to have a demented familiarity with its dozen plots (Liam Neeson advising his stepson how to win the girl of his dreams, Alan Rickman cheating on his wife Emma Thompson, Andrew Lincoln declaring himself to the unattainable Keira Knightley by showing up at her doorstep with handwritten signs) but I was never able to watch it through with the same old naivety after reading Lindy West’s furious and brilliant essay for Jezebel. West pointed out how much of the plot depended on women falling in love with their male employers, suggested “Hostile Work Environment: The Movie” as an alternative title, and went as far as likening the romance between Colin Firth’s character and his Portuguese maid, played by Lucia Moniz, to sex trafficking.

READ MORE HERE: https://www.theguardian.com/film/2017/mar/12/behind-the-scenes-of-comic-reliefs-love-actually-andrew-lincolns-creepy-cards-return

Saturday, October 11, 2014

Hugh Grant has dished on working with Julia Roberts, Renée Zellweger, Sandra Bullock and Sarah Jessica Parker

CELEBRITY LIFE
October 12, 2014

Got on well ... Hugh Grant and Sandra Bullock starred together in Two Weeks Notice.

HUGH Grant may be discreet about the women in his private life but the actor has spilled on which of his female co-stars was the best kisser and who he actually enjoyed working with.

Grant dished the dirt on Alan Carr’s Chatty Man show while promoting his new romantic comedy The Rewrite in which he stars opposite Marissa Tomei.

He said you never quite know when you are cast whether the chemistry will work.

“Sometimes you loathe each other. Sometimes hate comes over as love. I’ve had some amazing leading ladies,” he said. “The ones I really got on with are Sandra Bullock and Sarah Jessica Parker.”



When it comes to kissing however he said he struggled smooching Julia Roberts in Notting Hill.

“It’s a big mouth. I was aware of a faint echo when I was kissing her,” he said.

Grant said no one can beat Bridget Jones’ Diary co-star Renée Zellweger when it comes to kissing, saying she is definitely “top snogger”.

He said that he and Colin Firth engaged in a “competitive snogging” contest to try and outdo each other.

“You will have to ask Renee who she preferred. I think Colin tried too hard,” he said.


READ MORE HERE: http://www.news.com.au/entertainment/celebrity-life/hugh-grant-has-dished-on-working-with-julia-roberts-rene-zellweger-sandra-bullock-and-sarah-jessica-parker/story-fn907478-1227087684456

Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Hugh Grant Joins Breathing Campaign For Premature Babies

CONTACT MUSIC
by WENN
14 October 2013

Hugh Grant

British actor Hugh Grant has joined a campaign to save the lives of premature babies.

The Notting Hill star has teamed up with bosses of the Be A Breath Giver campaign to help raise money to provide U.K. hospitals with specialist breathing equipment.


Grant took to Twitter.com to share the news with his fans, writing, "I am supporting be a breath giver in raising money for specialist breathing equipment for premature babies."

Monday, August 26, 2013

It was 72nd-time lucky for Hugh Grant in 'Four Weddings' auditions



THE INDEPENDENT
26 August, 2013

Hugh Grant was the 72nd person to be auditioned for the lead role in Four Weddings and a Funeral, Richard Curtis has revealed.


The role of Charles in the British romcom swept Grant to stardom and he went on to appear in the likes of Notting Hill, Bridget Jones’s Diary and Love, Actually.



But Curtis, who penned the 1994 film, directed by Mike Newell, told the Radio Times: “Hugh Grant was,  I think, the 72nd person we auditioned for the lead in Four Weddings, and was the first one to make it seem funny at all.”


READ MORE HERE: http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/films/news/it-was-72ndtime-lucky-for-hugh-grant-in-four-weddings-auditions-8785029.html

Friday, August 9, 2013

Domhnall Gleeson climbs his way to the Hollywood A-list



THE INDEPENDENT
CAITLIN MCBRIDE – 09 AUGUST 2013

THE son of legendary actor Brendan Gleeson, Domhnall, joined Rachel McAdams for his latest film premiere.

Irish actor Domhnall is celebrating his first major Hollywood role, alongside actress Rachel McAdams. The pair star in the romantic comedy About Time, and stepped out to promote the film together at the world premiere in London.


The acting duo were the star attractions at last night's red carpet event, held at Somerset House. Domhnall opted for classic elegance in a grey suit and navy tie, while his co-star wore Roksanda Ilincic top, skirt, and belt, Casadei shoes, and Norman Silverman earrings.

The young actor is earning rave reviews for his role in About Time, in which he plays the geeky Londoner who learns he can travel back in time. However, with the world at his fingertips, he his only goal is to find a girlfriend (played by McAdams).


Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Jonny Lee Miller: 'Elementary' season 2 casting news: Rhys Ifans to recur as Mycroft Holmes TVJUNE 26, 2013BY: MEREDITH JACOBS (EXAMINER)

Actor Rhys Ifans arrives at the premiere of Columbia Pictures' 'The Amazing Spider-Man' at the Regency Village Theatre on June 28, 2012 in Westwood, California.

It's already been announced that "Elementary" is heading to London for its second season premiere, and on Wednesday, June 26, CBS announced some very exciting casting news, especially for those hoping to see some familiar characters on the show.

According to CBS, Rhys Ifans ("The Amazing Spider-Man," "Notting Hill") will be recurring as Sherlock Holmes' older brother, Mycroft Holmes, beginning with the "Elementary" season 2 premiere, which will be shot on location in London. Sherlock (Jonny Lee Miller) heads to London to revisit an old case, which forces him to face Mycroft. The brothers suffered a drastic falling out a few years earlier, but Sherlock and Joan (Lucy Liu) will be staying in his new home, and it should be one that is very familiar to Sherlock fans: 221B Baker Street. Joan will be caught in the middle as the brothers are forced to deal with their very complicated past.

READ MORE: http://www.examiner.com/article/elementary-season-2-casting-news-rhys-ifans-to-recur-as-mycroft-holmes

Monday, June 3, 2013

Rhys Ifans gives 'the interview from hell' and exposes a journalistic farce (THE GUARDIAN)

Rhys Ifans
Rhys Ifans: car-crash of an interview. Photograph: Adrian Sherratt

Billed on The Times's front page as "the interview from hell," Janice Turner's piece on the actor Rhys Ifans is a must-read for journalists and, especially, would-be journalists.

It certainly lives up/down to its billing. It is a car crash. But its most interesting feature is not its uniqueness, but the fact that it is symptomatic of the absurdity of virtually all celebrity interviews.

As a journalistic genre, it has become increasingly clear that the whole process is a waste of time for everyone involved: interviewer, interviewee, PR "minder" and, most importantly, the reader.

As I say, most of the time the system works. But just occasionally the facade collapses to reveal the farcical reality, and that's what happened during Turner's interview with Ifans.

He didn't want to be there and not only made no attempt to compromise but decided to be as rude and offensive as possible.

Turner is an experienced journalist who knows what is required of a one-hour interview, as she explained in her article:

"The game is you listen politely while they plug their film, bang on about their 'method', the brilliance of their co-stars and directors etc. Then in return you hope they will offer up — without you having to prod and pester like some celebrity stalker — the tiniest nugget of anecdote, a shard of light upon their real selves.

Because they hate the game too, and particularly since it is mainly conducted in hotel suites, you feel as if you're engaged in an odd form of prostitution, one where it remains unclear who is the hooker and who the john."

She had been warned by the PR not to touch on certain personal issues, such as his relationships with women. This prior restraint is common.


Believing Ifans to be "a thoughtful man" who might like to discuss "important issues", Turner decided to begin by asking him about his Welshness. That's hardly a controversial subject, but Ifans decided to be obstreperous.

It went downhill from there and Turner soon detected that Ifans was being condescending because he "is one of those actors who believes that he's an 'artist'".

Accepting that he "has a low opinion of journalists" she asked him if he supported Lord Justice Leveson's call for statutory underpinning of press regulation.

After Ifans had consulted the publicist about whether he should talk about the subject, he mumbled something about the press requiring "liberty" but contended "they should also be curtailed when they fucking lie."

He then refused to say whether he had used the Press Complaints Commission and Turner was by now aware that the conversation had gone sour. Evidently, he was glaring at her fiercely.


Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Downton Abbey star HUGH BONNEVILLE is evidence that prioritising acting over academia at Cambridge can pay off. He talks to NATALIE GIL. By Natalie Gil Features | 27th February 2013 (CAMBRIDGE TAB)


Hugh Bonneville has become something of a legend to the loyal Sunday night TV viewers of Britain. His current role, for which he is arguably best known, is as Lord Grantham in the mind-bogglingly popular Downton Abbey. But those less enthusiastic about costume dramas and the elevated segregation of the upper classes might also have spotted him as the eponymous and irritable tramp in Mr Stink, or as Ian Fletcher, Head of Deliverance for the Olympics in the BBC mockumentary, Twenty Twelve. Oh, and don’t forget his role as the lovably ignorant Bernie in Notting Hill.

What Do You Do?: One of the most amusingly awkward moments in Notting Hill. Hell, maybe even in the history of British rom coms.

After a stint at a London drama school, Bonneville studied Theology at Corpus Christi in the eighties, where he admits he was a ‘pretty pants’ student, having done ‘far too many plays than was healthy’ for his academic career. Possibly explaining why he came away with a Desmond 2:2 in Theology. But his stellar career and (well-merited) celebrity status, re-ignited by Downton, suggest there’s hope for us all regardless of our results in Finals.

Like a butler with a tray of foie gras canapés, costume dramas come and go in Britain, so why does Bonneville think people have warmed to Downton more than the rest? “If I knew that I’d be a millionaire, having bottled the recipe”, he jokes. Then he re-thinks: “one reason why it’s appealed to a broader audience than one might expect from a traditional costume drama is that it’s about tension not violence, romance rather than sex. It’s not so in your face. And it just breathes out in way that a lot of contemporary shows, which are brilliant, don’t.”

- See more at: http://cambridge.tab.co.uk/2013/02/27/interview-hugh-bonneville/#sthash.gH2N6HaM.dpuf


Friday, February 22, 2013

Interview: Hugh Bonneville Florence Smith-Nicholls talks to the star at the Cambridge Union about Downton fame and college life. by Florence Smith-Nicholls Saturday 23rd February 2013, 00:22 GMT (VARSITY)



It’s twilight on a bleak February evening and I’m sprinting down Castle Hill dodging students whilst frantically keying nonsensical messages into my mobile phone, I’m getting the most exercise I’ve had in Lent term so far. Why the amateur athletics? Rather than a week five bout of supervision amnesia, I’m running late for a much more important appointment. Lord Grantham of Downton Abbey fame has come to Cambridge.

Those of you not acquainted with the Lord might know him by his other name, Hugh Bonneville. You might also know him under the guise of a rather unprepossessing tramp called Mr. Stink, or as Ian Fletcher, Head of Deliverance for the 2012 Olympic Games. Indeed, Bonneville is that rare breed of actor who can put on many faces without you necessarily remembering his original identity. It is as a Lord, though, that Bonneville has really become a national treasure.

Hugh has come to speak at the Cambridge Union, and as I pant my way towards the redbrick building, I already know what my first question will be. As a former Cantabrigian at Corpus Christi college, I ask him about his defining memory of his time as an undergraduate. Rehearsals rooms and auditions, that’s what he remembers: “I’m afraid the School of Divinity didn’t see as much of me as it should have done.” Wearing jeans and a hoody, Bonneville is more the leisurely student than a carefully coifed member of the aristocracy: there is no hint of Grantham here. I feel instantly at ease with Hugh; he emanates the calm confidence of an experienced interviewee.

READ MORE: http://www.varsity.co.uk/culture/5667

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Hugh Grant shows off his paternal side at Cloud Atlas gala... as he reveals it 'feels great' to become a father again By KIMBERLEY DADDS PUBLISHED: 17:57 EST, 18 February 2013 |(DAILY MAIL)




It was only two days ago that Hugh Grant revealed he has become a father for the second time.

And it seems the new addition has brought out the paternal side in him.

The Notting Hill actor was the star guest at the Cloud Atlas gala screening in London on Monday evening.


The 52-year-old showed off his fatherly side as he met two-year-old girl Tyler who was at the screening with her parents.

With his childless bachelor days behind him, Hugh seemed happy to pick up the cute blonde girl as he greeted fans outside the event at the Curzon Mayfair Cinema.

Grant, who already has 18-month-old daughter Tabitha, recently welcomed a son with the 33-year-old Chinese actress Tinglan Hong.


Suited and booted: James Darcy and Tom Hiddlestone were also present in their dapper outfits

READ MORE: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/tvshowbiz/article-2280789/Hugh-Grant-shows-paternal-Cloud-Atlas-gala--reveals-feels-great-father-again.html?ito=feeds-newsxml


Monday, February 18, 2013

Hugh Grant a father for second time (INDEPENDENT IE)


17 FEBRUARY 2013

Actor Hugh Grant has become a father for the second time and announced the news on his Twitter account - but warned the press to leave his family "in peace".

The Notting Hill and Bridget Jones star is "thrilled" to have welcomed a baby boy, a brother for his one-year-old daughter Tabitha, with Chinese actress Tinglan Hong - a relationship that started out as a "fleeting affair".

The 52-year-old film star has almost been more famous for his appearance at the Leveson Inquiry and his campaigning for a more responsible press of late than for his films, and his tweets are not without a reference to that passion.

He tweeted: "In answer to some journos. Am thrilled my daughter now has a brother. Adore them both to an uncool degree. They have a fab mum.

"And to be crystal clear. I am the Daddy.





Monday, February 4, 2013

Men of Downton Abbey BEFORE Downton Abbey...Posted on February 3, 2013 by Cathy Chester

Mr. Carson, Jim Carter


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=WfUTDlmLMFk#!


Matthew Crawley, Dan Stevens


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=MMogFYhaHeA

Mr. Bates, Brendan Coyle


http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=NU6o4Ticx-c

His Lordship, Hugh Bonneville

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=JexO-N39Nzg


http://anempoweredspirit.com/category/hugh-bonneville

Thursday, November 1, 2012

Gemma Arterton, Hugh Bonneville lined up for 'The Pre-Nup' (CHICAGO TRIBUNE)


 
Hugh Bonneville and Gemma Arterton from "Lost in Austen"

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Gemma Arterton and Hugh Bonneville are lined up for "The Pre-Nup," a new romantic comedy to be directed by Jonathan Lynn, a person familiar with the project told TheWrap.

Currently in pre-production, the film follows an American groom who suggests to his British bride on the night before their wedding that they get a pre-nup.

He is a successful investment banker and she is an expat novelist based in New York. And his father is a former rock star who threatens to cut him off if he doesn't agree to get the legal document.

READ MORE: http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/sns-rt-us-theprenupbre8a01s2-20121101,0,5955761.story

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Hugh Bonneville's new movie role - Mr. Stink


Hugh Bonneville is set to star on the upcoming television family drama (which is based on David Walliams' children's book of the same name) alongside Sheridan Smith and Britain's Got Talent star Pudsey the dog!











Thursday, September 20, 2012

Colin Firth, Hugh Grant: Bridget Jones 3 is taking shape (UKPA) – 4 hours ago



The script for the third Bridget Jones instalment is still being written, its producer has said.

But Tim Bevan, the co-chairman of Working Title Films, said the movie, Bridget Jones's Baby, was beginning to take shape.

"The script is being written. Bridget Jones's Baby is like herding cats, but they're beginning to fall into line," he said, reported Radio 1 Newsbeat online, confirming that the cast had been approached about the third film.

The last Bridget Jones film, The Edge Of Reason, came out in 2004, with Renee Zellweger, Colin Firth and Hugh Grant reprising their roles.

READ MORE:http://www.google.com/hostednews/ukpress/article/ALeqM5jNzn4dq9cnssCnCX6B7wvmXe1INg?docId=N0282881348133574322A


Sunday, September 16, 2012

The disastrous duet of Hugh Grant and Liz Hurley (EVENING STANDARD)


Things have not always run smoothly in the glittering career of Hugh Grant. He tells an Oxford literary magazine about five embarrassing failures in his life.

When he was 12 he tried to throw a cricket ball back to the bowler at Lord’s but it flew backwards into the crowd. Later he wore his mother’s red anorak when he was a teenage motorbike messenger and no one would talk to him. He once failed in a TV adaptation of a Barbara Cartland novel because he had a squeaky voice, and in a Spanish- made film about Lord Byron his hair perm was too curly.

But the worst disaster occurred when Liz Hurley made him sing a duet with her, as Frank and Nancy Sinatra, while they were on holiday in the South of France.

“A band was playing to a large crowd,” he tells the autumn edition of Arete, a learned quarterly for Oxford graduates such as himself. “It’s hard now to imagine how I allowed myself to be persuaded by my then girlfriend to go up with her and sing Something Stupid. In harmony. I might have been fractionally drunk but I remember a moment of sudden and terrifying sobriety, followed by blind panic, and then us starting so far off key that the band had to stop and start again.

“This happened three times. In the end we were told to leave the stage. When we got back to our friends we found they’d fled.”

Arete’s editor Craig Raine writes  encouragingly: “Hugh recently starred in the Leveson Inquiry into phone hacking with great success.”

READ MORE: http://www.standard.co.uk/news/londoners-diary/the-disastrous-duet-of-hugh-grant-and-liz-hurley-8117470.html

Saturday, September 15, 2012

Hugh Grant Sues News Corp. Over Phone Hacking by Tabloid By Erik Larson - Sep 14, 2012 10:26 AM ET (BLOOMBERG)



Hugh Grant, the British actor who told a media-ethics inquiry the press had become “toxic” in its pursuit of celebrity gossip, sued News Corp. (NWSA)’s U.K. unit over claims its News of the World tabloid hacked his phone.

The lawsuit was filed yesterday in London, his lawyer Mark Thomson said in an e-mail. Grant, 52, joins Sarah Ferguson, the Duchess of York, and 34 other victims who lodged claims yesterday, racing to beat the deadline for the civil suit which won’t begin before May 1.


Grant, who starred in the comedy “Notting Hill,” told the inquiry in November that phone hacking was probably used by other publishers. He said he’d suffered numerous media intrusions, such as a break-in at his apartment in 1995 and tabloids running stories about private medical treatments.

The now-defunct tabloid targeted some of the best-known celebrities, including U.S. actors Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie and England soccer player Wayne Rooney, prosecutors said in July. Rebekah Brooks, the former chief executive officer of News Corp.’s U.K. publisher, and seven others were charged with conspiring between 2000 and 2006 to hack the phone messages of more than 600 people.


READ MORE: http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-09-14/hugh-grant-sues-news-corp-over-phone-hacking-by-u-k-tabloid.html




Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Colin Firth project for Canongate 22.08.12 | Benedicte Page (THE BOOKSELLER)



Canongate is working with a group of actors and musicians including Academy Award-winner Colin Firth on a multimedia project called The People Speak.

Alongside a book, the project will include a stage show which will bring to life the voices of British campaigners, dissidents and visionaries from the 12th century to the present day.

The idea began life in America, where performers such as Matt Damon and Bob Dylan supported the scheme. Author and editor Anthony Arnove has now brought the idea to the UK, where a cast including Ian McKellen and Rupert Everett will perform at the Tabernacle in Notting Hill, west London, on 16th September.

Canongate will publish an accompanying book, The People Speak, on 13th September priced at £17.99, compiled by Firth, Arnove and historian David Horspool, collecting a range of speeches, songs and letters from British history by writers including Emmeline Pankhurst and Oscar Wilde

READ MORE: http://www.thebookseller.com/news/firth-project-canongate.html

Friday, July 27, 2012

Hugh Grant as Killer Rapist in Cloud Atlas: Six Other Actor Transformations ArticleComments 0 By Nicholas Edmondson: Subscribe to Nicholas's RSS feed July 27, 2012 4:15 PM GMT (INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS TIMES)



Hugh Grant's fans would typically expect to see him sipping a cappuccino in a middle-class bistro as part of a gentle romantic comedy.

But the owner of England's most famous foppish fringe is sure to raise a few eyebrows with his performance in the adaptation of David Mitchell's Cloud Atlas.

In the film, which takes in a number of interconnected stories from the 19th century to a post-apocalyptic future, Grant play several cameo roles, including that of a cannibal.

Grant had grown frustrated with his typecasting as the go-to British romantic comedy star following great success in Richard Curtis' Four Weddings and a Funeral, and Notting HIll.

He told Empire: "I do a lot of killing and raping. I wear an awful lot of prostheic makeup. You probably wouldn't know I was in the film. But it was a laugh. I slightly called my own bluff."



READ MORE: http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/articles/367628/20120727/hugh-grant-cloud-atlas-cannibal-robin-williams.htm

Saturday, July 21, 2012

Hugh Bonneville in Notting Hill (video)



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JexO-N39Nzg&feature=player_embedded


It was this film, and in fact, this very scene, that made me a big Hugh Bonneville fan.  Well, this scene and the  one at the end when he grabs the reporter (female) and gives her a big kiss.  I was sorry he wasn't in more of Notting Hill - I imagine his scenes were deleted to show more of Julia.  Big mistake.  Huge mistake