The Star Malaysia - Star2

Grant grins and bears it

Hugh Grant has no problem playing a narcissist­ic actor in Paddington 2.

- By WILL LAWRENCE

WHEN creating the villain for Paddington 2, the filmmakers had to write a very delicate letter to Hugh Grant, explaining why they thought he would be perfect to play a washed-up, self-important actor.

Indeed, they were so keen on the star of Four Weddings And A Funeral (1994) and Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001) that they called the character Hugh throughout the writing process.

“We always wanted the villain to be him,” says writer-director Paul King to media at The Shard in London in November, “and we called our character Hugh Grant for about six months because you have a voice in your head when you are writing. “And then I had to write this very awkward letter going, ‘Dear Mr Grant, we have written this character in Paddington 2 who is a washedself-important, up, vain, probagood bly not very actor whose best days are behind him. And we immediatel­y thought of you’.”

King, who also wrote and directed the first Paddington film (2014), says that though he always found Grant very amusing on screen, he had never met him and had no idea how he would respond.

He says: “As it hapHugh pens, doesn’t take himself seriously at all. In fact, he has a very healthy disdain for the entire acting profession and he has lots of funny anecdotes from his days in repertory theatre, with varighastl­y ous, old loves.”

Grant shines in the role of Phoenix Buchanan, who emerges as the nemesis to the film’s titular hero, a small brown bear from Peru. As with the first movie, the film is a liveaction piece with a CGI bear, voiced once more by James Bond star Ben Whishaw. The bear, with his old hat, battered suitcase, duffle coat and a penchant for marmalade sandwiches, is a classic character from English children’s literature.

Grant says he quickly downloaded it after he was offered the role and adds that he admired it immensely.

“It’s quite a difficult thing to make children’s films without going sentimenta­l or yucky, and it was a very clever trick that Paul King brought off with that film,” says the actor who rummaged through memories from his early career on stage when putting his criminal character together.

“I spent a lot of the early part of my career in the 1980s doing plays with memorable theatrical types. I pillaged them all for this character, for the almost unendurabl­e, overweenin­g vanity of the man.

“He can’t see beyond his own beauty and talent, and that makes him do things that I’m sure he’s ashamed of,” Grant adds.

The role of an archvillai­n is absolutely vital to the success of a children’s film and much of the fanfare around the first Paddington movie, which took more than US$260mil at the worldwide box office, centred on Nicole Kidman’s performanc­e as a sadistic taxidermis­t.

One of the filmmakers’ few frustratio­ns with the first film was that the villain and Paddington could not spend much time together until the third act “because if she’s got him, she’s got him”, notes King, “and all of his agency disappears as a character”. A Bear Called Paddington Bourne Identity.”

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