Emma Thompson Says Alan Rickman Was ‘So Happy’ to Finally Play Someone ‘Heroic and Nice’ in “Sense and Sensibility ” - STORY JRNL

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Friday, January 9, 2026

Emma Thompson Says Alan Rickman Was ‘So Happy’ to Finally Play Someone ‘Heroic and Nice’ in “Sense and Sensibility ”

Moviestore/Shutterstock; Clive Coote/Columbia Pictures Alan Rickman (left) and Emma Thompson (right) in 'Sense and Sensibility'

Moviestore/Shutterstock; Clive Coote/Columbia Pictures

NEED TO KNOW

  • Emma Thompson opened up about her 1995 film Sense and Sensibility

  • She said Alan Rickman was so excited to play a 'heroic' character for once

  • Rickman had already played movie villains in Die Hard and Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves

Emma Thompsonwas glad to help audiences seeAlan Rickmanin a different way.

Thompson, 66, opened up about some of her movies in a video forGQ. In it, she looked back at1995'sSense and Sensibility, which recently turned 30. In the movie, an adaptation of theJane Austennovel of the same name, she starred as Elinor Dashwood, a level-headed young woman who tries to lead her family after her father's death.Hugh Grantplayed her love interest Edward Ferrars and Kate Winslet played her sister Marianne. Rickman, whodied in 2016 at the age of 69, played Colonel Brandon, who befriends the Dashwoods and falls for Marianne. Marianne's other love interest, John Willoughby, was played byGreg Wise; he and Thompsonmet on the film and married in 2003.

"It was a very happy film," Thompson said in the video. "But in terms of the cast, we were so lucky because they were all, in a way, theater people." She called Winslet, who was then 19, "untried," adding, "I mean, she'd doneHeavenly Creatures, but that was it." She continued, "And she was heaven on earth and still is, you know, just completely normal person."

Moviestore/Shutterstock  Alan Rickman (left) and Emma Thompson in 'Sense and Sensibility'

Moviestore/Shutterstock

As for Grant — who Thompson said she thinks she's worked with more than any other actor — she said, "I kept on saying, 'God, Hugh, you're so grumpy. You've got the energy of a welk.' And he would respond quite well to that. But actually, I think it was nice for him to do something like that at that point."Sense and Sensibilitycame right after Grant, now 65, broke out inFour Weddings and a Funeral.

Then there was Rickman. Thompson said, "Alan Rickman, God rest him, he was so happy to be playing someone heroic and nice 'cause he'd been he was so fed up with people wanting him to be the Sheriff of Nottingham."

Rickman has received a BAFTA nomination for playing the Sheriff of Nottingham inRobin Hood: Prince of Thieves, released in 1991. His film debut came in 1988'sDie Hard, in which he played thenow-iconic villain Hans Gruber. Thompson and Rickman (and Grant) later starred together inLove, Actually, whereRickman played a cheating husbandto Thompson's Joni Mitchell-loving character. Thompson and Rickman both also appeared in theHarry Potterfilms, wherehe famously played Professor Snapeand she played Professor Trelawney.Rickman and Thompson remained close friendsthroughout his life.

Moviestore/Shutterstock  Emma Thompson (left) and Kate Winslet in 'Sense and Sensibility'

Moviestore/Shutterstock

Of theSense and Sensibilitycast, Thompson said, "They just came on and were those people and it was as though they knew Austin personally, you know, she'd drawn from them rather the other way round. So it was a group of actors who understood one another, you know, and there were no egos to speak of. So there was no one to navigate. So we could just be."

Thompson also reflected on director Ang Lee, who was making his English-language debut for the film. "He was just extraordinary," she said.

"On the first day when we were shooting, me and Hugh Grant were shooting something. At the end of it, we said, 'Oh, actually, Ang, you know, can we do that again? Can we just walk we just want to walk this direction? Can we just try it a slightly different way?' And he reacted very well and quietly," she remembered.

She later "discovered" that a big deal that was because he told them that in Taiwan, "The director is God" and just moves around the actors. "They're just pieces," she remembered him saying. "He said it's absolutely not collaborative. And actually, he loved it. He loved the collaboration."

Thompson won an Oscar for her adapted screenplay, becoming the first (and still only) person to win Oscars for acting and writing. She and Winslet were also both nominated for their performances in the film.

A newSense and Sensibilityadaptationis in the works from Netflix, starring Daisy Edgar-Jones.

Read the original article onPeople