Ralph Fiennes is clearing up how to pronounce his name once and for all.
Speaking with The Hollywood Reporter at the Santa Barbara International Film Festival, the Harry Potter alum, 62, opened up about the correct way to say his name â âRafe Finesâ â and joked that this has been a long lasting problem for him.
âItâs one of those funky old English things that I was dealt â my parents dealt me,â he joked, to laughs from the audience. I think itâs the case that the spelling âR-a-l-p-hâ used to be pronouncedâŠâRafe.â That was the old way to pronounce âRalph,â you said âRafe.â â
âAnd I have met a lot of âRafes,â spelled âRalph,â â Fiennes added before eliciting another laugh from the crowd. âIâve always had to deal with this question.â
Fiennes has always been candid about the pronunciation of his name, sometimes correcting those who call him the modern pronunciation of âRalph.â In 2011, also speaking with the Hollywood Reporter, he said that he would have liked to correct the publicâs pronunciation of the name, but believed it was âtoo lateâ by then.
âThat was the name I was born with and I sort of have some weird thing about, Iâm sticking with what I was given,â he said at the time.
âI believe my father named me after his step-grandfather. His name was Ralph Eastwood, nicknamed Rusty, but spelt R-a-l-p-h,â the actor recalled at the time. âAnd I wanted to, I suppose, honor my parents giving me this name and keeping up the spelling but I have â Iâve come on occasion to regret it because it would be easier.â
The Oscar nominee was also being honored at the SBIFF as the outstanding performer of the year award for his leading role in the Vatican-set thriller Conclave, which sees his fictional Catholic Cardinal Lawrence attempt to lead cardinals from all over the world as they gather to vote for a new pope.
Fiennes has made lots of public appearances over the past several months as he promotes the Academy Award-nominated film â and at one stop in Palm Springs, Calif., for the Varietyâs 10 Directors to Watch and Creative Impact Awards brunch, he reunited with his Maid in Manhattan costar, Jennifer Lopez.
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Fiennes, who played politician Chris Marshall opposite Lopezâs Marisa Ventura in the film over two decades prior, first complimented the singer and actress for her âamazing skillsâ as he recalled making the film together.
âBut of course, to be a legend and a groundbreaker, itâs a matter of spirit. If you have the skills, their currency is lessened, unless thereâs a strong spirit behind them. Itâs the spirit which moves us and lifts us,â Fiennes said at the time, per an Instagram video from Variety.
âI am the senator, if you didnât know,â he added, referring to his role in the 2002 romantic comedy. âIn my brief stint as a Republican senator, I wasnât very convincing. I didnât stand a chance, really. To be honest, her powerful energy just leaves the men sort of, well, theyâre just left behind, and off she goes, she blasts away. Jennifer, obviously Iâm talking about you, youâre incredible. Your wings are unstoppable.â
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