Nickolas Grace's
....overacting, upstaging, and self-obsessive scene stealing was way too over the top. It got to where I had to forward through them.
"Don't ever let them catch you acting!" (Lillian Gish)
....overacting, upstaging, and self-obsessive scene stealing was way too over the top. It got to where I had to forward through them.
"Don't ever let them catch you acting!" (Lillian Gish)
overacting, upstaging, and self-obsessive scene stealing was way too over the top. It got to where I had to forward through them.Oh my gosh are you SERIOUS?
Nickolas Grace, who played the flamboyant and stuttering aesthete Anthony Blanche, recalled a fan club in Toronto that gathered monthly to dress in purple smoking jackets, apply purple nail polish and discuss decadence. “I said, ‘My God, what have I done to these people?’ ” he said. “People would come up to me in the street and say, ‘Just say “B-brandy Alexander.” ’ ”
I have to agree with the other poster who answered you. I don't know if you've read the book. But I can tell you that Charles tells us, when we first meet Anthony
that the things he does, and the role he has put on is deliberately exaggerated.
Nickolas Grace was perfect and perfectly accurate to the role.
This of course raises the question if they should've changed the role a bit in the adaptation, that this is a problem of something not necessarily working on different media than the book (I happen to love it and think it works perfectly, but I understand the other pov).
Whether its here or there it certainly isn't Nickolas's fault, but the directors.
bear that in mind when/if you're going to watch the series again, and perhaps you'll find him more bearable, possibly learn to even appreciate it.