Style icon: Cary Grant | Norton of Morton
In which G.M. Norton continues his style icon series with a tribute to the ultimate leading man.
To continue my style icon series following my earlier Sir Roger Moore effort, I would like to raise a glass to Mr. Archibald Alexander Leach. Or to give him the name that has made millions of ladies swoon and millions of men aspire to be him – Mr. Cary Grant.
| Cutting a dash |
Yesterday marked the 109th year since he was born. There are rumours circulating that he was all suit and polish even on arrival, surprising his parents with a smile at his mother and a wagging finger at his father.
Born in Bristol, South West England, Leach had a rotten childhood. At the age of nine, his scoundrel of a father put his mother in a mental institution before hastily remarrying and abandoning young Archibald to fend for himself.
So he did what any self-respecting person would do and joined a travelling circus troupe, soon embarking across the pond to America. With a name as unfortunate as Archibald Leach, he changed it to the smoother sounding Cary Grant and within seconds of emerging from the name-changing office, a contract with Paramount Pictures was thrust into his hands.
| The ability to stop traffic is one of the benefits of being Cary Grant |
The re-born Grant had everything going for him – good looks, physical grace, an understated wit and he wore a suit better than anyone in Hollywood. He used these qualities to great effect for the slight variations of the same film character he portrayed.
Tall and light on his feet, he could saunter into any room or on anycinema or television screen and command your attention immediately. That’s because Cary Grant is the ultimate leading man and for me, the most important actor of the last one hundred years.
This is a bold statement, I agree with you but there’s little point dithering – the clothes are an integral part of this, the way he looked so effortlessly stylish is part of his appeal.
In my favourite Grant film, North by Northwest, he was entering the twilight of his career. Even though he was pushing 50, he lit up the screen as he relied on his wit, intelligence, physical abilities and the all-important grey suit to get himself out of one scrape after another. As Sir Alfred Hitchcock commented, Grant is “the only actor I’ve ever loved in my whole life.”
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| “He’s a well-dressed one, isn’t he” |
Of course, North by Northwest gave salivating audiences one of the silver screen’s most iconic scenes with Grace stranded in the middle of a field and running for his life as a plane mercilessly accosted both him and his grey suit. How his embattled attire ever survived is one of life’s little mysteries.
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| It’s behind you! |
Immaculately presented, sartorially refined and the object of affection and admiration is reason enough to include Mr. Grant in my style icons list. As Grant himself famously remarked, “Everyone wants to be Cary Grant – even I want to be Cary Grant.” Me too, Archie, old boy. Me too.
G.M. Norton
Protagonist of ‘Norton of Morton’


