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Though he has walked through the shadow of some ticklish “scandals”, Hugh Grant has always kept his cool.
A conviction for “lewd conduct in a public place” with a very talkative prostitute and endless tabloid scrutiny of his relationships with Liz Hurley and Jemima Khan failed to blow the frosting off the top.
Whatever the turmoil of his private life it seemed his cool was invincible.
Yesterday he was accused of losing it. A photographer, Ian Whittaker, described how an apparently innocuous request for a photograph had brought forth in the actor a bitter rage. Whittaker claimed that Grant had launched a frenzied verbal and physical attack that involved a tub of baked beans – allegations denied by Grant.
Yesterday, it also emerged that Grant had been arrested on suspicion of an assault and questioned for an hour at Notting Hill Police station. He was bailed to return next month.
His lawyers issued an urgent legal notice. They allowed that “an incident did happen” but denied the allegations, printed in The Star, the Daily Record and The London Paper, about “our client’s alleged wish that a paparazzi’s photographer’s children die of cancer”.
The photographer, for his part, promised “to see the thing through to the end”.
Whittaker, 43, had been in Chelsea on Tuesday, waiting outside the home of Liz Hurley, hoping to get pictures of the actress after her well-publicised marriage to Arun Nayar, the Indian businessman.
Grant lives in the same street and pulled up in his car. “It looked to me as if he had been out for a morning jog,” Whittaker said in one report of the incident.
Whittaker said that Grant had his head down, and that he merely asked the actor to “give us a smile, please?”
“But he must have been having a bad day, because he started chasing me down the street.” Whittaker then appears to have walked backwards away from the actor, taking pictures as he went. He said: “We ended up about 100 yards down the street in the middle of the road.”
He then claims the actor kicked him “three or four times and then kneed me in the groin”.
“He asked me if I had a girlfriend or any kids and I said I had two. He said, ‘I hope they die of f***ing cancer’.”
He claimed that Grant then said: “Do you know who I am? I’m a millionaire”, and then screamed: “Leave me alone,” offering to pay the photographer £200 a day to keep away.
In perhaps the most bizarre claim of all, Whittaker said Grant had then picked up what appears to have been a Tupperware container full of baked beans from outside his door – perhaps a discarded takeaway carton – and threw it. Whittaker was said to have been left bruised “and covered in baked beans”. It was, the photographer said, “the kind of thing you expect Pete Doherty to do, not Hugh Grant”. Grant rejects the allegations.
It seems an unlikely reaction from one so used to media attention. After his arrest in 1995 by the Los Angeles Police Department with the prostitute Divine Brown, he handled the blanket publicity with cautious and apologetic charm. Appearing in the US on the Jay Leno Show, he was asked: “What the hell were you thinking?” Grant replied: “I’m not one to go around blowing my own trumpet.” If anything, Grant’s image was bolstered as sales of his videos increased by 30 per cent.
So it remained through his split with Ms Hurley and his recent break-up with Ms Khan. Intrusive reports were handled by his lawyers. Yesterday they settled a libel action with Associated Newspapers over a report into his private life.
In an interview in February he described himself as “grumpy, anxious and difficult”. Asked what made him grumpy, he replied: “Everything. It would be shorter to tell you what doesn’t.”
An actor’s life
— First hit the big screen with the 1982 film Privileged and during the decade worked as an advertising copywriter and actor in repertory theatre
— Earlier roles included playing Frederic Chopin and Lord Byron, and he also starred in Roman Polanski’s Bitter Moon
— His big breakthrough came in 1994 with Four Weddings and a Funeral when his performance as the charming but stammering Charles drew comparisons with David Niven and Cary Grant
— Achieved notoriety in June 1995 when he was arrested on Sunset Strip, Los Angeles, in the company of Divine Brown, a prostitute. The actor was apparently engaged in a “lewd act”. He later made a public apology to Elizabeth Hurley, then his girlfriend. His next film, Nine Months, benefited at the box office from the publicity
— During the 1990s he also took roles in Ang Lee’s Sense and Sensibility alongside Emma Thompson, starred with Gene Hackman in Extreme Measures and in the opulent period piece Restoration
— His “comeback” film was Notting Hill released in 1999 where he played a failed bookshop owner who enters a relationship with a Hollywood film star, Anna Scott, played by Julia Roberts
Source: Times database
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I think celeds should be lelfed alone becuz they have their own life just like me and you.
Tori, Sioux City, Iowa
fine the people that pay the paparazi!!!
robmchardy, paris, france
Hugh should have thrown a baked ham and a "great bloody loaf" at the photographer's head as well. Last night I looked at "The Queen" with Helen Mirren once again and while it's cinematic perfection, I couldn't help but take note of the fact that one Brit was literally hounded out of existence by the photographers and the press. It is not required that people--famous or otherwise--be polite to a profession that takes invasion of privacy for granted.
Elan Durham, North Hollywood, CA
"The photographer, for his part, promised "to see the thing through to the endâ. "
The photographer, for his part, appears to have got the roles of 'abuser' and 'victim' somewhat confused. And what really worries me is that the law will back his view when all that is required to prevent these incidents, alleged or otherwise, is for the parasite scum paps to leave celebs the hell alone. And no, I don't buy any of the 'celeb-expo' type publications, not ever.
Mike, Blackpool, Lancs.
The casino is dead, long live the casino.
Mike, Blackpool, Lancashire
Good on Hugh Grant. Who could have blamed him if he'd emptied the can over the parasite, sorry, 'photographer', taken a photo of his discomfiture and posted it on Youtube with the tag "You've Bean Framed"...
DavidBruno, Brussels,
How much did the photographer get for the photographs, I wonder? Of coure, he will probably file a lawsuit and get awarded damages as well. You have to feel sorry for him - he probably had to shell out about 99p for some ointment for his baked bean bruises, and he had to wash his clothes, poor man...
Sue, San Antonio, TX, USA
Surely the police have more real crime to tackle than arresting celebrities over such incidents. Leave Hugh alone and I agree the photographers should be arrested for harassment too!
Claire, London, UK
Pity it wasn't a tin of Spotted Dick!
John McIlray, Scottsdale, Arizona, USA
I think all people should have the right to privacy including actors and it is only natural he would not want to be harrased outside his home.
I do however think any wishes expressed for another person to die of cancer is both in poor taste and ignorant to the deep emotional upset cancer sufferers and their families have to endure.
I however severly doubt any such comment was made from a man who has had years of dealing with the press and would know how damning such a comment would be.
Emma Baldry, Worcester, UK
Oh, this whole thing doesn"t amount to a hill of beans, though I"m sure the photographer, who"s full of them, knows how many make five, Old Bean.
Eugene, Heidelberg, germany
Well done Hugh. Give them all a good kicking. Why aren't the police arresting the photographers for constant harrassment? Its another case of the person being harrassed getting arrested while the bully harrassing them gets off scot free. Part of Blair/Browns Police state.
Jane, London, England
I have 1 million tubs of baked beans for sale at £10 each. All enquiries by email please. Confidentiality assured.
eric, harrogate, uk
Why can't we have privacy laws similar to those in France where, "in general, the right to privacy entitles anyone, irrespective of rank, birth, fortune or present or future office, to oppose the dissemination of his or her picture - an attribute of personality - without the express permission of the person concened."
Why should photographers be able to stalk anyone ?
That is what it amounts to.
The balance between the public's right to know or the public interest, has become completely distorted in favour of what the papparazzi can get the most money for.
Why are UK politicians frightened to act on this?? Surely not the fear of bad press! Legislation is preferable to case law relating to privacy being developed around the Human Rights Act.
Portia, London, UK
Hugh,
Congratulations!! Proud of you. Think that your life (and other actors) are under so much scrutiny from the media and public when you're working, that your private lives should remain private unless you choose to do the full "Hello" photo thing. I am sure that many of us would have done the same.
Keep making the films, keep making me laugh. Best romantic comedy actor we've had in a long time.
Miles, London,
For crying out loud - leave these actors alone when they on on 'their own time'. Didn't the paparazzi learn anything from Diana? These artists give the press etc plenty of photo opps when they're working - just back off.
Well done Hugh- give them heaps!!
Angela Parry-Marshall, Perth, Western Australia
I think if Hugh had splurges of interest from the public over other upsets in his life, this may have all have been staged for that reason. If he sincerely does want his privacy, telling the photographer politely to please leave him alone should have been enough. I believe it is common sense for the photographers, knowing that it is their livelihood--if a star does something like this, they should turn their heads away from them for 30 days, I would bet they'd be setting up photo sessions if they weren't mentioned or photographed fro a month.
Barbara Thomas, Berea, Kentucky