Four Weddings and a Funeral


10:15 pm - 12:10 am, Friday, December 26 on BBC One London (1)

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About this Broadcast

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A London man's misfortunes in love look set to change when he meets an American beauty. However, the prospect of a transatlantic relationship succeeding seems slim, so the pair go their separate ways - only for him to realise he is unable to get her out of his mind. Richard Curtis's comedy, with Hugh Grant, Andie MacDowell, John Hannah, Charlotte Coleman, Kristin Scott Thomas, Simon Callow and James Fleet


1994 HD subtitles 16x9 audio-description
Comedy Movie/Drama Romance

Cast & Crew

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Hugh Grant (Actor) .. Charles
Kristin Scott Thomas (Actor) .. Fiona
John Hannah (Actor) .. Matthew
Simon Callow (Actor) .. Gareth
Charlotte Coleman (Actor) .. Scarlett
Andie MacDowell (Actor) .. Carrie
James Fleet (Actor) .. Tom
Corin Redgrave (Actor) .. Hamish
David Bower (Actor) .. David
Rowan Atkinson (Actor) .. Father Gerald
Mike Newell (Director)

More Information

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Did You Know..

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Hugh Grant (Actor) .. Charles
Born: September 09, 1960 in Hammersmith, London
Best Known For: Playing bashful-yet-handsome British men.
Early-life: Hugh John Mungo Grant was born in London on September 9, 1960, and grew up in Hammersmith. "I was a charming little boy, but a bit neurotic," says Grant. "I was very pale and small for my age and I used to faint a lot." His mother was a teacher, his father a carpet salesman-turned-painter. He has an older brother called Jamie. Grant won a scholarship to Oxford in 1979, where he tried his hand at student drama, at one point featuring in Hamlet - performed in Star Trek costumes.
Career: Grant started out as a member of comedy troupe The Jockeys of Norfolk. He appeared in his first film, Privileged, in 1982. Other early projects include The Detective, A Very Peculiar Practice, The Demon Lover and Ladies in Charge. He had higher profile roles in Maurice, The Lair of the White Worm and The Remains of the Day. His big break came when he was cast in Four Weddings and a Funeral in 1994. Big-screen productions since include An Awfully Big Adventure, Sense and Sensibility, Notting Hill, Mickey Blue Eyes, About a Boy, Love Actually and two Bridget Jones films. He could recently be heard in animated film The Pirates!
Quote: "I just don't believe in love at first sight any more, even though I've based my whole career on the concept. In my experience, power, money and influence always attract the opposite sex. It's something that I've always exploited - with good results."
Trivia: He is a patron of Pancreatic Cancer Action.
Kristin Scott Thomas (Actor) .. Fiona
Born: May 24, 1960 in Redruth, Cornwall
Best Known For: Four Weddings and a Funeral, and The English Patient.
Early-life: Born in Redruth, Cornwall, on May 24, 1960, Kristin is the elder sister of actress Serena Scott Thomas. On leaving school, Kristin moved to London and worked in a department store. At the age of 19 she went to Paris to work as an au pair. She went on to study acting at the Ecole nationale superieure des arts et techniques du theatre in Paris. After graduating at the age of 25, she was cast opposite Prince in Under the Cherry Moon (1986).
Career: Her big break came when she was cast in A Handful of Dust (1988), a role that won her an Evening Standard British Film Award for most promising newcomer. She went on to star in Bitter Moon (1992), Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994), Mission: Impossible (1996), The English Patient (1996), The Horse Whisperer (1998), Random Hearts (1999), Gosford Park (2001), The Golden Compass (2007) and The Other Boleyn Girl (2008). Thomas has also acted in a number of French films, including Ne le dis à personne (2006), Il y a longtemps que je t'aime (2008), Partir (2009) and Elle s'appelait Sarah (2010).
Quote: "I've always really wanted to be onstage but movies kind of carry you along. You get swept away by them. And there's this feeling sometimes of being a bit of a pawn and of other people channelling their ambition through you."
Trivia: She was awarded an OBE in 2003. She won a 2008 Laurence Olivier Theatre Award for her performance in Seagull.
John Hannah (Actor) .. Matthew
Born: April 23, 1962 in East Kilbride, Scotland
Best Known For: Four Weddings and a Funeral.
Early-life: Born April 23, 1962, in East Kilbride, Scotland. He's the youngest of three children and has two older sisters. Hannah started his working life as an electrician and also spent time on a market stall before turning to acting on the advice of a friend: "I was always rabbiting on about something or other," says Hannah. "He said: 'You may as well get paid for talking. Why don't you take it up?'" He then enrolled at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama in Glasgow.
Career: Hannah's TV debut came in 1987's Brond. He continued to work on the small screen in such projects as Bookie, Harbour Beat, Taggart, and Paul Calf's Video Diary, and in the theatre, until Four Weddings and a Funeral catapulted him to stardom in 1994. Small screen success followed with Out of the Blue and McCallum. He also starred in Rebus, which was made by his own company, Clerkenwell Films. His movie hits include Sliding Doors, The Mummy, The Mummy Returns, and The Hurricane. Other credits include Sea of Souls, Cold Blood, Spartacus: War of the Damned, Spartacus: Gods of the Arena, Damages and A Touch of Cloth.
Quote: "If you cut me in half you'd still see the words East Kilbride written through me like a stick of rock."
Trivia: He has supported the Epilepsy Association of Scotland and Oxfam's Cut Conflict Campaign. His nephew, Rory Hannah, is also an actor.
Simon Callow (Actor) .. Gareth
Born: June 15, 1949 in London
Best Known For: Four Weddings and a Funeral.
Early-life: Simon Phillip Hugh Callow was born on June 15, 1949, in London. His parents separated when he was two years old and he was raised by his mother and grandmother. He spent time at the London Oratory Grammar School, and also had a stint on the African continent, between the ages of nine and 12. His mother, who had once enjoyed an affluent lifestyle, attempted to cover up the family's poor economic status by making sure her son's diction was perfect.
Career: Following spells at Belfast's Queen's University and London's Drama Centre, Callow worked in the Old Vic's box office after being recommended for the post by Laurence Olivier. Acclaimed stage roles followed, as did several small parts in such TV shows as The Sweeney and Carry On Laughing! He had the lead in 1984 sitcom Chance in a Million, and made his film debut the same year in Amadeus. Since then he's continued to appear regularly on stage and TV. His most notable movies include A Room with a View, Postcards from the Edge, Shakespeare in Love, Four Weddings and a Funeral, and The Phantom of the Opera. He was also a judge on the show Popstar to Operastar in 2011.
Quote: "People expect me to be constantly merry, and I'm not. Sometimes I'm quite melancholy. I have an in-built sense of regret about things."
Trivia: He has written biographies of Oscar Wilde, Charles Laughton and Orson Welles.
Charlotte Coleman (Actor) .. Scarlett
Andie MacDowell (Actor) .. Carrie
Born: April 21, 1958 in Gaffney, South Carolina
Best Known For: Groundhog Day and Four Weddings and a Funeral.
Early-life: Rosalie Anderson MacDowell was born in Gaffney, South Carolina on April 21, 1958. Her mother was a music teacher and her father was a lumber executive. In 1978, Andie dropped out of college, moved in with her sister Beverly and started waitressing in nightclubs. After helping to organise a fashion show at one of the nightspots, she was snapped up by Elite Model Management.
Career: MacDowell's modelling career took off in a big way, but it also led her to the movies. In 1984, she landed a role in Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan (though her voice was dubbed by Glenn Close), and a year later gained a small role in the blockbuster St Elmo's Fire. It would be another four years before she gained widespread success, and it started with indie flick sex, lies and videotape (1989). Since then, she has gone on to establish a solid acting career, with films such as Green Card (1990), Groundhog Day (1993), Short Cuts (1993), Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994) and Multiplicity (1996). More recently she's appeared in The Six Wives of Henry Lefay (2009), The 5th Quarter (2009) and Footloose (2011). Since 2013, she has starred in American drama Cedar Cove.
Quote: "I think women have an innate ability to be intuitive with people that they truly love. I think we are more intuitive than men."
Trivia: Since 1986, MacDowell has appeared in advertisements for L'Oreal.
James Fleet (Actor) .. Tom
Born: March 11, 1954 in Bilston, Staffordshire
Best Known For: The Vicar of Dibley and Four Weddings and a Funeral.
Early-life: James Edward Fleet was born in Bilston, Staffordshire, on March 11, 1954 to a Scottish mother, Christine, and an English father, Jim. He moved to a town near Aberdeen at the age of 10 with his mother when his dad died. He studied engineering at university before training as an actor at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama. He began his career in the Royal Shakespeare Company, appearing in several plays in the early 1980s.
Career: Fleet is best known for playing the bumbling Tom in the 1984 romantic comedy Four Weddings and a Funeral, and the dim-witted Hugo Horton in the sitcom The Vicar of Dibley. He had a stint in Coronation Street in 2010 and his other TV credits include roles in Midsomer Murders, Being Human, Death Comes to Pemberley and Bad Education. On the big screen, he has appeared in Sense and Sensibility (1995), The Phantom of the Opera (2004) and Charlotte Gray (2001).
Quote: "Casting directors tend to see me as a posh idiot."
Trivia: Fleet is a keen biker.
Corin Redgrave (Actor) .. Hamish
David Bower (Actor) .. David
Rowan Atkinson (Actor) .. Father Gerald
Born: January 06, 1955 in Consett, County Durham
Best Known For: Mr Bean and Blackadder.
Early-life: Rowan Sebastian Atkinson was born in Consett, County Durham, on January 6, 1955. He is the youngest of four sons of a farmer and company director. Rowan was educated at Durham Choristers School, St Bees School and Newcastle University. He also studied for a Masters degree in Electrical Engineering at Oxford, where he began his comedy career. He became friends with writer Richard Curtis and composer Howard Goodall during his time there.
Career: Atkinson's first professional success came in 1978 via the radio show The Atkinson People; it was co-written by Curtis and produced by Griff Rhys Jones. He then became part of the Not the Nine O'Clock News team before creating the character of Edmund in The Black Adder 1983. The sitcom ran for four series and a number of specials. He also created the affable idiot Mr Bean, who appeared in a number of one-off TV specials and two hugely successful films. Other projects include Johnny English and its sequel, The Thin Blue Line, The Witches, Four Weddings and a Funeral and Rat Race. Atkinson also appeared at the Olympics opening ceremony and returned to the West End stage to star in Quartermaine's Terms. He was awarded a CBE in 2013.
Quote: "People think because I can make them laugh on the stage, I'll be able to make them laugh in person. That isn't the case at all. I am essentially a rather quiet, dull person who just happens to be a performer."
Trivia: He is an avid fan of cars, even writing articles about them for various magazines.
Mike Newell (Director)

Before / After

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