Four Weddings and A Funeral
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Mike Newell
Hugh Grant
Andie Macdowell
James Fleet
Simon Callow
John Hannah
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
Romantic comedy about Charles, a noncommittal Englishman who meets Carrie--the American girl of his dreams--at a mutual friend's wedding and proceeds to awkwardly woo her through one funeral and three more weddings--one of which happens to be her own. Finally Charles discovers himself standing at the altar on his own wedding day, betrothed to a woman he has no desire to spend the rest of his life with.
Director
Mike Newell
Cast
Hugh Grant
Andie Macdowell
James Fleet
Simon Callow
John Hannah
Kristin Scott Thomas
David Bower
Charlotte Coleman
David Scott Rubin
Timothy Walker
Sara Crowe
Ronald Herdman
Elspet Gray
Philip Voss
Rupert Vansittart
Nicola Walker
Paul Stacey
Simon Kunz
Rowan Atkinson
Robin Mccaffrey
Michael Mears
David Wright
Ray Uren
Gordon Blackwell
Ron Griffiths
David Haig
Sophie Thompson
Corin Redgrave
Donald Weedon
Nigel Hastings
Emily Morgan
Amanda Mealing
Melissa Knatchbull
Polly Kemp
Anna Chancellor
Hannah Taylor Gordon
Bernice Stegers
Robert Lang
Jeremy Kemp
Rosalie Crutchely
Richard Allen
Mark James
Jason Bruer
Simon Wallace
James Mcdermid
Bryn Burrows
Paulette Ivory
Ken Drury
Struan Rodger
Lucy Hornack
Randall Paul
Pat Starr
Tim Thomas
Neville Phillips
Susanna Hamnett
John Abbott
Richard Butler
Kenneth Griffith
Ira Newborn
Crew
Dave Allen
Chris Allies
W H Auden
Sue Baker
Clive Banks
Jeff Barry
Gerry Bates
Sarah Beardsall
Mike Beaven
Rosie Bedford-stradling
Richard Rodney Bennett
Oscar Beuselinck
Tim Bevan
Bill Black
Bill Black
Mick Boggis
Jed Bray
Richard Broome
Ann Buchanan
David Carr
Paul Cheesman
Diane Christian
Clare Christie
Roy Clarke
Vince Clarke
Mick Coulter
Mick Coulter
Jimmy Coward
Francesca Crowder
Clive Curtis
Richard Curtis
Richard Curtis
Wendy Dade
Vicki Gee Dare
Justin Davies
Ted Debrera
Patsy Delord
Juliette Dow
Wendy Ebsworth
Terry Edland
Nigel Egerton
Julia Etterman
Eric Fellner
Simon Finney
John Fishlock
Nick Flowers
Leah Foley
Jane Frazer
Peter Freeman
Emma Freud
Toni Gard
Darren Gattrell
Jeremy Gee
George Gershwin
Ira Gershwin
Valentina Giambanco
Andy Glen
Marilyn Goldsworthy
Maggie Gray
Diane Greaves
Ellie Greenwich
Clare Greenwood
Jon Gregory
Michelle Guish
Deborah Harding
Ken Hawkey
Debra Hayward
Nick Heather
Lindy Hemming
Peter Howard
Natasha Hudson
Tom Innes
Charlie Ixer
Gary Ixer
Christian James
Elton John
Dave Jones
Paul Kemp
Duncan Kenworthy
Michael Kuhn
Melissa Lackersteen
Charlotte Laughton
Wayne Leach
Wendy Leach
Tracy Lee
Dick Lewzey
Steve Lindsey
John Locke
Derek Lomas
Lee Lighting Ltd
John Lunn
Simon J Lycett
Ian Macbeth
Tony Marshall
Peter Maxwell
Andy Mayson
Christian Mcwilliams
Wayne Michaels
Mark Milsome
Brian Mitchell
Jane Moore
Stephen Morley
Angela Morrison
Enyo Mortty
Con Murphy
Ira Newborn
Alison O'brien
Martin O'connor
Kevin O'shea
John Ott
Steve Pasmore
Kieron Phipps
Anna Pinnock
Chris Plevin
Elvis Presley
Trevor Puckle
Sarah Rains
Ruby Rawlins
John Reid
Steven Ricards
Mary Richards
Neil Richardson
Colin Ritchie
Elaine Robertson
Julie Robinson
Kay Robinson
Phil Robinson
Odilon Rocha
Amber Rudd
George Schembri
John Scott
Jupiter Sen
Ian Seymour
Billy Sherrill
Paul Shersby
Philip Sindall
Kathryn Smith
Malcolm Smith
Caroline Southey
Phil Spector
John Squires
David Stephenson
Jack Stew
Terry Stinson
Jon Symonds
Michele Tandy
Stewart Till
Peter Tyler
Louis Vuitton
Peter Wallis
Tommy Westbrook
Natascha Wharton
Barry Wilkinson
Jamie Wilkinson
Simon Wilkinson
Ian Wingrove
Mark Wolfe
Alison Wyldeck
Allison Wyldeck
Tammy Wynette
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Technical Specs
Award Nominations
Best Original Screenplay
Best Picture
Articles
Four Weddings and a Funeral
Four Weddings and a Funeral, described by Variety as "the little film that could," was a simple story shot on a miniscule budget that seemingly came out of nowhere and surprised everyone. Its charm, warmth and distinctly British humor, plus a star-making turn from Hugh Grant in the lead role, made it a gigantic-though unexpected--box office hit.
Screenwriter Richard Curtis had been mostly writing material for his friend Rowan Atkinson's popular character, Mr. Bean. He came up with the idea for Four Weddings and a Funeral based on a real event that had happened to him some years earlier. While a guest at a friend's wedding, Curtis met a girl who wanted to spend the night with him, but he turned her down. It was a decision he constantly regretted and became the motivation for his screenplay.
The script bounced around London, eventually attracting the attention of Mike Newell. The director had worked steadily in British film and television, but he had not yet broken through to a mainstream international audience. "It was handed to me in my agent's office," said Newell of the Four Weddings and a Funeral script, "by a very bright and forthright assistant who, knowing that I said 'No' to everything, sort of hit me in the chest with it and said, 'You should do that.'"
Newell loved the screenplay and committed to the project. At first, he was concerned that the characters were all too privileged, which would alienate a wider audience. "But we went to work on that," said Newell, "and tried to make the social range of things broader."
Hugh Grant, like Mike Newell, had been working steadily in film and television for years, but he was still virtually unknown to American audiences. His roles so far in films like Maurice (1987), White Mischief (1987) and Bitter Moon (1992) were serious dramatic roles, and he wasn't thought of as a comic actor. That was about to change.
When Hugh Grant auditioned for Four Weddings, he thought he was too old for the part, but he loved the script. Screenwriter Richard Curtis thought Grant was too handsome. "He genuinely didn't want me to get it," said Grant. "He thought that the character should not be posh and should not be in any way good looking. He should be a kind of everyman."
Despite Curtis' misgivings, there was no question that he completely "got" the character of Charles. His reading of the lines were spot-on, nailing every tongue-tied delivery exactly the way Curtis had always envisioned. So, Grant got the part.
For the role of Carrie, the American girl with whom Charles is smitten, Mike Newell and the others auditioned what seemed like every actress in Hollywood. Newell had recently directed the critically acclaimed film Enchanted April (1992), which had earned an Oscar® nomination for Joan Plowright, so actresses everywhere were clamoring to work with him. Jeanne Tripplehorn was finally tapped to play Carrie, but she soon had to drop out of the film for personal reasons.
Andie MacDowell, the former model-turned-actress, happened to be in the U.K. doing publicity for Groundhog Day (1993) when she heard they were looking for a replacement. She read the script and organized a meeting with Mike Newell, Duncan Kenworthy and Richard Curtis. "Every once in awhile you'll read a script that will just blow your mind," said MacDowell. "This was one of those."
Everyone liked MacDowell, and she was offered the part. To do the film, she gave up a much higher profile film that would have paid her significantly more money. The other script, she said, was terrible and she would much rather be a part of something wonderful.
One of the film's greatest assets was its colorful and memorable supporting cast. The production team brought on fuchsia-haired Charlotte Coleman to play Charles' roommate Scarlett; Simon Callow and John Hannah as gay couple Gareth and Matthew; Kristin Scott Thomas as the cynical Fiona; and David Bower as Charles' deaf brother David. Richard Curtis' old friend Rowan Atkinson ("Mr. Bean") was also brought in for a side-splitting cameo as a nervous priest presiding over his first wedding.
Four Weddings was originally set to go into production in 1992, but it wasn't ready to start until 1993. Because of the delay, the film's budget got drastically cut. Rather than abandoning the project, Kenworthy and Newell decided to move forward with it, knowing that getting something made was better than nothing. "We shook hands," said Kenworthy, "and said, 'it's going to be hard, but we'll do it together'." The film was shot in a mere 35 days.
When the film first previewed at a theater in Santa Monica, California, the cast and crew weren't sure that the film was funny at all. "The titles came up," said Mike Newell, "and nobody knew what to expect. And then about a minute and a half into the film this guy lets out this huge guffaw, and from then on it was the preview made in heaven."
The plan all along for Four Weddings and a Funeral was to open the film slowly through an enthusiastic word-of-mouth campaign since the budget was so small. Duncan Kenworthy opened it first in New York and Los Angeles, where it met with positive reviews. The Los Angeles Times called it "a tasty, sophisticated romp, a romantic comedy that wears its skill lightly, and garnishes its humor with style." Newsweek said, "Hugh Grant, who has graced the margins of many an English film, gets to step front and center in the romantic comedy Four Weddings and a Funeral and proves himself a deft and debonair leading man."
Slowly but surely Four Weddings generated a major buzz among filmgoers, and audiences began to flock to the theaters to see the wry romantic comedy. It became a surprise hit, reaching number one at the box office, and eventually becoming the highest grossing British film in history. Its success finally catapulted Hugh Grant onto the A-list, and director Mike Newell was welcomed into the Hollywood fold.
Four Weddings and a Funeral was rewarded with Academy Award nominations for Best Picture and Best Original Screenplay, while the popular soundtrack sparked a hit for the band Wet Wet Wet with the cover song "Love Is All Around," which was number one on the British charts for 15 weeks. Hugh Grant and Mike Newell worked together just one more time on An Awfully Big Adventure (1995) the following year, but Grant worked several more times with writer Richard Curtis and Duncan Kenworthy. The three teamed together on two more successful films, Notting Hill (1999) and Love Actually (2003).
Producer: Tim Bevan, Richard Curtis, Eric Fellner, Duncan Kenworthy
Director: Mike Newell
Screenplay: Richard Curtis
Cinematography: Michael Coulter
Film Editing: Jon Gregory
Art Direction: Maggie Gray
Music: Richard Rodney Bennett
Cast: Hugh Grant (Charles), Andie MacDowell (Carrie), Kristin Scott Thomas (Fiona), James Fleet (Tom), Simon Callow (Gareth), Charlotte Coleman (Scarlett).
C-117m. Letterboxed.
by Andrea Passafiume
Four Weddings and a Funeral
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Duncan Kenworthy was nominated for the 1994 Golden Laurel Award by the Producers Guild of America.
Mike Newell was nominated for outstanding directorial achievement by the Directors Guild of America (1994).
Nominated for the 1994 Golden Reel Award by the Motion Picture Sound Editors in the foreign film category.
Richard Curtis won the 1994 award for Best Original Screenplay from the Writers Guild of America (WGA).
Winner of four 1994 British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) Awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor (Hugh Grant), and Best Supporting Actress (Kristin Scott Thomas). Also nominated for Best Original Screenplay, Best Supporting Actress (Charlotte Coleman), Best Supporting Actor (Simon Callow and John Hannah), Best Music, Best Costume Design, and Best Editing.
Winner of the 1994 Australian Film Institute Award for best foreign film.
Winner of the 1994 Cesar Award for best foreign film.
Expanded Release in United States April 15, 1994
Expanded Release in United States April 22, 1994
Expanded Release in United States April 8, 1994
Expanded Release in United States March 18, 1994
Expanded Release in United States March 25, 1994
Expanded Release in United States March 31, 1994
Released in United States 1994
Released in United States April 1994
Released in United States January 1994
Released in United States March 1994
Released in United States May 1994
Released in United States on Video August 24, 1994
Released in United States Spring March 9, 1994
Shown at Cannes Film Festival (market) May 12-23, 1994.
Shown at Cleveland International Film Festival (opening night) April 7-17, 1994.
Shown at Santa Barbara International Film Festival March 4-13, 1994.
Shown at Tokyo International Film Festival September 24 - October 2, 1994.
Began shooting May 28, 1993.
Released in United States 1994 (Shown at Tokyo International Film Festival September 24 - October 2, 1994.)
Released in United States January 1994 (Shown at Sundance Film Festival (Opening Night) in Park City, Utah January 20-30, 1994.)
Released in United States March 1994 (Shown at Santa Barbara International Film Festival March 4-13, 1994.)
Released in United States Spring March 9, 1994
Expanded Release in United States March 18, 1994
Expanded Release in United States March 25, 1994
Expanded Release in United States March 31, 1994
Released in United States April 1994 (Shown at Cleveland International Film Festival (opening night) April 7-17, 1994.)
Expanded Release in United States April 8, 1994
Expanded Release in United States April 15, 1994
Expanded Release in United States April 22, 1994
Released in United States May 1994 (Shown at Cannes Film Festival (market) May 12-23, 1994.)
Released in United States on Video August 24, 1994
Completed shooting July 9, 1993.