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  • - You have to go by instinct,

  • a combination of does this script appeal,

  • who are the other actors attached,

  • who is the director?

  • All of those things combined to make it seem

  • a viable project.

  • You have no way of knowing because

  • you have to take a gamble otherwise

  • every movie you made would be an instant hit

  • because we'd all known and you know nobody does that.

  • As William Gilbert the late screenwriter said,

  • "nobody knows anything."

  • [upbeat piano music]

  • My name is Richard E. Grant

  • and this is the timeline of my career.

  • What a piece of work is a man.

  • How noble in reason, how infinite in faculties,

  • how like an angel in apprehension,

  • how like a god of beauty of the world.

  • I had been unemployed for nine months

  • before I got this part, so playing somebody

  • who is bitter and twisted about being

  • an alcoholic, unemployable actor

  • was the best and unplanned life experience

  • that I could possibly have had.

  • I was 29 years old in the spring of 1986.

  • They had tried to get this movie

  • with an unpronounceable title "Withnail and I" cast.

  • Daniel Day Lewis had just come off

  • a double whammy of appearing in "Room With a View"

  • and "My Beautiful Launderette",

  • so he was offered absolutely everything

  • including the lead in "Withnail and I".

  • Massively he turned it down and the casting director

  • was then scraping around, I had never done a movie before

  • let alone an audition for one

  • and got called up by the late Mary Selway

  • the casting director, she cast me in it

  • that gave me the beginning of a film career

  • and the irony is that I am allergic to alcohol

  • as I discovered when I was a teenager

  • that I had blood tests and have no enzyme in my system,

  • so Bruce Robinson the writer/director,

  • he's a masochist of course and he insisted

  • that I had a chemical memory

  • and so he sent me home and I got paralytically drunk

  • on a bottle of champagne.

  • Throwing up, drinking, throwing up, drinking

  • until I eventually went to rehearsals the next morning

  • and then there was a moment where I knew

  • that I had to get out of the door

  • because I could feel a Persian carpet of vomit

  • coming up my throat, passed out outside

  • and then woke up in my own bed 24 hours later

  • having no memory of how I got there.

  • In the scene of the movie where these two characters

  • are just so desperate for any kind of alcohol

  • or substance he takes lighter fluid

  • and during the rehearsal it had been water

  • and Bruce Robinson replaced it

  • with very, very strong vinegar,

  • so when this went down my throat I choked

  • and then vomited all over Paul McGann's shoes

  • out of site of the camera.

  • Paul McGann had a big television series.

  • He was very self-confident and I'm 6'2"

  • and he said, "you know, you're never ever

  • "gonna make it in the movies because

  • "everybody is height impaired like Tom Cruise"

  • and I said, "well, Clint Eastwood's over 6'2"

  • "and there are people that are over 6'2."

  • He said, "Nah, you haven't a chance."

  • [laughing]

  • He was you know funny and mocking,

  • but I was convinced that I would never work again

  • and ironically playing that out of work,

  • alcoholic, drug-addicted actor

  • has lead to every single job almost without exception

  • that I've had in the movie industry ever since.

  • Would not Satan have saved you,

  • were he thus inclined?

  • - Perhaps he'll save us both, Redferne.

  • - Withnail had opened in America

  • before it did in England and a director

  • called Steve Miner and the late great producer,

  • Arnold Kopelson who had just won an Oscar

  • came to London because they were doing this

  • historical horror movie called "Warlock",

  • set between the 18th century and the 20th century

  • and they wanted Sean Connery, he turned it down,

  • they then went to Michael Douglas, he turned it down

  • and then they'd seen Withnail

  • and thought well we'll get a skinny English guy

  • who's gonna cost us nothing, he'll do a Scottish accent

  • because we originally wanted Sean Connery.

  • So I went to L.A. and the first job I did there

  • was this horror movie that had this tagline,

  • "He came from the past to destroy the future."

  • All I know to say, oh you know Hollywood

  • and write it off as a superficial place

  • of no consequence, but I absolutely loved it.

  • I'd been a film buff because I grew up in Swaziland,

  • which was a British protectorate in Southeast Africa.

  • There was no television where I grew up

  • at all until I had left.

  • Movies and the radio were the two outlets

  • into the world beyond.

  • The idea that I would ever be in a movie,

  • let alone work in Hollywood was so unlikely

  • that I was just gobsmacked to be there.

  • Hi. - Hi.

  • - I loved your wacky TV bit.

  • - Thanks, I loved your too.

  • - But I didn't...

  • - You know I can explain it's a very simple thing...

  • - Oh, I see.

  • - See it's a thing that I do regularly...

  • - That's marvelously funny.

  • You have a lot of verve.

  • - Verve?

  • - I had done a second film with Bruce Robinson

  • called "How to Get Ahead in Advertising"

  • and at the premiere of that I met Steve Martin

  • and he said, "Would you be in my next movie?"

  • and I thought yeah, pigs might fly.

  • A month later true to his word

  • I got the script of "L.A. Story"

  • and was flown out to L.A., so that was my second job there

  • and I had been warned that Steve

  • was very difficult to get to know,

  • there would be no small talk whatsoever.

  • So I was staying at the Chateau Marmont

  • and I got a phone call, "Hey, it's Steve."

  • I said, "Steve who?"

  • He said, "Steve Martin."

  • "Do you want to come over for brunch?"

  • I said, "Okay."

  • And he opened the door and he was very friendly

  • and he said, "Would you like a drink?

  • What do you want to eat?"

  • I meet his wife Victoria Tennant

  • who I was playing the husband of in the story

  • and I thought I'd be there for half an hour,

  • 10 minutes I had no idea, stayed the whole day.

  • So he was the complete opposite

  • of what I had been told he would be like.

  • We've become from that age onwards great friends

  • and we used to communicate at the end of the last century

  • by fax on a weekly basis.

  • So he's got apparently sort of box of faxes that thick.

  • There's a book that we have written between us

  • of this 30 year friendship.

  • I've got all the emails.

  • He's kept all the faxes.

  • He could have me in court really

  • or other people could have me in court

  • because they are unvarnished in which

  • nothing is censored and no prisoners are taken.

  • So there was this scene inside the L.A. Museum,

  • Steve was on roller skates, he's such a physical comedian

  • when he puts his mind to it he just has

  • this obsessive determination to get something right

  • and it was an amazing privilege

  • to be able to film in that museum

  • without anybody else around,

  • so that's all I remember from that day

  • and the fact that all the fashions

  • were high-waisted, pleated pants

  • I don't think will ever come back into fashion.

  • She's dead.

  • I'll tell you there's not a dry eye in the house.

  • - She's dead?

  • - She's dead.

  • This is a tough story, a tragedy

  • in which an innocent woman dies.

  • Why?

  • Because that happens.

  • I was in an absolute disastrous movie "Hudson Hawk"

  • starring Bruce Willis doing this

  • James Bond-like spoof or that was the intention of it.

  • At the premiere as I sat down

  • there was a tap on my shoulder,

  • "Hey, E. Grant."

  • Robert Altman.

  • And he said," I've got a part for you

  • "in a movie called "The Player",

  • "which I'm starting shooting in a months time.

  • "Are you available?"

  • And I said Bob, what you're about to see "Hudson Hawk"

  • is so diabolical that I will never ever

  • be able to work in L.A. or the movie industry ever again.

  • He said, "Ah, no."

  • When I got this career resurrection

  • to finally work with Bob Altman

  • was an amazing, life reaffirming thing

  • because he absolutely loved actors.

  • He liked actors with very long faces,

  • who were very thin and didn't cost a lot of money.

  • I had seen "Nashville" when I was a theater student 27 times

  • in a movie house, so I was a complete Altman obsessive,

  • so when I got the opportunity to work with him once

  • and then subsequently got to be

  • in three of his other movies was the real fulfillment

  • of a teenage movie buffs dream.

  • I miss him and his wife Kathryn

  • more than anybody that I've ever worked with

  • in show business because he would invite

  • all the crew and all the actors to watch the dailies

  • every evening, everyone was offered a joint

  • or a drink, you really felt that you were part

  • of an experience of a movie being made

  • rather than the piecemeal in which movies are made

  • where people are so isolated.

  • I've been in movies where I haven't even met

  • other actors who were in the movie

  • because your scenes don't cross over until the premiere.

  • From an actors point of view if you're a social person

  • like I am it was really the ideal.

  • The fact that "The Player" completely

  • resurrected Altman's career was an amazingly touching,

  • warm-hearted moment, so I was honored to be in it.

  • Really here at the opera like that sitting her

  • next to May Welland, it's all very odd.

  • - Well, she's had such an odd life.

  • - Will he even bring her to the Beaufort's Ball

  • you suppose?

  • - [Older Man With Glasses] If they do

  • the talk will be of little else.

  • - During "The Player" one of the producers

  • threw a party at which everybody in the room

  • was Al Pacino, Warren Beatty, Barbara Streisand,

  • Ellen Barkin, Winona Ryder who was 19.

  • She came up to me and blew fan smoke

  • because she was still living with Johnny Depp

  • at that time and she said, "Johnny Depp

  • "and I know every single line of Withnail"

  • and she started quoting it at me.

  • Winona said to me, "You have to be in Dracula,

  • "which I'm doing."

  • And I said well who's directing it?

  • And she said, "Coppola".

  • I said, well what power do you have?

  • She said, "No, I'm the one that's

  • "got the thing financed."

  • Through Winona, I got to be in Dracula

  • and once I was in Dracula I then

  • got cast straight after that again

  • I think because of agent Winona

  • in Martin Scorsese's "Age of Innocence"

  • playing a small part, but when I meet Daniel Day Lewis

  • on the first morning I did prostrate myself

  • and I said, "Oh Daniel, thank you

  • "for giving me my career break by turning down

  • "'Withnail and I' four years previously"

  • and he said, "Arise my son."

  • The following day he didn't speak to me

  • for the next three months

  • and I didn't know what I'd done wrong

  • and I said to Michelle Pfeiffer,

  • "What the [beep] is going on?".

  • She said, "Oh, it's because his character

  • "hates your character."

  • Oh, okay.

  • It was very unnerving and then from then onwards

  • he never spoke to me until my last day

  • and then he suddenly broke out of character

  • and said, "Hey, it was so great to work with you."

  • or whatever.

  • Completely floored.

  • Working with Altman, then Coppola, then Scorsese

  • for somebody that had grown up

  • on all of their movies in the '70s

  • was something that I couldn't possibly have taken on board,

  • so both being Italian-American directors

  • Coppola works in an atmosphere of circus-like chaos.

  • He said, "I can't cook for two people,

  • "I have to cook for 30", so when we were

  • staying at his house and every night

  • he'd cook for all of us.

  • People would arrive with their dogs

  • and their pets and their relatives

  • and they were friends, there was visitors,

  • it was a very social, extended Italian family atmosphere

  • and that went on for the six or seven months of shooting.

  • Flip to a month later, New York,

  • Martin Scorsese who speaks at bullet speed

  • as you know, everything was monastically quiet.

  • Somebody would even whisper to me...

  • [unintelligible sound]

  • Everybody's on tenter hooks at all times

  • and I said to Michael Ballhaus Director of Photography,

  • you've worked with Martin Scorsese before, is this the norm?

  • He said, "Oh yeah, yeah, this is how it is."

  • So it seemed almost a contradiction inters to me

  • that a man whose movies are so charged

  • with the sounds of violence

  • and incredibly iconic soundtracks

  • full of amazing music when he works

  • it is as quiet as a tomb that was a big surprise.

  • - It's up to us whether we turn up

  • to this gig or not tomorrow, all right.

  • - Okay, stay at home.

  • That's fine.

  • - Fine.

  • - Fine.

  • - What about the fans?

  • We can't let them down.

  • - Well that's just too bad.

  • I love that we're segwaying from

  • working with Martin Scorsese to "Spice World" the movie.

  • But there's a great outcome to working on this.

  • In the days of answering machines

  • my eight year old daughter came back

  • and of course she loved doing this,

  • she'd press the button and listen to the messages

  • and there was a message that went,

  • "You have an offer to play for X amount of money

  • the Spice Girls manager in 'Spice World' the movie."

  • She went absolutely apoplectic.

  • She said, "Dad I don't care if you get a Disney contract

  • "for 50 years, you have to be in the 'Spice World' movie,

  • "so that I can come meet them."

  • I did and they were very, very kind

  • and generous towards her and I got

  • an enormous amount of professional flack

  • from very grand actors who said,

  • how can you be in a movie, they aren't actors,

  • there was no real script to speak of

  • and you've basically prostituted yourself.

  • Fast forward 20 years Adele was a "Spice World" fan,

  • she sent me tickets to go and see her

  • at the O2 when you couldn't get in to see her live

  • for love nor money.

  • Likewise, Lena Dunham who didn't know "Withnail"

  • or any of those things had seen me

  • in "Spice World" the movie and asked me to play

  • a part in one episode of "Girls"

  • and then wrote me into three more episodes,

  • it paid off in the end and now "Spice World"

  • has a cult following and there are people

  • that dress up as the Spice Girls.

  • Mostly men I think.

  • They weren't in the acting discipline

  • of you have to do it like this

  • they were basically encouraged to be entirely themselves,

  • so I loved working with them.

  • The biggest surprise is that Victoria Beckham

  • has this persona of non-smiling

  • and being very serious, but she was really funny

  • and had a great sense of humor.

  • They sent me to a sort of rock and roll tailor

  • and they kitted me out in amazing satin

  • and wet-look fancy suits, all of which I've still got.

  • I got them at the end, so they're in my attic.

  • - Thank you for your efficiency.

  • - You're all set then.

  • - [Male] Yes, George?

  • - Nothing, sir.

  • - [Male] I should hope not.

  • - What was extraordinary about "Gosford Park"

  • is that Altman had two cameras

  • working simultaneously on two tracks

  • and one would be going that way

  • and the other one would be going that way.

  • You never knew who it was focused on,

  • so you had to be completely in character,

  • completely in the moment and interact with everybody

  • in the way that felt as close to real life

  • as you could possibly conjure up.

  • The full arc or trajectory of an actor's career

  • was visible and you could go and speak to somebody

  • that was bright eyed and bushy tailed

  • who just coming out of drama school

  • is you know first movie and a big break,

  • then to the middle aged ones of which I was at that time,

  • then to the older ones who were sitting around

  • telling war stories and you know who's died

  • and this bevy of knights and dames.

  • Kristen Scott Thomas and Dame Maggie Smith,

  • it was a great education about

  • what to expect or not expect or just to enjoy from a career.

  • You felt completely, communally involved

  • and valued as an actor in it

  • and he knew everybody's name and he was as much

  • interested if the frame of the movie was like that

  • of what was going on in this left-hand corner

  • as what was in the center of the frame.

  • He would microphone between 18

  • and 25 actors so that what happens in real life

  • is people overlap, interrupt or whatever

  • and he wanted that to be the nature

  • of how a movie was made.

  • I don't understand why most movies

  • are not made like that.

  • In 2002 when "Gosford Park" won Best Ensemble

  • at the SAG Awards it was at a time

  • when award shows were not as they are now,

  • these huge media events,

  • but we were thrilled that we got one,

  • but kind of impact or import of it

  • didn't strike in quite the same way

  • because it's like oh yeah you guys got an award.

  • Where? What?

  • That's how it was.

  • Whereas now every corner of the English speaking globe

  • seems to know when the SAG Awards are on

  • and the Golden Globes.

  • In the two months of the award season

  • there seems to be one almost every two days.

  • - Gary said I'd be bored stiff,

  • but I love it.

  • - How very hubbly-jubbly for you.

  • - Hubbly-jubbly. - Hubbly-jubbly.

  • - Blah blah this, tub a bub, hubbly-jubbly,

  • hoighty toighty, toodle loo, ding dong.

  • Sounds like a load of old Wah-Wah.

  • - I had a very dysfunctional childhood

  • where I grew up my mother ran off

  • with my father's best friend when I was 10

  • and I inadvertently woke up in the backseat

  • of a car and saw her imforgranted

  • with my father's best friend on the front seat

  • which is the opening scene of my movie "Wah-Wah"

  • and "Wah-Wah" is what my American stepmother

  • identified as the way posh English people spoke,

  • it's all wah wah wah like that,

  • she couldn't really understand what they were saying.

  • [unintelligible sounds]

  • It was really a coming of age when I was 14

  • and Nicholas Hoult played me,

  • it was an amazing experience to go

  • back to Swaziland where no movie

  • had ever been made and being a first time

  • writer/director I was able to recreate

  • in all the places where these events happened

  • in my life and film them and have people

  • that were middle aged when I was young

  • now in their old age playing extras in the movie,

  • so it was a very cathartic experience to do that

  • and also unlike being an actor

  • you are in control of everything.

  • For somebody who's a detail obsessive,

  • which I am it is the perfect job,

  • so being asked a thousand questions a day

  • of somebody saying you know should it be this color,

  • do I come in from here or what's the motivation for this.

  • I love that.

  • I met the late great director Mike Nichols

  • just before I started shooting

  • and I said, "what's your advice?".

  • He said, "actors can always act faster

  • "than they think", so we'd do one or two takes

  • and when I was satisfied with what I had got

  • I always asked the actor do one for you

  • and then I said always at the end,

  • let's do one for Mike.

  • In other words leave whatever pauses

  • or whatever you are doing and just motor through it

  • and almost without exception the doing one for Mike

  • were the takes that we used because

  • they had the most life, the most freedom

  • and the thing of speed that was a great learning experience

  • and a very, very simple note that had a kind of genius.

  • - [Interviewer] Are you hoping to direct again?

  • - I am now on a movie that I've been told is fully financed

  • and we're in the process of beginning casting.

  • So I'm back in the helm.

  • - We've a letter from his mother,

  • she's just heard about the Fall of the Bastille

  • and her son was on his way through France.

  • She was so desperate to get him home

  • she sent it by special messenger.

  • - Mothers.

  • - Some things never change.

  • - Lots of things never change.

  • Julian Fellowes had written "Gosford Park"

  • that's obviously the first time I had met him

  • and he got the Oscar for Best Screenplay

  • and there is a tradition in England

  • that almost every English actor has been in

  • a medical soap opera, a Dickens,

  • an Agatha Christie, any kind of period drama that is going

  • we're always in britches and tights

  • or cravats, it's just the way of English actors.

  • They had done three or four series

  • of "Downton Abbey" and I suppose

  • they were probably scrapping the barrel,

  • who haven't we had on this program yet.

  • I got cast to play Elizabeth McGovern's love interest

  • or he sees her as his love interest,

  • this sleazy art dealer.

  • Most of us either knew each other

  • or had all worked together.

  • I'd worked with Jeremy Swift

  • and Maggie Smith on "Gosford Park"

  • and what is interesting for me is that

  • Altman couldn't decide whether I was going to play

  • an upstairs character, which is what I'm usually cast as

  • because the way I look and speak

  • or somebody who was downstairs

  • and he thought it would be much more interesting

  • to have me playing somebody who was downstairs,

  • i.e. servant class, working class,

  • so in "Downton Abbey" I was cast

  • to type in that I was playing somebody

  • who was middle to upper class educated,

  • it was very interesting to experience that.

  • - You're friends with Julia something?

  • - [Man At Bar] Steinberg.

  • - Yep.

  • - She not an agent anymore.

  • She died.

  • - She did?

  • Jesus, that's young.

  • - Maybe she didn't die, maybe she just

  • moved back to the suburbs.

  • I always confuse those two.

  • No, that's right she got married and had twins.

  • - Better to have died.

  • - Indeed.

  • In November three years ago I got a call

  • from my agent who said, "You have to read this script

  • "in 24 hours, they start shooting

  • "at the beginning of January in New York."

  • I said, who's turned it down or who's died.

  • She said, "Irrelevant, don't ask that question."

  • I said, well who's playing Lee Israel?

  • And they said Melissa McCarthy

  • and I thought it's gonna be a very broad comedy.

  • I started reading it and realized

  • there was an amazing true story

  • and astonished that I had never heard of Lee Israel before

  • or this scam that she pulled off,

  • these literary forgeries of famous dead writer's letters.

  • So I read it and of course said yes

  • and we read through the script

  • with Marielle Heller the director.

  • What we liked about how we approached our work?

  • What do we like to eat?

  • Got on instantaneously and we started shooting

  • on the Monday.

  • The contrast of coming off "Logan",

  • which had a crew of about 300 guys

  • with arms bigger than my thighs,

  • which is not saying much but with explosions of hardware,

  • to then go from that to working

  • on this very intimate, small scale

  • in apartments and bookshops around New York

  • the emotional intimacy of it compared

  • to the machismo of being on a big action Marvel movie

  • couldn't have been more extreme

  • and of course that subject matter.

  • But it is the way that Mari approaches work

  • that she creates a very communal atmosphere

  • in which you feel safe to do whatever you can bring

  • to the table or to try and surprise her.

  • We had no concept or idea that this movie

  • would have the critical acclaim that it subsequently got

  • or that any of us would get award recognition

  • or nominations in those big five awards.

  • It's about as ideal a working condition

  • that you could hope for as an actor.

  • I would work with both of them in a nano-second again.

  • - It was a coordinated incursion Allegiant General.

  • They overpowered the guards and forced me

  • to take them to their ship.

  • - I see.

  • Get me the Supreme Leader.

  • - Yes sir.

  • - Tell him we found our spy.

  • Star Wars exactly like the casting of "Logan"

  • I got sent a generic interrogation scene

  • from a 1940s English war movie,

  • pages of dialogue which you had to learn,

  • self-tape on an iPad, send it off into cyberspace,

  • don't hear anything for two months,

  • don't even know what the title of the project is

  • or what it's for you just know

  • that they want two different flavors from the scenes

  • that they've sent.

  • I got a call saying J.J. Abrams

  • of course you know the front half of my brain

  • knew exactly who he was.

  • I was amazed at his self-confidence

  • and self-possession because we don't get people

  • like that in England, certainly not in the movie business

  • and they said, "J.J. Abrams is sending you a car

  • "to go to Pinewood Studios just outside London,

  • "for a meeting" and I said, for what?

  • And they said, "Oh, it's for Star Wars, the final one."

  • So I went and walked into the room,

  • Daisy Ridley was sitting with him

  • and I thought well what am I doing,

  • am I auditioning with Daisy,

  • am I reading in or whatever and he said,

  • "So, are you gonna do the part?"

  • And I said well what part and he started describing it.

  • I just felt the room going upside down

  • and I thought how the hell am I being offered

  • in my early 60s a villain role

  • in the final ever Star Wars movie

  • and I didn't really believe it

  • all the way through the shooting

  • I kept being convinced I'd be fired,

  • cut out or replaced, so every time I came into work

  • I'd say to J.J., "Please pinch my shoulder,

  • "so that I know I have some physical evidence

  • "to show that I've actually been here"

  • because everything is filmed under incredible secrecy.

  • You have to wear a cloak going from the makeup trailer

  • into the studio because they had drones

  • from various tabloid newspapers flying overhead.

  • On the day that you worked you would get the scene

  • and you had to sing in for it and sign out for it

  • at the end of the day and then learn it on the spot.

  • Most secretive job I've ever been on,

  • it was like Fort Knox lock down, nothing.

  • I never even dared tell my wife

  • and daughter the name of my character

  • because I thought if they told anybody

  • or my daughter mentioned it on social media

  • to a friend I would get exposed and fired,

  • so it was a unique experience from that point of view

  • and I thought the movie was absolutely amazing

  • and how he managed to wrangle all these nine movies

  • and satisfy so much of what that franchise ended with

  • and I think he did an amazing job.

  • Having begun last year with an Oscar nomination,

  • Golden Globe, SAG all those things

  • and then at the end of the year

  • to be in the final ever Star Wars movie,

  • which I had obsessively followed

  • since I was a 20 year old drama student

  • in 1977 when I saw the first one,

  • it's a year that will never be repeated

  • in my experience ever again.

  • So I'm very grateful to it and it all happened in America.

  • This is Peter.

  • Peter was you if you entered your day

  • in the same place you began it

  • with no change everyday like the others.

  • This is existing, not living.

  • Now you know Peter, squint your eyes and Peter is you

  • enough so at least that I think

  • we can jump right in to day something changes.

  • Doing the run up to the Oscars

  • Jason Segal contacted me via my agent

  • and said, "Can I have breakfast with you

  • "at the Four Seasons Hotel."

  • He then spoke with great erudition

  • and he's very articulate and passionate about

  • this dream project that he had

  • in which he was the writer, showrunner,

  • director and lead actor and he described

  • what I was playing as a kind of

  • essentially a puppet master of somebody who

  • is controlling a game where a whole

  • disparate group of people start going on a quest

  • and it's to do with identity and going into your past

  • via a virtual reality set on your head.

  • He won me over and I met Sally Field

  • and I said, "Have you read the whole thing?"

  • and he said "no" and I said,

  • "Well can I read the whole thing?"

  • and he said, "No, it doesn't exist yet.

  • "We've got a couple of episodes

  • "that you can go on that and this is the concept

  • "and this is how we think it's going to end."

  • But nothing was finite at that point.

  • I thought well if Sally is taking the chance

  • and gamble on it, I'll do the same thing.

  • My father was dead at 53 and I'm now about to be 63,

  • so I feel that every year that I've lived

  • longer than he did is a bonus

  • and that because he died so young it has really

  • made me appreciate the here and now

  • and grabbing every opportunity that you can

  • so that you don't end up as many people I know do

  • by my age of going should've, could've, would've

  • and that way bitterness and unhappiness lies,

  • so seize the day.

- You have to go by instinct,

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リチャード・E・グラント、「ダウントン・アビー」から「スター・ウォーズ」までのキャリアを語る|Vanity Fair (Richard E. Grant Breaks Down His Career, from 'Downton Abbey' to 'Star Wars' | Vanity Fair)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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