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 | Screenplay
 
   by Richard Curtis
 
 
   
titles.
 
 This screenplay article is taken from the
travel book company and it belongs to them. This screenplay portrays the
actual movie so those who have yet to see this wonderful show I would suggest
that you do not read this as it is a spoiler.
 
'She' plays through the credits.EXT. VARIOUS DAYS
 
 
 
 Exquisite footage of Anna Scott - the great movie star
 of our time - an ideal - the perfect star and woman - her
 life full of glamour and sophistication and mystery.
 
 
 EXT. STREET - DAY
 
 Mix through to William, 35, relaxed, pleasant,
 informal.  We follow him as he walks down Portobello Road,
 carrying a load of bread.  It is spring.
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 Of course, I've seen her films and
 always thought she was, well,
 fabulous -- but, you know,
 million miles from the world I live
 in.  Which is here -- Notting Hill
 -- not a bad place to be...
 
 EXT. PORTOBELLO ROAD - DAY
 
 It's a full fruit market day.
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 There's the market on weekdays,
 selling every fruit and vegetable
 known to man...
 
 EXT. PORTOBELLO ROAD - DAY
 
 A man in denims exits the tattoo studio.
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 The tattoo parlor -- with a guy
 outside who got drunk and now can't
 remember why he chose 'I Love Ken'...
 
 EXT. PORTOBELLO ROAD - DAY
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 The racial hair-dressers where
 everyone comes out looking like the
 Cookie Monster, whether they like
 it or not...
 
 Sure enough, a girl exits with a huge threaded blue bouffant.
 
 EXT. PORTOBELLO ROAD - SATURDAY
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 Then suddenly it's the weekend, and
 from break of day, hundreds of stalls
 appears out of nowhere, filling
 Portobello Road right up to Notting
 Hill Gate...
 
 A frantic crowded Portobello market.
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 ... and thousands of people buy
 millions of antiques, some genuine...
 
 The camera finally settles on a stall selling beautiful
 stained glass windows of various sizes, some featuring biblical
 scenes and saints.
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 ... and some not so genuine.
 
 EXT. GOLBORNE ROAD - DAY
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 And what's great is that lots of
 friends have ended up in this part of
 London -- that's Tony, architect
 turned chef, who recently invested
 all the money he ever earned in a new
 restaurant...
 
 Shot of Tony proudly setting out a board outside his
 restaurant,the sign still being painted.  He receives and
 approves a huge fresh salmon.
 
 EXT. PORTOBELLO ROAD - DAY
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 So this is where I spend my days
 and years -- in this small village in
 the middle of a city -- in a house
 with a blue door that my wife and I
 bought together... before she left
 me for a man who looked exactly like Harrison
 Ford.
 
 We arrive outside his blue-doored house just off Portobello.
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 ... and where I now lead a strange
 half-life with a lodger called...
 
 INT. WILLIAM'S HOUSE - DAY
 
 WILLIAM:
 Spike!
 
 The house has far too many things in it.  Definitely two-
 bachelor flat.
 Spike appears.  An unusual looking fellow.  He has
 unusual hairs, unusual facial hair and an unusual Welsh accent:
 very white, as though his flesh has never seen the sun.  He
 wears only shorts.
 
 SPIKE:
 Even he.  Hey, you couldn't help me
 with an incredibly important
 decision, could you?
 
 WILLIAM:
 This is important in comparison to,
 let's say, whether they should
 cancel third world debt?
 
 SPIKE:
 That's right -- I'm at last going out
 on a date with great Janine and I just
 want to be sure I've picked the right
 t-shirt.
 
 WILLIAM:
 What are the choices?
 
 SPIKE:
 Well... wait for it...
 (He pulls on a t-shirt)
 First there's this one...
 
 The t-shirt is white with a horrible looking plastic alien
 coming out of it, jaws open, blood everywhere.  It says 'I Love
 Blood.'
 
 WILLIAM:
 Yes -- might make it hard to strike a
 really romantic note.
 
 SPIKE:
 Point taken.
 
 He heads back up the stairs... talks as he changes...
 
 SPIKE:
 I suspect you'll prefer the next one.
 
 And he re-enters in a white t-shirt, with a large arrow,
 pointing down to his flies, saying, "Get It Here.'
 
 WILLIAM:
 Yes -- she might think you don't have
 true love on your mind.
 
 SPIKE:
 Wouldn't want that...
 (and back up he goes)
 -- just one more.
 
 He comes down wearing it.  Lots of hearts, saying, 'You're the
 most beautiful woman in the world.'
 
 WILLIAM:
 Well, yes, that's perfect. Well
 done.
 
 SPIKE:
 Thanks.  Great.  Wish me luck.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Good luck.
 
 Spike turns and walks upstairs.  Revealing that on the back of
 the t-shirt, also printed in big letters, is written 'Fancy a
 fuck?'
 
 EXT. PORTOBELLO ROAD - DAY
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 And so it was just another hopeless
 Wednesday, as I set off through the
 market to work, little suspecting
 that this was the day which would
 change my life forever.  This is
 work, by the way, my little travel
 book shop...
 
  
 A small unpretentious store... named 'The Travel Book Co.'
 
 WILLIAM (V.O.):
 ... which, well, sells travel books
 -- and, to be frank with you, doesn't
 always sell many of those.
 
 William enters.
 
 INT. THE BOOKSHOP - DAY
 
 It is a small shop, slightly chaotic, bookshelves everywhere,
 with little secret bits round corners with even more books.
 Martin, William's sole employee, is waiting enthusiastically.
 He is keen, an uncrushable optimist.  Perhaps without cause.
 A few seconds later, William stands gloomily behind the desk.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Classic.  Absolutely classic.
 Profit from major sales push -- minus
 347 pound.
 
 MARTIN:
 Shall I go get a cappuccino?  Ease the
 pain.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Yes, better get me a half.  All I can
 afford.
 
 MARIN:
 I get you logic.  Demi-capu coming up.
 
 
  
He salutes and bolts out of the door -- as he does, a woman
 walks in. We only just glimpse her.
 
 Cut to William working.  He looks up casually.  And sees
 something.  His reaction is hard to read.  After a pause...
 
 WILLIAM:
 Can I help you?
 
 It is Anna Scott, the biggest movie star in the world -- here --
 in his shop.  The most divine, subtle, beautiful woman on earth.
 When she speaks she is very self-assured and self-contained.
 
 ANNA:
 No, thanks.  I'll just look around.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Fine.
 
 She wanders over to a shelf as he watches her -- and picks out a
 quite smart coffee table book.
 
 WILLIAM:
 That book's really not good -- just
 in case, you know, browsing turned to
 buying.  You'd be wasting your money.
 
 ANNA:
 Really?
 
 WILLIAM:
 Yes.  This one though is... very
 good.
 
 He picks up a book on the counter.
 
 WILLIAM:
 I think the man who wrote it has
 actually been to Turkey, which helps.
 There's also a very amusing incident
 with  a kebab.
 
 ANNA:
 Thanks.  I'll think about it.
 
 William suddenly spies something odd on the small TV monitor
 behind him.
 
 WILLIAM:
 If you could just give me a second.
 
 Her eyes follow him as he moves toward the back of the shop and
 approaches a man in slightly ill-fitting clothes.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Excuse me.
 
  
 THIEF:
 Yes.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Bad news.
 
 THIEF:
 What?
 
 WILLIAM:
 We've got a security camera in this
 bit of the shop.
 
 THIEF:
 So?
 
 WILLIAM:
 So, I saw you put that book down your
 trousers.
 
 THIEF:
 What book?
 
 WILLIAM:
 The one down your trousers.
 
 THIEF:
 I haven't got a book down my trousers.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Right -- well, then we have something
 of an impasse.  I tell you what --
 I'll call the police -- and,    what can
 I say?  If I'm wrong about the whole
 book-down-the-trousers scenario, I
 really apologize.
 
 THIEF:
 Okay -- what if I did have a book down
 my trousers?
 
 WILLIAM:
 Well, ideally, when I went back to
 the desk, you'd remove the Cadogan
 guide to Bali from your trousers, and
 either wipe it and put it back, or
 buy it.  See you in a sec.
 
 He returns to his desk.  In the monitor we just glimpse,
 as does William, the book coming out of the trousers and put
 back on the shelves.  The thief drifts out toward the door.
 Anna, who has observed all this, is looking at a blue book on
 the counter.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Sorry about that...
 
 ANNA:
 No, that's fine.  I was going to
 steal one myself but now I've changed
 my mind.  Signed by the author, I see.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Yes, we couldn't stop him.  If you
 can find an unsigned copy.  It's
 worth an absolute fortune.
 
 She smiles.  Suddenly the thief is there.
 
 THIEF:
 Excuse me.
 
 ANNA:
 Yes.
 
 THIEF:
 Can I have your autograph?
 
 ANNA:
 What's your name?
 
 THIEF:
 Rufus.
 
 She signs his scruffy piece of paper.  He tries to read it.
 
 THIEF:
 What does it say?
 
 ANNA:
 Well, that's the signature -- and
 above, it says 'Dear Rufus -- you
 belong in jail.'
 
 THIEF:
 Nice one.  Would you like my phone
 number?
 
 ANNA:
 Tempting but... no, thank you.
 
 Thief leaves.
 
 ANNA:
 I think I will try this one.
 
 She hands William 20 note and the book he said was rubbish.
 He talks as he handles the transaction.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Oh -- right -- on second thoughts
 maybe it wasn't that bad.  Actually
 -- it's a sort of masterpiece really.
 None of those childish kebab
 stories you get in so many travel
 books these days.  And I'll throw in
 one of these for free.
 
 He drops in one of the signed books.
 
 WILLIAM:
 0Very useful for fighting fires,
 wrapping fish, that sort of things.
 
 She looks at him with a slight smile.
 
 ANNA:
 Thanks.
 
 And leaves.  She's out of his life forever.  William is a little
 dazed.  Seconds later Martin comes back in.
 
 MARTIN:
 Cappuccino as ordered.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Thanks.  I don't think you'll believe
 who was just in here.
 
 MARTIN:
 Who?  Someone famous?
 
 But William's innate natural English discretion takes over.
 
 WILLIAM:
 No. No-one -- no-one.
 
 They set about drinking their coffee.
 
 MARTIN:
 Would be exciting if someone famous
 did come into the shop though,
 wouldn't it?  Do you know -- this is
 pretty incredible actually -- I once
 saw Ringo Starr.  Or at least I think
 it was Ringo.  It might have been
 that broke from 'Fiddler On The Roof,'
 Toppy.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Topol.
 
 MARTIN:
 That's right -- Topol.
 
 WILLIAM:
 But Ringo Starr doesn't look
 anything like Topol.
 
 MARTIN:
 No, well... he was quite a long way
 away.
 
 WILLIAM:
 So it would have been neither of them?
 
 MARTIN:
 I suppose so.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Right.  It's not a classic anecdotes,
 is it?
 
 MARTIN:
 Not classic, no.
 
 Martin shakes his head.  William drinks his cappuccino.
 
 
 WILLIAM:
 Right -- want another one?
 
 MARTIN:
 Yes.  No, wait -- let's go crazy --
 I'll have an orange juice.
 
 EXT. PORTOBELLO ROAD - DAY
 
 William sets off.
 
 INT. COFFEE SHOP - DAY
 
 William collects his juice in a coffee shop on Wesbourne Park
 Road.
 
 EXT. PORTOBELLO ROAD - DAY
 
  
 William swings out of the little shop -- he turns the corner of
 Portobello Road and bumps straight into Anna.  The orange
 juice,  in its foam cup, flies.  It soaks Anna.
 
 ANNA:
 Oh God!!!.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Oh, I'm so sorry, here.
 
 He grabs some paper napkins and starts to clean it off -- getting
 far too near her breasts in the panic of it...
 
 ANNA:
 Get your hands off!!!
 
 He jumps back.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Nothing, nothing... Look, I live just
 over the street -- I got some water and soap you could get
 cleaned up.
 
 ANNA:
 No thank you.  I need to get my car
 back.
 
 WILLIAM:
 I also have a phone.  I'm confident
 that in five minutes we can have you
 spick and span and back on the street
 again... in the non-prostitute sense
 obviously.
 
 In his different ways, he is confident, despite her being
 genuinely annoyed.  She turns and looks at him.
 
 ANNA:
 Okay.  So what does 'just over the
 street' mean -- give it to me in yards.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Eighteen yards.  That's my house
 there the one with the blue door.
 
 He doesn't lie -- it is eighteen yards away.  She looks down.
 She looks up at him.
 
 INT. WILLIAM'S HOUSE - CORRIDOR - DAY
 
 They enter.  She carries a few stylish bags.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Come on in.  I'll just...
 
 William runs in further -- it's a mess.  He kicks some old shoes
 under the stairs, bins an unfinished pizza and hides a plate of
 breakfast in a cupboard.  She enters the kitchen.
 
 WILLIAM:
 It's not as tidy as it normally is, I fear but.
 
 And he guides her up the stairs, after taking the bag of books
 from her...
 
 WILLIAM:
 The bathroom is right at the top of
 the stairs and there's a phone on the
 desk up there.
 
 She heads upstairs.
 
 INT. KITCHEN - DAY
 
 William is tidying up frantically.  Then he hears Anna's feet on
 the stairs.  She walks down, wearing a short, sparkling black
 top beneath her leather jacket.  With her trainers still on.  He
 is dazzled by the sight of her.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Would you like a cup of tea before
 you go?
 
 ANNA:
 No thanks.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Coffee?
 
 ANNA:
 No.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Orange juice -- probably not.
 
 He moves to his very empty fridge -- and offers its only contents.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Something else cold -- coke, water,
 some disgusting sugary drink
 pretending to have something to do
 with fruits of the forest?
 
 ANNA:
 No.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Would you like something to eat-- something to um nibble --
 apricots, soaked in honey -- quite
 why, no one knows -- because it stops
 them tasting of apricots, and makes
 them taste like honey, and if you
 wanted honey, you'd just buy honey,
 instead of apricots, but nevertheless
 -- they are yours if you want
 them.
 
 ANNA:
 No.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Do you always say 'no' to everything?
 
 Pause.  She looks at him deep.
 
 ANNA:
 No.
 (pause)
 I better be going.  Thanks for your um
 help.
 
 WILLIAM:
 You're welcome and, may I also say...
 heavenly.
 
 It has taken a lot to get this out loud.  He is not a smooth-
 talking man.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Take my one chance to say it.  After
 you've read that terrible book,
 you're certainly not going to be
 coming back to the shop.
 
 She smiles.  She's cool.
 
 ANNA:
 Thank you.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Yes.  Well.  My pleasure.
 
 He guides her toward the door.
 
 WILLIAM:
 It was nice to meet you.  Surreal but nice.
 
 In a slightly awkward moment, he shows her out the door.  He
 closes the door and shakes his head in wonder.  Then...
 
 WILLIAM:
 'Surreal but nice.'  What was I
 thinking?
 
 There's a knock on the door.  He moves
 back, casually...
 
 WILLIAM:
 Coming.
 
 He opens the door.  It's Anna.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Oh hi.  Forgot something?
 
 ANNA:
 Hi. I forgot the other bag.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Oh right.
 
 He shoots into the kitchen and picks up the forgotten
 shopping bag.  Then returns and hands it to her.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Here we go.
 
 ANNA:
 Thanks.  Well...
 
  
 They stand in that corridor -- in that small space.
 Second time saying goodbye.  A strange feeling of intimacy.  She
 leans forward and she kisses him.  Total silence.  A real sense
 of the strangers of those lips, those famous lips on his.  They
 part.
 
 WILLIAM:
 I apologize for the 'surreal but nice'
 comment.  Disaster...
 
 ANNA:
 Don't worry about it.  I thought the
 apricot and honey business was the
 real lowpoint.
 
 Suddenly there is a clicking of a key in the lock.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Oh my God.  My flatmate.  I'm sorry --
 there's no excuse for him.
 
 Spike walks in.
 
 SPIKE
 Hi.
 
 ANNA:
 Hi.
 
 WILLIAM
 Hi.
 
 Spike walks past unsuspiciously and heads into the kitchen.
 
 SPIKE:
 I'm just going to go into the kitchen
 to get some food -- and then I'm going
 to tell you a story that will make your
 balls shrink to the size of raisins.
 
 And leaves them in the corridor.
 
 ANNA:
 Probably best not tell anyone about
 this.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Right.  No one.  I mean, I'll tell
 myself sometimes but... don't worry
 -- I won't believe it.
 
 ANNA:
 Bye.
 
 And she leaves, with just a touch of William's hand.
 Spike comes out of the kitchen, eating something white out of
 a styrofoam container with a spoon.
 
             
   
SPIKE:
 There's something wrong with this
 yogurt.
 
 WILLIAM:
 It's not yogurt -- it's mayonnaise.
 
 SPIKE:
 Well, there you go.
 (takes another big spoonful)
 On for a video fest tonight?  I've
 got some absolute classics.
 
 INT. WILLIAM'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
 
 The lights are off.  William and Spike on the couch,
 just the light from the TV playing on their faces.  Cut to the
 TV full screen.  There is Anna.  She is in a stylish Woody Allen
 type modern romantic comedy, "Gramercy Park," in black and white.
 
 INT. MANHATTAN ART GALLERY - DAY
 
 Anna's character -- Woody Anna -- is walking around the
 gallery with her famous co-star, Michael.  They should be the
 perfect couple, but there is tension.  Anna is not happy.
 
 MICHAEL:
 Smile.
 
 ANNA:
 No.
 
 MICHAEL:
 Smile.
 
 ANNA:
 I've got nothing to smile about.
 
 MICHAEL:
 Okay in about 7 seconds, I'm going to
 ask you to marry me.
 
 And after a couple of seconds -- wow -- she smiles.
 
 INT. WILLIAM'S LIVING ROOM - NIGHT
 
 SPIKE:
 Imagine -- somewhere in the world
 there's a man who's allowed to kiss
 her.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Yes, she is fairly fabulous.
 
 INT. BOOKSTORE - DAY
 
 The next day.  William and Martin quietly co-existing.
 An annoying customer enters.  Mr. Smith.
 
 MR. SMITH:
 Do you have any books by Dickens?
 
 WILLIAM:
 No, we're a travel bookshop.  We only
 sell travel books.
 
 MR. SMITH:
 On right.  How about that new John
 Grisham thriller?
 
 WILLIAM:
 No, that's a novel too.
 
 MR. SMITH:
 Oh right.  Have you got a copy of
 'Winnie the Pooh'?
 
 Pause.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Martin -- your customer.
 
 MARTIN:
 Can I help you?
 
 William looks up.  At that moment the entire window is
 suddenly taken up by the huge side of a bus, obscuring the
 light -- and entirely covered with a portrait of Anna -- from
 her new film, "Helix."
 
 INT. WILLIAM'S HOUSE - CONDOR/LIVING ROOM - DAY
 
             
   
William heads upstairs and pauses.  Spike coming down,
 wearing full body scuba diving gear.
 
 SPIKE:
 Hey.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Hi...
 
 INT. WILLIAM'S KITCHEN - DAY
 
 The two of them fixing a cup of tea in the kitchen.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Just incidentally -- why are you
 wearing that?
 
 SPIKE:
 Ahm -- combination of factors really.
 No clean clothes...
 
 WILLIAM:
 There never will be, you know, unless
 you actually clean your clothes.
 
 SPIKE:
 Right.  Vicious circle.  And then I was
 like rooting around in your things,
 and found this, and I thought -- cool.
 Kind of spacey.
 
 EXT. WILLIAM'S TERRACE - DAY
 
 The two of them on the rooftop terrace, passing the day.
 William is reading 'The bookseller.'  The terrace is
 small and the plants aren't great -- but it overlooks London in
 a rather wonderful way.  Spike still in scuba gear, goggles on.
 
 SPIKE:
 There's something wrong with the
 goggles though...
 
 WILLIAM:
 No, they were prescription, so I could
 see all the fishes properly.
 
 SPIKE:
 Groovy.  You should do more of this
 stuff.
 
 WILLIAM:
 So -- any messages?
 
 SPIKE:
 Yeh, I wrote a couple down.
 
 WILLIAM:
 So that means there are two messages?
 
 SPIKE:
 You want me to write down all your
 messages?
 
 William closes his eyes in exasperation.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Who were the ones you didn't write
 down from?
 
 SPIKE:
 Ahm let's see -- ahm.  No.  Gone
 completely.  Oh no, wait.  There was --
 one from your mum: she said don't
 forget lunch and her leg's hurting
 again.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Right.  No one else?
 
 SPIKE:
 Absolutely no one else.
 
 Spike looks back and relaxes.
 
 SPIKE:
 Though if we're going for this
 obsessive writing-down-all-messages
 thing -- some American girl called
 Anna called a few days ago.
 
 William freezes -- then looks at Spike.
 
 WILLIAM:
 What did she say?
 
 SPIKE:
 Well, it was genuinely bizarre...
 she said, hi -- it's Anna -- and then
 she said, call me at the Ritz -- and
 then gave herself a completely
 different name.
 
 WILLIAM:
 Which was?
 
 SPIKE:
 Absolutely no idea.  Remembering one
 name's bad enough...
 
 
 Screenplay Continued
 
 
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