Thank you for reading.
Yes, I stumbled onto those stories about Grant and possible villains over the years.
The "Dial M" story gets "murky." Hitchcock recommended that Grant see the play and consider playing the villain. Grant did so...and DID want to play the villain.
But the film was being made for Warner Brothers and evidently Jack Warner said "no." EITHER Warner felt that Grant should NOT play a villain(and the one in Dial M was very cruel and uncaring) OR Warner didn't want to meet Grant's high price(which would have required a bigger payout on percentage from what was intended to be a 3D film.) There's also the issue that Grant himself may have not fought too hard for the role. Ray Milland ended up with it -- at about 1/4 of Grant's fee.
The Devil in Damn Yankees is a bad guy, but its really a comedy part and you can't take him seriously as evil. When Grant passed, it ended up being played by the guy who played it on Broadway -- Ray Walston.
Of course, Cary Grant -- like a lot of complex leading men -- brought some darkness, and meanness , to roles like Suspicion, Notorious, and even To Catch a Thief. It was always there.
Its hard for "hero" actors to switch to bad guys. But not always. Modernly, Tom Cruise was a GREAT bad guy as a hit man in "Collateral." His intensity as a hero switched easily to intensity as a possibly psycho hit man.
John Travolta kept his paydays high for years by agreeing to play villains(Broken Arrow, Face Off partially, Swordfish, Taking of Pelham 123.) Harrison Ford did it once -- maybe twice.
John Wayne never played a flat-out villain, but his driven, mean characters in Red River and The Searchers have a touch of evil...or at least of anger and domination.
Anyway, there's Cary Grant in Charade doing enough to SUGGEST he might be the bad guy.
Its as close as we got.
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