The Critic

Romeo Coates

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Weightier role

Concern grows over frisky housewives’ favourite Hugh Bonneville’s Hollywood-style physical transforma­tion of late.

While history suggests such sudden image changes for our top celebritie­s can be a sure sign of troubled waters ahead, I’m also reminded newly-svelte and airbrushed Hugh, 57, displays reckless disregard for continuity issues when it comes to upcoming filming on the

Downton Abbey movie sequel. Surely creator Julian Fellowes is right to expect his star actor puts some extra timber back on before once again inhabiting the more healthily-nourished Earl of Grantham?

★ AS SHE CURIOUSLY INSISTS on speaking with an American accent whenever interviewe­d by Americans, and an English accent whenever interviewe­d by the English, one cannot help wondering how that strange girl Gillian Anderson attempts to talk in the presence of both nationalit­ies at the same time.

It’s now imperative this fascinatin­g social experiment is put to the test …

No sooner does Pierce Brosnan generously agree to star in a new video to boost Irish tourism than small-minded types see fit to mock the old charmer’s disastrous attempt at an authentic Emerald Isle accent. More than half a century after he left the land of his birth, it's hardly Mr Brosnan’s fault if the price of longtime commercial success is losing one’s precious Irish brogue somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean. X is it right and proper for a thespian of Ralph Fiennes’s stature to be seen publicly begging movie executives to keep him on as James Bond’s boss M when Daniel Craig’s successor arrives? With another

twenty-first-century purge of the Bond franchise inevitably on the horizon after Mr Craig’s departure, grim rumour has it dear Ralph’s on the “vulnerable list”. Better to go to the scaffold with silent dignity …

Nothing to be sniffed at

with levels of fun having reached new heights these past months, I see this mean-spirited government is now intent on “cracking down” on the weekend drug habits of the respectabl­e classes.

Heaven forbid anyone should look at the broader picture; not least the sorry fate of many in the middling ranks of the acting profession, whose sudden lack of employment over the past year presently leaves them stretched to fund essential Colombian marching powder habits.

What’s more, anyone fortunate enough to have witnessed the sight of a privately educated North London thespian attempt to talk “street” when the friendly neighbourh­ood narcotics dealer pops round of a Saturday evening, would confirm this represents social interactio­n at its most riveting.

★ lavishing the crown with more awards, the Americans wilfully ignored the fact that its creator Peter Morgan was only recently declared a national disgrace on this side of the pond for being the first dramatist ever to shamelessl­y fictionali­se royal history. How can Peter be expected to learn the grave error of his ways if he continues to be indulged in this fashion? Succumbing to daytime television during the dreariness of lockdown, one couldn’t help noticing the infuriatin­g frequency of “down to earth” northern voice artists, hired to flog the array of tat on offer during ad breaks — not least, cost-effective dying. I’m informed much of the hoi polloi find such seemingly humble-sounding folk more “trusting”. Surely the work of wolves in (northern) sheep’s clothing?

When boys were girls

News that kindly gent Ronald Pickup had passed at 80 transporte­d me to a distant time when I — then, but an impression­able lad — had the honour of watching both him and Tony Hopkins dressed in drag for a delightful all-male version of As You Like It at the Old Vic in 1967. It briefly left one hankering for the more straightfo­rward days of centuries past, when the boys played all the roles as Shakespear­e himself intended.

★ speaking of Tony Hopkins, I note the reformed hellraiser has been indelicate­ly suggesting the actors he used to get sozzled with in West End watering hole The Salisbury are now “all dead.” He should be kindly informed that some of us remain!

Unsober reflection

Having once been assured by people I can no longer quite remember that these were to belatedly be my “defining years” in this corrupt trade, the plague-inflicted tragedy that’s befallen such promise is rarely far from one’s thoughts.

Who knows where I might have been, had disgusting fate not intervened? Many a solitary cocktail hour’s been spent pondering the matter — and it seems I must now apologise to those friends and colleagues who I may have telephoned at length to elaborate the point further. WHILE WE HOPEFULLY MOVE towards better times during this spring of 2021, the relentless wheels of showbiz ensure at least some certaintie­s ahead. No longer lucrativel­y typecast in rom-coms, Hugh Grant will instead continue to be lucrativel­y typecast as villains; more pretty actresses will play Princess Diana (at least two on the way); unless forcibly restrained, Gyles Brandreth is coming to a town near you.

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