Hugh Grant
- In full:
- Hugh John Mungo Grant
- Married To:
- Anna Eberstein (2018–present)
- Movies/Tv Shows (Acted In):
- "Did You Hear About the Morgans?" (2009)
- "Restoration" (1995)
- "The Detective" (1985)
- "Sense and Sensibility" (1995)
- "White Mischief" (1987)
- "Travaux, on sait quand ça commence..." (2005)
- "Paddington 2" (2017)
- "Ladies in Charge" (1986)
- "Privileged" (1982)
- "Nine Months" (1995)
- "The Pirates! In an Adventure with Scientists!" (2012)
- "Love Actually" (2003)
- "Till We Meet Again" (1989)
- "W1A" (2017)
- "Shades of Darkness" (1986)
- "The Last Place on Earth" (1985)
- "Two Weeks Notice" (2002)
- "A Very English Scandal" (2018)
- "Bridget Jones's Diary" (2001)
- "The Rewrite" (2014)
- "The Gentlemen" (2019)
- "The Englishman Who Went Up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain" (1995)
- "Remando al viento" (1988)
- "The Lair of the White Worm" (1988)
- "Florence Foster Jenkins" (2016)
- "Mickey Blue Eyes" (1999)
- "La nuit Bengali" (1988)
- "Performance" (1991–1993)
- "Maurice" (1987)
- "Notting Hill" (1999)
- "An Awfully Big Adventure" (1995)
- "The Big Man" (1990)
- "American Dreamz" (2006)
- "The Remains of the Day" (1993)
- "Small Time Crooks" (2000)
- "Impromptu" (1991)
- "Night Train to Venice" (1993)
- "Sirens" (1994)
- "Extreme Measures" (1996)
- "A Very Peculiar Practice" (1986)
- "The Man from U.N.C.L.E." (2015)
- "Shakespeare: The Animated Tales" (1992)
- "About a Boy" (2002)
- "Jenny's War" (1985)
- "Four Weddings and a Funeral" (1994)
- "Bitter Moon" (1992)
- "Cloud Atlas" (2012)
- "I'm Still Here" (2010)
- "Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason" (2004)
- "Music and Lyrics" (2007)
- "The Dawning" (1988)
Hugh Grant (born September 9, 1960, Hammersmith, London, England) is a British actor best known for his leading roles as the endearing and funny love interest in romantic comedies, including Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994), Notting Hill (1999), Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001), and Love Actually (2003). Later in his career, Grant also found success playing darker characters.
Education and early work
It was not until Grant’s senior year at the University of Oxford, where he was studying English literature, that he became involved in acting. He appeared in a student film, Privileged (1982), and joined the Oxford University Dramatic Society. Following graduation (1982), Grant wrote and occasionally performed in radio commercials and attempted to write a novel before turning once again to acting. His stage debut came at the Nottingham (England) Playhouse in 1985. Moving to London, he formed the Jockeys of Norfolk comedy troupe, for which he wrote, directed, and performed in revues.
Four Weddings and a Funeral and Notting Hill
Grant began his professional film career with the James Ivory–Ismail Merchant film Maurice (1987), for which he won a best actor award at the Venice Film Festival. It was his charming performance as a British bachelor in Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994), however, that brought him to the attention of the general public; he won a Golden Globe Award for best actor and was named best actor by the British Academy of Film and Television Arts.

Grant quickly followed up with Nine Months and a film adaptation of Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility, both of which were released in 1995. He took on a more serious role in Extreme Measures (1996), portraying an emergency room doctor, but he returned to romantic comedy with Notting Hill (1999), in which he starred as a bookstore owner who falls in love with a movie star (played by Julia Roberts).
Bridget Jones’s Diary and Love Actually
Stepping out of his trademark role as the boyishly appealing leading man who ultimately gets the girl, Grant portrayed Daniel Cleaver, the womanizing boss and scheming sometime lover of the title character (Renée Zellweger), in Bridget Jones’s Diary (2001). His later films included About a Boy (2002), an adaptation of Nick Hornby’s novel; Love Actually (2003); and Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (2004). In 2007 Grant starred opposite Drew Barrymore as an aging pop star in Music and Lyrics. He next appeared in Did You Hear About the Morgans? (2009), a comedy about a married couple who enter a witness-protection program.
In 2012 Grant provided the voice of a pirate captain in The Pirates! Band of Misfits, a stop-motion animation film, and he disappeared into multiple roles in the epic Cloud Atlas, which wove together six stories that spanned centuries. Grant later portrayed St. Clair Bayfield, the manager of the deluded title character, a talentless opera singer played by Meryl Streep, in Florence Foster Jenkins (2016).
Later roles
Grant subsequently began to play darker characters, from narcissists to murders, and these roles garnered him some of the best reviews of his career. In 2017 he was cast as the villain Phoenix Buchanan in the family movie Paddington 2, and in the TV miniseries A Very English Scandal (2018), he portrayed Jeremy Thorpe, a British politician accused of trying to kill his former gay lover. Grant then played an unscrupulous private investigator in Guy Ritchie’s comedy-action movie The Gentlemen (2019).
In the miniseries The Undoing (2020), Grant was cast as a charming doctor whose secrets are exposed when he becomes a suspect in a murder. He then appeared with Timothée Chalamet in Wonka (2023), a family comedy inspired by Roald Dahl’s books about candy maker Willie Wonka. While the movie earned mixed reviews, Grant’s performance as a thieving Oompa-Lumpa was widely praised. He received even more acclaim for Heretic (2024), a horror film in which his character has sinister plans for two young missionaries. Grant later reprised his role as Phoenix Buchanan in Paddington in Peru (2024) and as Daniel Cleaver in Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy (2025).