Wednesday, May 07, 2025

Hugh Grant - The Talks

What did you like about playing the baddies?

It’s more fun. Actors prefer being baddies! Audiences prefer the baddies, and it's a very interesting question of why that is so. My personal belief is that it's the antagonist, the bad guy, who represents our true selves. And that is thrilling. I think it's thrilling to experience our true selves through that character. I think we are vicious, violent, selfish, unpleasant. And that's why good characters are quite difficult, because the good characters are the superficial, civilized veneer that we put on our true brutish self. It's less interesting.

...

Is that how you’d like to be remembered as an actor? Through the myriad of different kinds of roles you’ve played?

Oh, man. Well, I hope when we die, it's the same as before we were born. No one's really frightened of that enormous, infinite blackness before we were born. No one sits there thinking, “Oh, God, how awful. I was nothing.” So I don't really see why we should be frightened of that after we die, as long as it is black. I really don’t want to be up there on a cloud playing a harp, meeting some of the people I’ve hated in my life. I can’t imagine a greater nightmare. That would be hell, in fact.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

But what if one sets aside the obsession with clinging to the perception of one’s own momentary flicker of individuated consciousness as having a beginning and end and instead affirms the unity —and wonder—of the connection between one’s own consciousness and boundless reality itself? And what if—next to the awareness of our brutish, destructive, cloying impulses—one comes to see that the reality of goodness, truth and beauty is simply there, even making our awareness of depravity possible?