Grant's father was an officer in theSeaforth Highlanders for eight years inMalaya andGermany.[21] He ran a carpet business and pursued hobbies such asgolf andwatercolour painting; he raised his family inChiswick, West London, where the Grants lived next to Arlington Park Mansions on Sutton Lane.[22][23] In September 2006, a collection of Capt. Grant's paintings was hosted by The John Martin Gallery in a charity exhibition, organised by his son, called "James Grant: 30 Years of Watercolours".[24] Hugh's mother worked as a schoolteacher and taughtLatin,French, and music for more than 30 years in thestate schools of west London.[25] She died at 67 ofpancreatic cancer.[26]
OnInside the Actors Studio in 2002, Grant credited his mother with "any acting genes that [he] might have." Both his parents were children of military families,[27] but despite that background, he has said, his family was not always affluent as he grew up.[28] He spent many of his childhood summers[23] hunting and fishing with his grandfather in Scotland.[22] Grant has an older brother, James "Jamie" Grant, a New York-based investment banker.[22][29]
Grant gained acclaim for his role in theJames Ivory directed filmMaurice (1987).
After making his debut in the Oxford-financed filmPrivileged (1982), Grant dabbled in a variety of jobs, such as working as an assistant groundsman atFulham Football Club,[41] tutoring, writing comedy sketches for TV shows[42] and working forTalkback Productions to write and produce radio commercials for products such as Mighty White bread and Red Stripe lager.[43] At a screening ofPrivileged atBAFTA in London, he was approached by a talent agent offering to represent him. Still intending to begin hisMPhil at the Courtauld Institute, Grant declined, but then later reconsidered, thinking that acting for a year would be a good way to save some money for his studies.[3] Soon afterwards he was offered a supporting role inThe Bounty (1984) starringMel Gibson andAnthony Hopkins, but was prevented from playing the role because he did not yet have anEquity card, which could only be earned through acting in regional theatre.[3] To obtain his Equity card, he joined theNottingham Playhouse and lived for a year at Park Terrace inThe Park Estate inNottingham.[44]Richard Digby Day directed him in small roles at the Nottingham Playhouse inLady Windermere's Fan, an avant-garde production ofHamlet, andCoriolanus.[45][46]
In 1991 he also starred asFrederic Chopin inImpromptu, oppositeJudy Davis as his loverGeorge Sand. In 1992 he appeared inRoman Polanski's filmBitter Moon, portraying a fastidious and proper British tourist who is married but finds himself enticed by the sexual hedonism of a seductive French woman and her embittered, paraplegic American husband. The film was called an "anti-romantic opus of sexual obsession and cruelty" byThe Washington Post.[59] In 1993 he had a supporting role in theMerchant-Ivory dramaThe Remains of the Day. Grant later jokingly called many of the productions of his early career "Europuddings, where you would have a French script, a Spanish director and English actors. The script would usually be written by a foreigner, badly translated into English. And then they'd get English actors in, because they thought that was the way to sell it to America."[60]
At 32, Grant claimed to be on the brink of giving up the acting profession but was surprised by the script ofFour Weddings and a Funeral (1994).[4] "If you read as many bad scripts as I did, you'd know how grateful you are when you come across one where the guy actually is funny," he later recalled.[8] Released in 1994 with Grant as the protagonist,Four Weddings and a Funeral became the highest-grossing British film to date with a worldwide box office in excess of $244 million,[61] making him an overnight international star. His entry inThe Trouble with Men: Masculinities in European and Hollywood Cinema states "Four Weddings made him a truly international star whose image was endlessly promoted in tabloid newspaper articles, television chat shows and magazine profiles, especially in mass circulation women's magazines. Grant was careful to play up to the affable and self-deprecating English gent. His interviewers commented frequently on his romantic attractiveness, a modern matinée idol, blue eyed, very good looking in a classically English way, with his floppy hair and charming smile, his impeccable manners leavened by the occasional expletive".[62]
The film was nominated for twoAcademy Awards and, among numerous awards won by its cast and crew, it earned Grant aGolden Globe Award for Best Actor - Motion Picture Musical or Comedy and aBAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. It also temporarily typecast him as the lead character, Charles, a bohemian and debonair bachelor. Grant saw it as an inside joke that the star, due to the parts he played, was assumed to have the personality of the screenwriter (Richard Curtis), who is known for writing about himself and his own life.[60][63] Grant later expressed "Although I owe whatever success I've had toFour Weddings and a Funeral, it did become frustrating after a bit that people made two assumptions: One was that I was that character – when in fact nothing could be further from the truth, as I'm sure Richard would tell you – and the other frustrating thing was that they thought that's all I could do. I suppose, because those films happened to be successful, no one, perhaps understandably, ... bothered to rent all the other films I'd done".[4]
In July 1994, he signed a two-year production deal withCastle Rock Entertainment and, by October, he became founder and director of the UK-based Simian Films Limited.[64] He appointed his then-girlfriend,Elizabeth Hurley, as the head of development to look for prospective projects. Simian Films produced two Grant vehicles in the 1990s and lost a bid to produceAbout a Boy toRobert De Niro'sTriBeCa Productions.[65] The company closed its US office in 2002 and Grant resigned as director in December 2005.[66] Before the release ofFour Weddings and a Funeral, Grant had reunited with its directorMike Newell for the tragicomedyAn Awfully Big Adventure (1995), which was labelled a "determinedly off-beat film" byThe New York Times.[67] He portrayed the supercilious director of a repertory company in post-World War IILiverpool. CriticRoger Ebert wrote, "It shows that he has range as an actor"[68] but theSan Francisco Chronicle disapproved on grounds that the film "plays like a vanity production for Grant".[69]Janet Maslin, praising Grant as "superb" and "a dashing cad under any circumstances", commented, "For him this film represents the road not taken. Made beforeFour Weddings and a Funeral was released, it captures Mr. Grant as the clever, versatile character actor he was then becoming, rather than the international dreamboat he is today."[67] His next role was as a cartographer in 1917 Wales inThe Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain (1995).
Grant's first studio-financedHollywood project was oppositeJulianne Moore inChris Columbus's comedyNine Months (1995). Though a hit at the box office, it was almost universally panned by critics.The Washington Post called it a "grotesquely pandering caper" and singled out Grant's performance, as achild psychiatrist reacting unfavourably to his girlfriend's unexpected pregnancy, for his "insufferable muggings".[70] Grant himself has been highly critical of his performance inNine Months, stating in a 2016 interview that "I really ruined it. And it was entirely my fault. I panicked, it was such a big jump up from what I'd been paid before to what they were offering me. And the scale was inhuman to my standards, you know the scale of the production,20th Century Fox, the whole thing. And I just tried much too hard, and you know I forgot to do basic acting things, like mean it. So I pulled faces and overacted, it was a shocker".[3] Next in 1995, he starred asEmma Thompson's suitor in herAcademy Award-winning adaptation ofJane Austen'sSense and Sensibility, directed byAng Lee. In 1995 he also performed inRestoration;Lisa Schwarzbaum wrote that Grant is "having a fine and liberating time playing a supercilious court portrait painter",[71] andKevin Thomas ofLos Angeles Times said he has "some delicious moments" in the film.[72] He made his debut as a film producer with the 1996 thrillerExtreme Measures. Roger Ebert andGene Siskel each gave the film three out of four stars, with Siskel writing "Hugh Grant's work inExtreme Measures is a refreshing standout."[73]
After a three-year hiatus, in 1999 he paired withJulia Roberts inNotting Hill, which was written byRichard Curtis and produced by much of the same team that was responsible forFour Weddings and a Funeral. This newWorking Title production displacedFour Weddings and a Funeral as the biggest British hit in the history of cinema, with earnings equalling $363 million worldwide.[61] As it became exemplary of modern romantic comedies in mainstream culture, the film was also received well by critics. CNN reviewerPaul Clinton said, "Notting Hill stands alone as another funny and heartwarming story about love against all odds."[74] Reactions to his Golden Globe-nominated performance were varied, withSalon.com's Stephanie Zacharek criticising that, "Grant's performance stands as an emblem of what's wrong withNotting Hill. What's maddening about Grant is that he just never cuts the crap. He's become one of those actors who's all shambling self-caricature, from his twinkly crow's feet to the time-lapsed half century it takes him to actually get one of his lines out."[75] The film provided both its stars a chance to satirise the woes of international notoriety, most noted of which was Grant's turn as a faux-journalist who sits through a dull press junket with whatThe New York Times called "a delightfully funny deadpan".[76]
Grant also released his second production output, a fish-out-of-water mob comedyMickey Blue Eyes, that year. It was dismissed by critics, performed modestly at the box office and garnered its actor-producer mixed reviews for his starring role. Roger Ebert thought, "Hugh Grant is wrong for the role [and] strikes one wrong note and then another",[77] whereasKenneth Turan, writing in theLos Angeles Times, said, "If he'd been on theTitanic, fewer lives would have been lost. If he'd accompaniedRobert Scott to theSouth Pole, the explorer would have lived to be 100. That's how good Hugh Grant is at rescuing doomed ventures."[78]
While promotingWoody Allen'sSmall Time Crooks (2000) on NBC'sThe Today Show in 2000, Grant told hostMatt Lauer, "It's my millennium of bastards".[79]Small Time Crooks starred Grant, in the words of film criticAndrew Sarris, as "a petty, petulant, faux-Pygmalion art dealer, David, [who] is one of the sleaziest and most unsympathetic characters Mr. Allen has ever created".[80] In a role devoid of his comic attributes,The New York Times wrote: "Mr. Grant deftly imbues his character with exactly a perfect blend of charm and nasty calculation."[81] In 2000, Grant also joined the supervisory board ofIM Internationalmedia AG, the powerfulMunich-based film and media company.[82] In 2001, his turn as a charming but womanising book publisher Daniel Cleaver inBridget Jones's Diary was proclaimed byVariety to be "as sly an overthrow of a star's polished posh – and nice – poster image as any comic turn in memory".[83] The film, adapted fromHelen Fielding's novel of the same name, was an international hit, earning $281 million worldwide.[61] He was, according toThe Washington Post, fitting as "a cruel, manipulative cad, hiding behind the male god's countenance that he knows all too well".[84]
In 2002, Grant starred as the trust-funded womaniser, Will Freeman, in the film adaptation ofNick Hornby's best-selling novelAbout a Boy. The BBC thought Grant delivered an "immaculate comic performance",[85] and with an Academy Award-nominated screenplay,About a Boy was determined byThe Washington Post to be "that rare romantic comedy that dares to choose messiness over closure, prickly independence over fetishised coupledom, and honesty over typical Hollywood endings".[86]Rolling Stone wrote, "The acid comedy of Grant's performance carries the film [and he] gives this pleasing heartbreaker the touch of gravity it needs",[87] while Roger Ebert observed that "the Cary Grant department is understaffed, and Hugh Grant shows here that he is more than a star, he is a resource".[88] Released a day after the blockbusterStar Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones,About a Boy was a more modest box office grosser than other successful Grant films, making all of $129 million globally.[61] The film earned Grant his third Golden-Globe nomination, while theLondon Film Critics Circle named Grant its Best British Actor andGQ honoured him as one of the magazine's men of the year 2002.[89] "His performance can only be described as revelatory", wrote critic Ann Hornaday, adding that "Grant lends the shoals layer upon layer of desire, terror, ambivalence and self-awareness."[86]The New York Observer concluded: "[The film] gets most of its laughs from the evolved expertise of Hugh Grant in playing characters that audiences enjoy seeing taken down a peg or two as a punishment for philandering and womanising and simply being too handsome for words-and with an English accent besides. In the end, the film comes over as a messy delight, thanks to the skill, generosity and good-sport, punching-bag panache of Mr. Grant's performance."[90]
About a Boy also marked a notable change in his boyish look. Now 41, he had lost weight and also abandoned his trademark floppy hair.Entertainment Weekly'sOwen Gleiberman took note of Grant's maturation in his review, saying he looked noticeably older and that it "looked good on him".[91] He added that Grant's "pillowy cheeks are flatter and a bit drawn, and the eyes that used to peer with 'love me' cuteness now betray a shark's casual cunning. Everything about him is leaner and spikier (including his hair, which has been shorn and moussed into a Eurochic bed-head mess), but it's not just his surface that's more virile; the nervousness is gone, too. Hugh Grant has grown up, holding on to his lightness and witty cynicism but losing the stuttering sherry-club mannerisms that were once his signature. In doing so, he has blossomed into the rare actor who can play a silver-tongued sleaze with a hidden inner decency."[91]
He was paired withSandra Bullock inWarner Bros.'sTwo Weeks Notice (2002), which made $199 million internationally but received poor reviews.[61]The Village Voice concluded that Grant's creation of a spoiled billionaire fronting a real estate business was "little more than a Britishism machine".[92]Two Weeks Notice was followed by the 2003 ensemble comedy,Love Actually, headlined by Grant as the BritishPrime Minister. A Christmas release by Working Title Films, the film was promoted as "the ultimate romantic comedy" and accumulated $246 million at the international box office.[61] It marked the directorial debut ofRichard Curtis, who toldThe New York Times that Grant adamantly tempered the characterisation of the role to make his character more authoritative and less haplessly charming than earlier Curtis incarnations.[93]Roger Ebert claimed that "Grant has flowered into an absolutely splendid romantic comedian" and has "so much self-confidence that he plays the British prime minister as if he took the role to be a good sport".[94] Film criticRex Reed, on the contrary, called his performance "an oversexed bachelor spin on Tony Blair" as the star "flirted with himself in the paroxysm of self-love that has become his acting style".[95]
In 2004, he reprised his role as Daniel Cleaver for a small part inBridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, which, like its predecessor, made more than $262 million commercially.[61] Gone from the screen for two years, Grant next re-teamed withPaul Weitz (About a Boy) for theblack comedyAmerican Dreamz (2006). Grant starred as the acerbic host of anAmerican Idol-like reality show where, according toCaryn James ofThe New York Times, "nothing is real ... except the black hole at the centre of the host's heart, as Mr. Grant takes Mr. Cowell's villainous act to its limit".[96]American Dreamz failed financially but Grant was generously praised. He played his self-aggrandising character, an amalgam ofSimon Cowell andRyan Seacrest, with smarmy self-loathing.The Boston Globe proposed that this "just may be the great comic role that has always eluded Hugh Grant",[97] and critic Carina Chocano said, "He is twice as enjoyable as the preening bad guy as he was as the bumbling good guy."[98]
In 2007, he starred oppositeDrew Barrymore in a parody of pop culture and the music industry calledMusic and Lyrics. TheAssociated Press described it as "a weird little hybrid of a romantic comedy that's simultaneously too fluffy and not whimsical enough".[99] Though he neither listens to music nor owns any CDs,[27] Grant learned to sing, play the piano, dance (a few mannered steps) and studied the mannerisms of prominent musicians to prepare for his role as a has-been pop singer, based loosely onAndrew Ridgeley, member of 1980s pop duoWham!.[9] The film, with its revenues totalling $145 million, allowed him to mock disposable pop stardom and fleeting celebrity through its washed-up lead character. According to theSan Francisco Chronicle, "Grant strikes precisely the right note with regard to Alex's career: He's too intelligent not to be a little embarrassed, but he's far too brazen to feel anything like shame."[100] In 2009, he starred oppositeSarah Jessica Parker in theMarc Lawrence's romantic comedyDid You Hear About the Morgans?, which was a critical failure and box office disappointment.[101]
2012–2017: Mid-career experimentation
Grant in 2014
Grant was featured inthe Wachowskis' andTom Tykwer's epic science fiction filmCloud Atlas in 2012, playing six different dark characters.[102] In the same year, Grant lent his voice to theAardman stop motion animationThe Pirates! Band of Misfits.[103] He reunited with Lawrence again for a dramedy filmThe Rewrite (2014), starring oppositeMarisa Tomei. The film received mixed-to-positive reviews, while Grant's performance was praised by many critics;[104][105] directorQuentin Tarantino has stated that the film is one of his favourites of the year and called Grant a "perfect leading man".[106]
In 2015, he had a supporting role asAlexander Waverly inGuy Ritchie's crime thrillerThe Man from U.N.C.L.E.;[107]Entertainment Weekly described his performance as "the only bit of fun" in the film,[108] and Glenn Kenny ofRogerebert.com gave the film a mixed review but stated that "while it can't be said that Hugh Grant saves the movie, his return to prominence in the last half-hour, after a plot-seeding-walk-on earlier in the movie, peps things up considerably".[109]
His next appearance was as Phoenix Buchanan, the main antagonist ofPaddington 2,[121] which was a commercial and critical success.[122][123]The Guardian described his performance as "scene-stealing",[124] whileIGN commented "Grant continues to make an astonishing comeback in his career, once again by playing into his expert comedic abilities as Phoenix Buchanan, who dons each of his ridiculous disguises with a kind of egotistical obliviousness that Grant is perfect at pulling off."[125] Grant went on to winLondon Film Critics' Circle Award for Supporting Actor of the Year and was nominated for aBAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his performance.[126] Grant's performance was ranked as the 22nd greatest movie performance of the decade byIndieWire in 2019.[127]
2018–present: Mature career renaissance
In 2018, Grant returned to television screens after 25 years, asJeremy Thorpe oppositeBen Whishaw asNorman Josiffe in theBBC One miniseriesA Very English Scandal, which marked his second collaboration with directorStephen Frears.[128][129] The miniseries, and in particular Grant, were widely and highly praised.Digital Spy's review stated that "There's always been a bit of the devil in Grant's best turns, and in Thorpe, a man with a fully-realised dark side, he's found his richest part in years".[130] TheNew Statesman wrote, "Hugh Grant is Thorpe, and everything about his performance is exactly so. It's the role of Grant's life, and he performs it even more brilliantly than he did Phoenix Buchanan inPaddington 2."[131]The Sunday Times stated, "It's become tediously predictable to praise this drama but, as Thorpe, Hugh Grant really has proved he's getting better as he's getting older".[132] Grant was nominated for several awards, including thePrimetime Emmy Award,Screen Actors Guild Award,Golden Globe Award,BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Limited Series or Movie.[133][134]
In 2019, Grant played another against-type role, in Guy Ritchie'sThe Gentlemen, his second collaboration with the director followingThe Man From U.N.C.L.E.[135] Grant plays Fletcher, a seedy and unscrupulous private investigator, which he called "a fun bit of casting" referring to hisHacked Off campaigning. He has stated he based his character on tabloid reporters who "used to be my enemies and now they're my friends".[136] Even though the film received mostly mixed reviews,[137] Grant's performance was praised. Stephen Dalton ofThe Hollywood Reporter called Grant "a beating comic heart" of the film, adding that "he weighs up every wry line with relish, and Ritchie makes strong use of his deadpan comic talents."[138]Joe Morgenstern ofWall Street Journal also highly praised his work, writing, "[I]n a word, Mr. Grant is sensational. In two more words, he's absolutely hilarious; it's some of the best work he's done on screen."[139]
In 2020, Grant starred inHBO miniseriesThe Undoing, oppositeNicole Kidman andDonald Sutherland. The miniseries was premiered on 25 October 2020 to mixed reviews, though Grant's performance was widely acclaimed.[140][141] Film criticCaryn James said Grant has the "richest part" and added, "He sharply defines Jonathan as a slippery character, and walks the line expertly to keep us off guard. How much should we trust Jonathan? When he starts confessing some secrets, is all or any of it true? With this role and that in the recentA Very English Scandal, Grant has become expert at bringing his charm to darker characters."[142] Brian Tallerico ofRogerEbert.com was less impressed with the series but called Grant's performance as the "series-best".[143] Grant received aScreen Actors Guild Award,Golden Globe Award andCritics' Choice Television Award nomination for his performance.[144][145]
Grant in 2021
In 2023, Grant reunited with Guy Ritchie for the actionOperation Fortune: Ruse de Guerre alongsideJason Statham andAubrey Plaza.[146] The movie was originally planned to be released on early 2022 but had several delays.[147] While the film was abox office flop with mixed reviews, Grant's performance still received mostly positive response.[148]The A.V. Club said Grant "delivers a fantastic character performance" and "is so committed that he throws off the balance of the ensemble because no one else is as good as he is".[149] He next appeared as an ambitious rogue and con artist Forge in thefantasyadventure filmDungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves. Jonah Nink ofChicago Reader praised his performance by saying "None of the cast holds a fireball to Hugh Grant, however, who owns every second of his goofball performance as one of the film's villains."[150]
Also in 2023, Grant appeared as anOompa-Loompa inWonka, a film which serves as a prequel to theRoald Dahl novelCharlie and the Chocolate Factory, exploringWilly Wonka's origins.[151][152] In selecting Grant for the role,Wonka directorPaul King toldEmpire magazine, "Going back to the book, and reading all those poems, and hearing [the Oompa Loompas'] voice as a very sort of cynical, sarcastic, cruel, funny, but wicked voice, I went, 'Oh... That's sort of a bit like Hugh!'"[153] Despite initial backlash from the dwarfism community over his casting, Grant ultimately received praise for his performance, with Nick Levine ofNME writing "A scene-stealing Grant provides the comic highlights as Lofty, a supercilious Oompa Loompa with a grudge against Chalamet's title character, Willy Wonka."[154] In 2024, Grant had a guest appearance inStephen Frears-directed,Kate Winslet-starringHBO limited seriesThe Regime, for which he was nominated forCritics' Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actor.[155] The same year he played a fictional version ofThurl Ravenscroft who voicedTony the Tiger in theJerry Seinfeld comedy filmUnfrosted.[156][157] Grant's performance was praised with Matt Schimkowitz ofThe A.V. Club describing him as the film's "MVP" and William Bibbiani ofTheWrap writing that he "has the film's only consistently funny subplot".[158][159]
Grant next starred in theA24 horror filmHeretic (2024).[160] The film received mostly positive reviews, withVariety saying it's yet another "wildly against-type" role in his career.[161]Bilge Ebiri ofNew York Magazine said it was a "riveting turn" for Grant.[162] For his performance, he has received nominations for aGolden Globe Award, aCritics' Choice Award and aBAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role. In 2025, Grant returned to the romantic comedy genre in a supporting role, reprising his role as Daniel Cleaver inBridget Jones: Mad About the Boy.[163] Grant has stated that his role is brief and the film has more dramatic depth than previous parts, claiming the script has made him cry.[164] The film has received a positive reception andThe Hollywood Reporter review commented: "Grant, who scores many of the script's best lines, brings a shot of mischievous vitality every time he's onscreen, as well as some poignant commentary on mortality and lasting connection during a sobering juncture for Daniel. The actor's career renaissance of the past decade has made him a value-added bonus to pretty much any project in which he appears."[165] In a negative review of the film,The Guardian still praised Grant's performance, citing him as the only cast member, alongsideEmma Thompson, who doesn't phone it in.[166]
Grant began his career as acharacter actor but became predominantly a comedy (especially aromantic comedy) actor from his rise to stardom in mid-1990s until the 2010s. He said he moved away from romantic comedies after the failure ofDid You Hear About the Morgans? (2009). In a 2020 interview withThe Sydney Morning Herald, he said: "I got old and ugly and I'm not appropriate for romantic comedy films anymore, which has been a great blessing".[167] Even though his recent credits include political dramas likeA Very English Scandal and crime films likeThe Gentlemen, Grant is still often associated with hisRichard Curtis-scripted romantic comedy films. In the British press, it is common to compare young romantic comedy actors to him.
I've never been tempted to do the part where I cry or get AIDS or save some people from a concentration camp just to get good reviews. I genuinely believe that comedy acting, light comedy acting, is as hard as, if not harder than serious acting, and it genuinely doesn't bother me that all the prizes and the good reviews automatically by knee-jerk reaction go to the deepest, darkest, most serious performances and parts. It makes me laugh."
—Grant explaining his propensity for comedic roles, 2010[168]
Remarking upon his romantic comedy star era, some film critics, such asRoger Ebert, have defended the limited variety of his performances, while some others have dismissed Grant as a "one-trick pony".Eric Fellner, co-owner of Working Title Films and a longtime collaborator, said, "His range hasn't been fully tested, but each performance is unique."[169] Many of Grant's films of the 1990s followed a similar plot that captured an optimistic bachelor experiencing a series of embarrassing incidents to find true love, often with an American woman. In earlier films, he was adept at plugging into the stereotype of a repressed Englishman for humorous effects, allowing him to gently satirise his characters as he summed them up and played against the type simultaneously.[44] These performances were sometimes deemed excessive, in the words ofThe Washington Post's Rita Kempley, due to Grant's "comic overreactions—themugging, the stuttering, the fluttering eyelids". She added: "He's got more tics than Benny Hill."[170] His penchant for conveying his characters' feelings with mannerisms, rather than direct emotions, has been one of the foremost objections raised against his acting style. Stephen Hunter ofThe Washington Post once stated that, to be effective as a comic performer, Grant must get "hisjiving and shucking under control".[171] Film historianDavid Thomson opined inThe New Biographical Dictionary of Film that the actor equated merely "itchy mannerisms" with screen acting.[172]
Grant's screen persona in his films of the 2000s gradually developed into a cynical, self-loathing cad.[173] Claudia Puig ofUSA Today celebrated this transformation with the observation that finally "gone [were] the self-conscious 'Aren't I adorable' mannerisms that seemed endearing at the start of his film career but have grown cloying in more recent movies".[174] According to Carina Chocano, amongst film critics, the two tropes most commonly associated with Grant are that he reinvented his screen persona inBridget Jones's Diary andAbout a Boy and dreads the possibility of becoming a parody of himself.[175]
Nonetheless, Grant has occasionally acted in dramas. He played a sleazy, snide community theatre director with a penchant for young actors in the drama filmAn Awfully Big Adventure, which received critical praise, and for "a very quiet, dignified" performance asFrédéric Chopin inJames Lapine's biopic filmImpromptu.[176][177] In 2012, he played six "incredibly evil" characters in the epic drama filmCloud Atlas, an experience he has talked about positively, saying:
I thought before I read it that I'd turn it down, which I normally do, but I was interested in meeting [Cloud Atlas co-directors]the Wachowskis because I have always admired them enormously. And they are so charming and fascinating.... I slightly called my own bluff. In one of the parts I am acannibal, about 2,000 years in the future, and I thought, "I can do that. It's easy." And then I am suddenly standing in a cannibal skirt on a mountaintop in Germany and they are saying, "You know, hungry! We must have that flesh-eating, like a leopard who is so hungry", and I am thinking, "I can't do that! Just give me a witty line!"[178]
AfterCloud Atlas, Grant has never starred in a romantic comedy film with exceptions of the dramedyThe Rewrite (2014), where "romantic comedy is only a small part of it."[179] and his brief return as hisBridget Jones character Daniel Cleaver inBridget Jones: Mad About the Boy (2025). Grant is known as a meticulous performer who approaches his roles like acharacter actor, working hard to make his acting appear spontaneous.[180] In a career spanning more than 35 years, Grant has repeatedly claimed that acting was not his true calling, but rather a career that developed by happenstance.[181] However, in 2020, after moving on to more character roles, he has stated that he "enjoys acting now".[182]
Personality
Grant has expressed boredom with playing the celebrity in the press[183] and is known in the media for his guarded privacy.[184] On probing of his personal life, he has remained steadfast in "offering a dead bat to any question he feels is not general enough".[185] He has described himself as a reluctant actor, has called being a successful actor a mistake and has repeatedly talked of his hope that film stardom would just be "a phase" in his life, lasting no more than ten years.[60][186]
A 2007Vogue profile referred to him as a man with a "professionally misanthropic mystique".[9] He has expressed distaste forfocus groups,market research, and emphasis onopening weekend box-office numbers, saying: "It's so destructive to the filmmaking process. What was wrong with the way they used to release films, more slowly, let them build?"[187] The directorMike Newell has said: "There is at least as much of Hugh that is charismatic, intellectual, and whose tongue is maybe too clever for its own good as there is of him that's gorgeous and kind of woolly and flubsy."[188] Filmmaker Paul Weitz said that Grant is funny and that "he perceives flaws in himself and other people, and then he cares about their humanity nonetheless".[189] British newspapers regularly refer to him as"grumpy".[190]
Grant is a self-confessed "committed and passionate" perfectionist on a film set.[181] The American film criticDave Kehr has written that Grant "is known in the film industry as a meticulous performer who takes his time to prepare a role – someone who works hard to make it look easy – though that isn't a trait he admires in himself".[180] He is noted by co-workers for demanding endless takes until he achieves the desired shot according to his own standard.[9][191][192]
He dropped his agent in 2006, ending a 10-year relationship withCAA.[193] He has proclaimed in interviews that he does not listen to external views on his career: "They've known for years that I have total control. I've never taken any advice on anything."[9][168]
In the media
Libel lawsuits
In 1996, Grant won substantial damages fromNews (UK) Ltd over what his lawyers called a "highly defamatory" article published in January 1995. The company's newspaper,Today, which ceased publication the following November, had falsely claimed that Grant verbally abused a young extra with a "foul-mouthed tongue lashing" on the set ofThe Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain.[194]
On 27 April 2007, he accepted undisclosed damages fromAssociated Newspapers over claims made about his relationships with his former girlfriends in three separate tabloid articles, which were published in theDaily Mail andThe Mail on Sunday on 18, 21 and 24 February. His lawyer stated that all of the articles' "allegations and factual assertions are false".[195] Grant said, in a written statement, that he took the action because: "I was tired of theDaily Mail andMail on Sunday papers publishing almost entirely fictional articles about my private life for their own financial gain." He went on to take the opportunity to stress, "I'm also hoping that this statement in court might remind people that the so-called 'close friends' or 'close sources' on which these stories claim to be based almost never exist."[196]
The arrest occurred about two weeks before the release of his first major studio film,Nine Months, which he was scheduled to promote on several American television shows.The Tonight Show with Jay Leno had him booked for the same week.[200] In the much-watched interview, Grant did not make excuses for the incident after Leno asked him, "What the hell were you thinking?"[201][202][203] Grant answered, "I think you know in life what's a good thing to do and what's a bad thing, and I did a bad thing. And there you have it."[204]
OnLarry King Live, he declined hostLarry King's repeated invitations to probe his psyche, saying thatpsychoanalysis was "more of an American syndrome" and he himself was "a bit old fashioned".[205] He told the host: "I don't have excuses."[206]CNN reported that "Many are also applauding Grant for his refreshing honesty in a culture that has become fed up with overuse of the word 'abuse,' but Grant did not resort to an excuse."[207] Radio hostScott Shannon said, "He went ahead and faced the music and handled it with tongue [in] cheek."[207]
In April 2007, he was arrested on allegations of assault made bypaparazzo Ian Whittaker.[208] Grant made no official statement and did not comment on the incident.[209] Charges were dropped on 1 June 2007 by theCrown Prosecution Service on the grounds of "insufficient evidence".[210]
In April 2011, Grant published an article in theNew Statesman titled "The Bugger, Bugged"[11] about a conversation (following an earlier encounter) withPaul McMullan, a former journalist and paparazzo forNews of the World. In unguarded comments which were secretly taped by Grant, McMullan alleged that editors at theDaily Mail andNews of the World, particularlyAndy Coulson, had ordered journalists to engage in illegalphone tapping and had done so with the full knowledge of senior British politicians. McMullan also said that every British Prime Minister fromMargaret Thatcher onwards had cultivated a close relationship withRupert Murdoch and his senior executives. He stressed the friendship betweenDavid Cameron andRebekah Brooks (née Wade), agreeing when asked that both of them must have been aware of illegal phone tapping, and asserting that Cameron's inaction could be explained by self-interest: "Cameron is very much in debt toRebekah Wade for helping him not quite win the election ... So that was my submission to parliament – that Cameron's either a liar or an idiot."[11]
When asked by Grant whether Cameron had encouraged theMetropolitan Police to "drag their feet" on investigating illegal phone tapping by Murdoch's journalists, McMullan agreed this had happened, and stated that police themselves had taken bribes from tabloid journalists: "20 percent of the Met has taken backhanders from tabloid hacks. So why would they want to open up that can of worms?... And what's wrong with that, anyway? It doesn't hurt anyone particularly."[11]
Grant's article attracted considerable interest, due to both the revelatory content of the taped conversation, and the novelty of his "turning the tables" on a tabloid journalist.[12]
While the allegations regarding theNews of the World continued to receive coverage in the broadsheets and similar media (Grant appeared, for example, onBBC Radio 4) it was only with the revelation that the voicemail ofmurdered Milly Dowler had been hacked, and evidence for her murder enquiry had been deleted, that the coverage turned from media interest to widespread public (and eventually political) outrage. Grant became something of a spokesman against Murdoch'sNews Corporation, culminating in his appearance on BBC television'sQuestion Time in July 2011.[13] Grant later said: "It's been fascinating to have a little excursion into another world. I really needed that and also to be dealing with real life instead of creating synthetic life, which is what I've been doing for the last 25 years."[211]
On 5 February 2018,Mirror Group Newspapers apologised for its actions towards Grant and other public figures, calling the affair "morally wrong". This came after Grant accepted a six-figure sum to settle a High Court action.[212][213] He donated the payout to the press campaign groupHacked Off.[214]
In April 2024 Grant announced that he had settled a case against the publisher ofThe Sun, News Group Newspapers (NGN). In the case, Grant had claimed journalists employed by NGN had used private investigators to tap his phone and burgle his house. Grant said he "did not want to accept" the "enormous sum of money" he had been offered to settle—but that a trial was likely to prove "very expensive". Grant further stated that had he proceeded he would have faced a bill of up to £10 million even if he had won the case. NGN denied the claims against it.[215]
Personal life
Relationships
Elizabeth Hurley (pictured in 2008) was in a much publicised relationship with Grant between 1987 and 2000.
In 1987, while playingLord Byron in the Spanish productionRemando Al Viento (1988), Grant met actressElizabeth Hurley, who was cast in a supporting role as Byron's former loverClaire Clairmont.[60] He began dating Hurley during filming and their relationship was subsequently the subject of much media attention.[216][217] While dating Hurley, Grant gained international notoriety for soliciting the services of prostituteDivine Brown, in 1995. They separated in May 2000.[218] Grant is godfather to Hurley's sonDamian, born in 2002.[219]
Grant has five children with two women. In September 2011, he had a daughter with Tinglan Hong, who was variously misreported in the press as a receptionist at a Chinese restaurant in London or a Chinese actress.[220][221][222] His daughter's Chinese name is Jing Xi (驚喜), meaning "happy surprise".[223] Grant and Hong had a "fleeting affair", according to his publicist.[221] In 2012, he stated that Hong had been "badly treated" by the media; the press intrusion prevented him from attending the birth of his daughter, with Hong obtaining an injunction to allow him to visit them in peace.[220]
In September 2012, Grant's second child, a son, was born to Swedish television producer Anna Eberstein. Later, Grant reunited briefly with Hong, and she gave birth to Grant's third child, a son, in December 2012.[224][225]
Grant's daughters with Eberstein were born in December 2015[226][227] and March 2018.[228][229] He and Eberstein married on 25 May 2018.[230][231]
Political views
In 2011, Grant appeared at theLiberal Democrats' conference on theNews International phone-hacking scandal, where he briefly met then-party leaderNick Clegg. Grant said that he was attending theConservative andLabour conferences as well, but told Lib Dem activists that "You, more than any of the other parties, have a good bill of health. You have never been in bed with these scumbags."[232]
In the2015 general election, Grant expressed support for Liberal Democrat MPDanny Alexander[233] and later hosted a dinner for the Liberal Democrats, in which he met the winner of a draw of donors to the Liberal Democrats.[234][235] In an email sent by former Liberal Democrat leaderPaddy Ashdown, Grant wrote: "I am not a Lib Dem, aTory, a Labourite or anything in particular but I recognise political guts."[235] In the 2015 election, he endorsed two Labour candidates:Tom Watson[235] and his former agent,Michael Foster.[236]
As a young boy, he playedrugby union on his school's first XV team at centre and also playedfootball. He is a fan ofFulham. He continued to play in a Sunday-morning football league in south-west London after college and remains an "impassioned Fulham supporter".[34] He is also a supporter of Italian clubComo.[243] His other interests include tennis[244] and snooker.[245]
In 2011, theBBC apologised after Grant made an offhand joke abouthomosexuality and rugby when he was invited into the commentary box during coverage of anEngland vScotland game atTwickenham Stadium. Talking about playing rugby during his school days, Grant said: "I discovered it hurt less if you tackled hard than if you tackled like a queen".[246]
Relationships with co-stars
In 2018, Grant mentioned the on-set tension that he andRobert Downey Jr. had, stating: "He [Downey] hated me. He took one look at me and wanted to kill me. I was so hurt."[247] After Grant confirmed their decades-long feud, Downey went on Twitter to publicly make amends with him, to which Grant agreed.[248]
In addition to the confirmation, Grant also said that he andDrew Barrymore did not get along during production ofMusic and Lyrics. "Well, Drew, I think did hate me a bit. But I admired her. We just were very different human beings," Grant said. "She was very L.A. and I was an old grumpy Londoner. The funny thing is, although it was fractionally tense on the set of that film, I think the chemistry is rather good between us. Sometimes tension makes a good crackle."[247] Barrymore had also been one out of three leading ladies Grant listed whom he did not get along with, the others beingJulianne Moore andRachel Weisz.[249] However, on aGraham Norton Show appearance, Grant toldGraham Norton he did not know why he mentioned Weisz and he was probably "going for a 'comedy triple'".[250] He is now on good terms with Barrymore and appeared onThe Drew Barrymore Show.
Grant is a patron of theDIPEx Charity, which operates the website Healthtalkonline.[251][252][253] He is also patron of the Fynvola Foundation, named after his late mother; it supports the Lady Dane Farmhouse, a home inFaversham for adults withlearning disabilities.[254]
^"Hugh Grant".Inside the Actors Studio. 12 May 2002.Twelfth Night. I was a very dull Fabian, who has some of the worst jokes not only in Shakespeare but in dramatic history.
^"Hugh Grant".Inside the Actors Studio. 12 May 2002.I was offered to do the doctorate in the history of art at the Courtauld Institute in London ..., but to get a grant you did need thefirst, and I didn't get that first ....
^Presenters: Valerie Pringle and Dan Matheson (6 September 1999). "British Filmmaker Divides Time Between Producing and Acting".Canada AM. CTV Television, Inc.
^Smith, Madeline C.; Eaton, Richard (eds).Eugene O'Neill Production Personnel: A Biographical Dictionary of Actors, Directors, Producers, and Scenic and Costume Designers in Stage and Screen Presentations of the Plays. McFarland & Company, 2005. p. 80.
^Tressider, Jody (2012).Hugh Grant: The Unauthorised Biography. Random House.
^Dean, Jonathan (20 December 2015)."Wanted: the director who got political".The Sunday Times. Archived fromthe original on 26 December 2015.He has a perfect leading man." The film he is referring to is The Rewrite ...
^"Viewers still in Letterman's corner". CNN. Retrieved1 September 2022."Is this David Letterman's Hugh Grant moment?" In 1995, Jay Leno pulled ahead of Letterman in ratings thanks to his much-watched "What were you thinking?" interview with a contrite Hugh Grant.
^Lowry, Brian (12 July 1995). "Hugh-man interest lifts 'Leno' rating".Variety. p. 5.
^Kitty Bean Yancey, Jeannie Williams (11 July 1995). "Grant confesses: No excuse for escapade".USA Today. p. 1D.