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Rik Mayall’s Harry Potter Role That No-One Ever Saw

The best-known film of comedian and actor Rik Mayall – who sadly died two years ago today aged just 56 – was of course ‘Drop Dead Fred’, where he played the anarchic imaginary best friend to Phoebe Cates.

What his fans might not remember however is that he was set to star in an even more famous movie – ‘Harry Potter’.

He was cast as Peeves the poltergeist in ‘Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone’ and as he explains in this hilarious interview, he actually shot the role.

Take it away Rik:

“I tell you, the best f**king film I’ve ever been in, not for the film, because the film, with respect… no with no respect at all… the film was s**t, I’ll tell you why.

“A long while ago, all the kids at my kids’ school were saying “Hello Rik, have you read Harry Potter? It’s fantastic.” I’d go “what?”

“My agent said, “Hey Rik, you want to be in Harry Potter?”

“I said, “What, is it a book?”

“He said, “It’s a film.”

“I said, “Ah, it’s my favourite book, course I want to be in it.”

“I’d never read a word. He said: “Alright, you’re in it.”

“I thought, “f**king cool. What’s the money?”

“So I did it, I went and I f**king did it. I played the part of Peeves in ‘Harry Potter’. I got sent off the set because every time I tried to do a bit of acting, all the lads who were playing the school kids kept getting the giggles, they kept corpsing, so they threw me off.

Above: Peeves as he appeared in the ‘Prisoner of Azkaban’ game

“Well, they asked me to do it with my back to them and they still laughed. So they asked me to do it around the other side of the cathedral and shout my lines, but they still laughed so they said they’d do my lines with someone else.

“So then I did a little bit of filming, then I went home and I got the money. That’s significant.

“Then a month later, they said: “Er, Rik, we’re sorry about this, but you’re not in the film. We’ve cut you out of the film.”

“It was three weeks later, so I was in the film for around three weeks and then they cut me out.

“But I still got the money. So that is the most exciting film I’ve ever been in, because I got the oodle and I wasn’t in it. Fantastic.

“I hadn’t told my kids I wasn’t in it yet, and they came back and they said: “Bloody good make up. You didn’t look like yourself at all dad.”

“They thought I was playing Hagrid, Robbie Coltrane’s part.”

According to director Chris Columbus, the scene was cut because they weren’t happy with the design. He said: “David [Heyman, producer] and I looked at the design of Peeves and thought, We can get it better.”

It never was though, and as far as we know the scene never made it onto the DVD as a deleted scene (tell us below in the comments if you’ve seen it). Instead, the character of Peeves was simply written out of the film series, despite appearing prominently throughout the books.

Maybe we’ll see Rik’s performance as the mischievous spirit in a future home entertainment release.

Image credits: WB Games/TheJournal.ie/Getty

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A F***ing Good Life: Remembering Rik Mayall

Remembering Rik Mayall – An American perspective 

I fell in love with a man on the day he died. They say you learn a lot about a person by reading an obituary, but I was never one of those maudlin obit collectors. But I saw the name Rik Mayall cross my screen early on the morning of June 9, and I felt a rush in my ears. My Facebook post about it only garnered one comment. There were only a few of my friends who even knew, or cared, who Rik Mayall was. And that broke my heart.

 I learned about Rik Mayall when I was 22-year-old college student in 1985—the first time his landmark comedy series “The Young Ones,” which he created, wrote, and starred, splashed across MTV. We knew at the time that we were living in a unique time in history; we were very aware that the ‘80s were going to be written about and satirized and romanticized later, and for me, Rik Mayall represented a comic version of everything I loved—and hated—about the 1980s.

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My 'wonderful, generous, foul-mouthed and hysterical' father: daughter pays tribute to Rik Mayall - Telegraph

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Some of my favourite Rik moments

Rik Mayall was a very talented man, sent from God knows where to bless us all with his grace and genius. With Adrian Edmondson, they became one of the most beloved comedy duos in British history. 

So, I thought that as 2018 is rolling in, we should take a look at some of the best moments/things that Rik Mayall has ever said and done in his lifetime. Enjoy!

“I don’t have moments of weakness. I’m Rik Mayall.”

“I’m frightened of interviews.”

“It’s difficult to for me, to look into the eyes of a journalist and trust him to present it as you say.”