Sunday, October 30, 2022

Creepy Classics-The ghostly goings on behind the scenes of Macbeth & the Austen families scandalous guest

Have you ever wondered why actors go to extreme lenghts to avoid saying MacBeth? Mused over where Jane Austen gained her love of the gothic? 

Halloween is the spook tac u lar ah ah time to tell tales of what put the Shakey in Shakespeare and the Jitter in Jane Austen with these frightening facts about our creepy classics! 

If you are passing a theatre and a gaggle of screaming actors run off stage from a production of Macbeth spitting and turning around,, they haven't been possessed by a ghost, or have they...?! 

Macbeth was besieged by horrific happenings on the scary stage.๐Ÿ’€

๐Ÿ’€ Just before the opening night of the first production of Macbeth in 1606 legend has it that the actor playing Lady Macbeth fell ill and died, leaving Shakespeare ringing his hands on and off stage as, at the last moment, he had to take on the role of Lady Macbeth. ๐Ÿ’€

 ๐Ÿ‘ปOther incidents occurred as during another production of The Scottish Play the tip of a knife flew off into audience causing more than an attack of the vapors to the audience!๐Ÿ‘ป

๐Ÿ‘€Duncan was once again doomed in the 17th century when a prop was replaced with a real dagger killing the leading man live  on stage! 

๐Ÿ’€During Olivier dalliance with Duncan a stage weight fell narrowly missing the actor.


๐Ÿ‘€If you think The Scottish Play is full of fierce fighting, the actors have nothing on the audience! Fights have erupted among the theatre goers on everything from general crowd chaos to the cast choices! These fearsome fights have broken out in the 17 hundreds and again in 1849 leaving a trail of injuries and even fatalities in the plays wake.   

๐Ÿ‘€Ever wondered what prompted Jane Austen's fascination with the frightening? From the early terrifying tales of her youth, through to the Gothic Northanger Abbey, it wasn't only fiction that opened the authors eyes to sinister society๐Ÿ‘€

❤The Austen family had a family member descend upon their family home. Eliza de Feuillide became a friend of young Jane, later to marry Jane's brother Henry and become a sister to Jane, all things even Fanny Price would approve of i hear you cry? Except Eliza, fresh from the society whirl of France, arrived as a recent widow, but it was not a putrid throat that brought about the demise of Eliza's husband, Jean-Francois de Feuillide, but the sharp stab of the ghastly guillotine! Eliza's arrival into young Jane's life must have opened the authors eyes! ๐Ÿ‘€

❤Like her heroines, Jane must have engaged in candlelight  conversations with her cousin, only these conversations ended with a hero losing more than his heart❤



Reference 

  • R.S.C 'The curse of the Scottish play' 




heroine








 


❤๐Ÿ’€๐Ÿ‘บ๐Ÿ‘ป๐Ÿ’”๐Ÿ’š๐Ÿ’œ๐Ÿ˜ก

Wednesday, October 19, 2022

Elizabeth Gaskell House

 

Elizabeth Gaskell House

Interview with Trustee Jane Baxter

Elizabeth Gaskell may not have always shared the limelight of Jane Austen and Elizabeth's friend Charlotte Bronte, however, her steadfast fans display an enthusiasm for her that can only be rivaled by the passions of the author herself. You only have to look to social media to find an increasing number of dedicated fans across the globe. 'Thornton Thursdays' have set twitter alight with images of the 2004 BBC North and South adaptation and gifs of the now infamous 'Look back at me' scene are shared, liked and commented on regularly across social media.

Why then, does Elizabeth Gaskell continue to remain popular with a 21st century audience? Well, aside from the detailed study of character and relationships displayed throughout her work, she highlighted the plight of the poor, while attempting to unite all aspects of a divided society, a theme that still resonates today. 

I talk to Jane Baxter, a trustee at Elizabeth Gaskell House. Jane joined in 2014 to work as a volunteer. A member of the Society, she has also sat on the Committee. She was part of the project team responsible for the restoration of the authors bedroom in 2020-2021. So, she is the ideal person to talk to about the author and how Elizabeth Gaskell House has survived an eventful two years and what direction they see the trust taking in the future. 



*How has the Elizabeth Gaskell House weathered the lockdowns? Has it taken the house in a different direction?

*     We very quickly developed a series of online offers during the first lockdown – read-alongs on social media, followed by online talks. We have found that these continue to be successful and well-attended and reach a worldwide audience so we have continued with these.

*     Where do you see Elizabeth Gaskell house in five years’ time?

*     We will have completed and opened our new Conservatory which will benefit our weddings and link the house to the garden. We will continue in our successful promotion of Elizabeth Gaskell and her works to a wider audience and increase both visitor numbers to the house and online.

*     Why do you think her work has endured?

*     Her work is increasingly being recognized for its observations on the social issues of her time including poverty, class divisions and inequality, which are still relevant today.  

*     If Elizabeth were alive today, what do you think she would be doing? Where would she be placed on the shelves? Would she be a political scriptwriter, host a debate show, write for tv? What organisations would she join?

*     She would be writing novels – some taking inspiration from people she knows and from current affairs and issues. She probably would write for TV and possibly film. She may also write plays. I also think she would travel widely and perhaps write some travel journals – maybe be a female Simon Reeve…!

*     What social issues do you think she would raise if she were writing today?

*      She would champion education issues, support equality in the workplace be involved in charity work locally.

*     The BBC adaptation of North and South still has a growing fan base, what are your views on the adaptation and adaptations in general? Where do you stand on alterations and modernisation of novels?

*     Sandy Welch did a wonderful job of the adaptation, and the alterations she made enhanced the novel without ruining or taking anything from the narrative. I think top quality alterations like her North and South make it accessible to a wider audience. 

*     On social media Mr Thornton seems set to rival Mr Darcy, why do you think he continues to grow in popularity as a character?

*     Thornton is a more rounded and complex character than Darcy. Whereas Darcy is almost just a “romantic hero,” Thornton has to deal with and overcome so many difficulties and challenges, apart from the romantic side of the narrative – the strike, supporting his mother and sister and losing his business.

*     Do you remember the moment you first discovered Elizabeth Gaskell?

*     I was always aware of her as I used to pass the House when it was the almost-derelict “pink house” which led me to read some of her work.

*     Do you have any similarities to Elizabeth or any of her characters?

*     I’m definitely not as talkative and gossipy as Elizabeth!  

WWhatever differences Jane may perceive between herself and Elizabeth, I can say that they both spark an interesting discussion! 


Elizabeth Gaskell’s House have lots of online events on from talks and tours, to workshops and book groups. Visit here https://elizabethgaskellhouse.co.uk/whats-on/.

Follow Elizabeth Gaskell’s House on twitter, Instagram and Facebook

Twitter @EGaskellHouse

FB Elizabeth Gaskell’s House

Insta elizabeth_gaskells_house

 

 


 

Thursday, September 1, 2022

Jennyvi Dizon Interview

 Jennyvi Dizon Interview 


Jennyvi Dizon was born in the Philippines to a father who, after a hard days work as a computer programmer, would work as a tailor at night making suits for his colleges, fashion was sown into the fabric of Jennyvi's life. By the age of five she was following in her father's footsteps,designing and making outfits for her Barbie dolls. Jennyvi's lifelong passion had began. 

Jennyvi studied Fashion Design and Business Administration at Phoenix College, not content with studying, Jennyvi designed wedding gowns for her friends and then for her own wedding. After graduating, she started her own business designing bespoke wedding gowns and from 2003 she went on to win awards as her designs graced magazines covers.

 In 2021, Jennyvi, now living and working in New York, attended a JASNA (Jane Austen Society of North America) meeting. There she found others who shared her love of Austen, who she says helped her through difficult periods in her life. Her love of Austen reignited, she reread her novels and with JASNA encouragement, started Jane Austen couture which is set to premier in New York on the 10th of September. 

                So, with so many successes under her designer belt, i am curious to know, what                    first ignited her passion for fashion?

JENNYVI: Ever since I was 4 or 5, I was able to play with a variety of fabrics because my father was a tailor in the Philippines. I was able to sketch and then start making clothes for my Barbies and then at age 10 I started sewing uniforms for my mom’s friends who were nurses.

            I wonder what Originally prompted Jennyvi to follow her dream and make fashion her career, and what inspired this collection and, why now? 

JENNYVI: I just fell in love with what you can create from a flat piece of fabric and then bring it to life in a dress. Ultimately, when a woman wears my designs, I feel like that design has fulfilled it’s destiny. I know that sounds cheesy, but it’s true. I don’t create just to have my gowns hang in a closet, I want my designs to give the wearer confidence and fulfill their need. When I started sewing the Jane Austen collection I was creatively lost. I was dealing with grief fog from my mother’s death and I turned to Jane Austen’s novels for comfort and healing. Jane Austen is almost like a therapist for me. The more I read, the more I wondered what my designs would look like on her characters.

     I inquire when were she first introduced to Jane Austen, and why does she think she felt particularly drawn to her work?                                                              

JENNYVI: I was first introduced to Jane  Austen in high school, after I was finished with the assigned reading in my English class. My teacher told me to pick another book from the library Pride and Prejudice just popped out at me.

                                                 Jennyvi Dizon beside her muse Jane Austen 

Who does she think is the most stylish Austen character?                                                        

JENNYVI: The most stylish has to be Emma  in my opinion. With being the wealthiest, she has access to finer clothes. But her style is relative since she is not exactly a city woman. I live in NYC, but I was raised in Arizona which has a budding fashion      scene, but not as trendy as NYC. I’m only guessing if Emma was a real-life character in today’s time she would be following trends from Paris and in the Regency may have smuggled some French wares in or asking her sister to.

     I tell Jennyvi that Emma would be my choice too! I am curious to know if Jane had been born in another era, what fashion trends does Jennyvi think Jane would emulate, and what fashion tribe do she feel Jane, and her characters, would inhabit? Does she think there is an Emo or Punk hiding between the covers of the novels? 

JENNYVI: What a thought-provoking question. If anyone would be punk I think it would be Lizzy, just to make her mother mad and also use the punk aesthetic to ward off Mr. Collins. Jane Bennet would be into the Cottage Core trend which is similar to the Regency. What people call baby doll dresses with the empire waistline and puff sleeve, just reminds me of the Regency. Fanny Price I think would be wholesome and would always have her Sunday best on even if she isn’t going to church. But with the Emo style, it reminds me of the Clueless adaptation which was based off of Emma. Lots of plaid during the 90’s and Cher takes Ty under her wing after she sees how naรฏve she was. The most mature style would have to go to Anne Elliot, if I were to do a runway show on each character, Anne’s would have light natural fabrics with the Cottage Core easy breezy carefree style and move into darker shades to show the despair she felt in a broken engagement. Right now I’m working on a gown called Anne’s Heart of Gold Gown, which will be towards the end of the Fashion Week show to show how she triumphed and won her heart back. Gold is a symbol of success, hope, and triumph.

                                                                                                     Anne's Heart of Gold Gown 

                              


                                'Here is sneak peek of                                         Anne's Heart of Gold                                         Gown. I chose this                                             fabric because the sequins                                 on the shoulders is a nod                                     to Captain Wentworth's                                     uniform. Gold means                                         success and triumph.'                                                                                         


           

           


What fashion item would Jennyvi never leave home without, and what does she think would have been Jane’s essential item?

JENNYVI: Here in NYC because the forecast is sometimes wrong, you can’t leave the house without an umbrella. Even a small one helps. But as far fashion goes, scarves is a great thing to carry in your purse. They’re portable, they keep you warm when you need it, they hide food stains if you happen to have one on your bodice, or if you have a scarf on and drop food in it, you can easily take it off. Another perk is if a scarf is long enough you can use it as a belt or a head covering. It’s versatile. I think in Jane Austen’s time an essential would have been removable sleeves that you put under your puff sleeves. Today, we want things we can wear more than one way and the concept was the same back then. If women were expected to change 5 times a day. Then portable sleeves can change a woman’s look from day to night. Day to protect your skin from the sun and then night to create an evening gown look. 

 ' I individually sewed hundreds of                              

 strands of ostrich feathers to the hem                         

and the ruffle on the bodice.

 In Emma she was surprised that were 

wasn't any lace veils. I'm doing a long lace 

veil for the finale.' 

         What colour palette do she think best describes                 her personality and what does Jennyvi think                     Jane would choose and what kind of dress would             she design for  the author?

JENNYVI: My color palate is mostly dark reds, blues, and black, but I change my style and palettes depending on the season. Summer, I like bright greens, Spring I like light blues and pinks, in the fall I like dark reds and in the winter is where I wear the most black and navy blues.

           With her designers  eye, which adaptation, or costume dramas, wardrobe do Jennyvi most admire and how does she feel about alterations to the traditional Georgian style that some productions employ? 

JENNYVI: I love Lady Susan, the Kate Beckinsale adaptation Love and Friendship had beautiful gowns. It was still heavily influenced by Marie Antoinette and I have to admit I am a MA fan. I think the media did her no justice and she was a political pawn. I am also an Empress Bonaparte fan, I think her influence helped with the simple Georgian / Regency style. I have no qualms about movies making alterations to styles, just like the Bridgerton dresses.


My own designs are not historically accurate and to recreate something from the past is a slow process. As an aspiring screenwriter who wants to get my first screenplay produced into a movie, just researching historical accuracy can hold up the costume department. Not to mention the staff you would need to hire to help get the actors in the dresses. They didn’t exactly have zippers during that time. But I’ve always had a more fashion forward look towards my designs.  

      Costume is just that, a costume you wear for a production or event and then that’s it. You only wear that costume occasionally. I wanted my designs to be more versatile, costume elements, but more wearable. The perfect scenario is a Janeite has her wedding party wear Regency styled dresses as bridesmaids dresses. This dress she can wear for other date nights or formal settings not related to a costume event. 

 How would you describe Regency fashion to someone who has never seen it? JENNIEVI: If this was a short twitter post i would say Regency gowns are like long versions of the Baby Doll dresses with the Empire waist and puff sleeves that are normally made from a lightweight muslin or cotton fabric. 

      What achievement is she most proud of so far? 

JENNYVI: The achievement I’m most proud of is after some success in Arizona, I was able to build a life here in NYC and making my mom proud of me before she passed away. She initially disapproved of my career in fashion, but after seeing my designs on TV, in magazines, on the runways of New York Fashion Week, or in my photo shoots in Paris and Versailles, she finally saw that it was possible to make a living doing what you love.

Listening to Jennyvi, it is obvious that she has managed to combine her two great loves, fashion and Jane Austen. I cannot help but wonder what Jane herself would think? 

I remark to Jennyvi that i can picture Lizzy Bennet going on one of her infamous walks in Jennyvi's stylish trainers (or training shoes or kicks as i am  informed by Jennyvi they are called in the U.S) and that i only hope they do not get covered in mud! She replies that for her advertising she featured Lydia hiding out in New York. Quite what Miss Bingley and Lady Catherine would think of such goings on i do not know! 

However, what i do think is that Jane would have loved Jennyvi's classic combined with contemporary style. I feel this combination symbolizes everything Jane and her trailblazing heroines were about and anyone who says different, well they would get a dressing down. 

  • Jennyvi Dizon premiers her Jane Austen Couture collection on the 10th September at New York fashion week.  
  • You can see more of Jennyvi's fashion on her website: https://janeaustencouture.com 
  •  Contact Jennyvi at: info@janeaustencouture.com
  • You can find Jennyvi on social media on:
  •  twitter@jennyvi
  •  Instagram@'janeaustencouture or @jennyvinyc





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Thursday, August 11, 2022

Sarah Rose Kearns Interview

 

  Sarah Rose Kearns interview

It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a Janeite, must be able to study a character. Upon meeting me, Sarah, who prefers to go by her middle name of Rose, immediately asks me about myself and what I am studying. Janeites, and writers, like to people watch.

 Rose graduated from Columbia University with a degree in Creative Writing. Her debut play, an adaptation of Persuasion, played at the Connelly theatre, after a delay due to the pandemic, in September 2021 to critical acclaim. Her next project was Manydown, Rose's interpretation, based on a true story, where Austen accepted the proposal of family friend Harris Bigg-Wither and subsequently refusal him the next morning. Rose utilizes her writing skills to imagine what took place that historic night that went onto determine the Regency authors life. Although the pandemic was difficult for people in the arts, Rose displayed her creative side as she adapted her second project to fit the challenging times. After Manydown was preformed at JASP (Jane Austen Summer Program) Rose, with the help of director Mia Moravis, adapted Manydown into a radio play which is now available on Audible. 

On August 13th and 14th, Rose, and fellow Austen enthusiasts, hosted 'Open to Persuasion'  'An online mini-conference on Jane Austen's last completed novel' to benefit The Holy Theatre's Persuasion Workshop. You can find out all about the online festival at https://theholytheatre.betterworld.org where you can also donate to the Holy Theatre Persuasion Workshop.   

With a writers ear, Rose listens with genuine interest to my answers to her questions, before I manage to turn the questions back to her. I ask Rose what she thinks first lit the spark of creativity in her, and can she remember her first piece of creative writing?

ROSE: I wrote things in school as a child. I've been somebody who thought of myself as a theatre person longer than I thought of myself as a writer. After high school, I moved to New York and studied acting for a bit, and then decided to go back and get my degree in Creative Writing. I thought about being an English major, but I ended up majoring in creative writing just because those were the classes that I was enjoying. I didn't study play-writing in school but after I finished, I still wanted to do theatre and it seemed like a natural combination to try and bring those things together as a playwright.

I wondered does she feel her experience of acting gave her a greater understanding of writing for the stage?

ROSE: Yes, I do. It has been a process, Persuasion is the first full length play that I ever wrote, I completed the first draft almost six years ago. So, it was a long time coming. We had readings but in 2021 we were in rehearsals for the first full production. Which I was just so thankful, over the moon, so thrilled about. So, I learned a lot about play-writing as I was working on this particular project. Figuring out how to do it, while doing it. It has given me a different kind of insight. Probably a lot of actors, who write, get a sense of the rhythm of a scene that’s different from somebody who doesn’t come to it from that way. One of my biggest takeaways, early on, was that I just didn’t need as many words as I thought I did.  Of course, I’m very fond of Austen and I wanted to do justice to the book. My instinct was to just take all the dialogue from the book and put it in the script, then write other dialogue to fill in the gaps. I've learned that Austen is a fairly pithy writer, she’s not long-winded. You only need one sentence to say it on stage, even if it’s three sentences of dialogue in the book. Peoples sense of time and attention span is different. Of course, there are nonverbal ques and people’s lines. A lot of what I did with the piece, between the very first draft, was just whittling away extra words, and trying to convey the point as concisely as possible.  

I asked Rose when adapting Persuasion, what translated easily to the stage and what was the most difficult aspect? What did she leave in and what did she omit?  

ROSE: The structure of the play was pretty close to the first draft. I hadn't really figured out what scenes I wanted to include in the first draft, and i made them shorter. I did a lot of studying, I read a lot of screenwriting books, and story structure books, which I didn't study in college. Creative writing programs are maybe a little too pretentious to do story theory, but it was actually very useful. I figured out what I felt was the central outline or spine of the plot and the movements that needed to be hit for the story to work, to have an arc. I worked around that, and then I played around with figuring out how I could do it with a reasonable number of characters. It's written for a cast of ten with a lot of doubling up, but I did make some significant cuts that may be of interest to some Janeites. I, unfortunately, had to cut the two moments in the first volume of Persuasion where Wentworth comes and helps her out, the scene with the children, and the scene with the carriage. Those are so beautifully rendered in the novel, but I decided I didn't want to have either children or horses in the play. I hoped that some of the emotional tension in those scenes, which we see narrated from Anne’s perspective in the book, is provided by having actors’ bodies on stage and having eye contact, and that it can replace the experience. So, as much as I wanted to be pure Austen, it is a very different medium. Even if I had all the time in the world to tell a very long tale, to do a very long play, things needed to be translated in a way. It's like translating from one language to another, which is necessary, I am interpreting. So, I didn't set out about with the idea that I wanted to rewrite Persuasion, I was trying to capture what I perceived to be the important themes of the novel as a reader. That still meant changing things, I also cut out Mrs. Smith, she is a controversial character. Some people think volume two of the novel, Austen would have continued to revise if she hadn't been dying. She comes in and has a monologue, this whole chapter to herself, how Mr Elliott is such a bad person, it's a little clunky plot wise. She's an interesting figure but it doesn't feel well written to me as a reader. Not that I presume to correct Jane Austen! It doesn't feel essential to the plot, It seems to slow down the central thrust of the story. I decided it wasn't absolutely necessary and created another little moment, where you get the impression that Mr Elliott has multiple motives in his pursuit of Anne. I don’t think him being a villain is essential to the main plot of the story. There are other adaptations that would make a completely different set of choices. If you compare Persuasion to Emma, that has all the loose ends so perfectly tied up and tight. That's the last one that Austen saw through the press, while she was still alive. Every word is in the right place. I really love Emma; I think Persuasion is my favorite, but I agree with people who say Emma is the masterpiece. In Persuasion, there's this whole subplot with Mr Elliott and Mrs Clay which doesn't make a lot of sense, of course we know that she wrote a draft ending that she didn't like, and she corrected it a week later. On the other hand, she did say, in the summer of 1816, after she finished her complete draft of Persuasion, a year before she died, she said in a letter to Fanny Knight ‘I have something ready for publication’ which I presume could only, and some scholars argue, mean that she might have changed Persuasion. On the other hand, she was ill before she died, maybe she was trying to get it out, and we don't know why she did not pursue publication for Persuasion within that year. Typically, it seems that she let her work rest a little bit after finishing the first draft, so, it's unclear.

As a fellow Janeite, I wanted to know, when did she first 'meet' Jane and what got her hooked?

ROSE: It was Persuasion actually, I know many people had the experience of coming to Persuasion, and falling in love with Persuasion, as older readers, I actually didn't. I read Pride and Prejudice first, I think I was about 11 or 12 when I read those two. I was just a big reader and as a child, it was all over my head to some degree. I slogged through it. I wasn't an absolute pleasure, then I was thirteen or fourteen, I picked up Persuasion and that was the one that really imprinted on me, that was my book. I identified with Anne, not that I share her life circumstances particularly, but I was fond of her and she's been a good imaginary friend.

So, would she say Anne is the character she most identifies with of all Austen characters?

ROSE: I wouldn't presume to say I'm as cool as Anne, but I'm really fond of her and she's the one that I identified with most as a young reader. I admire her way of navigating her way through situations, especially in the first half of the story. She really doesn't have a lot of external validation from anybody in her life. She doesn't come into the spotlight. She doesn't have many lines in act one, yet she still seems to have self-respect, I find this admirable, she's not stupid. She manages not to be judgmental to other people. She looks at the Musgrove girls and she says, ‘The're nice girls and they have their way, I'm nice, I have my way, I'm happy to be me. I wish I had a sister that I was this close to but I'm not trying to be a silly young girl’.

Fanny Prince and Anne are often considered to be judgmental characters, as a fan of Anne, what does Rose think of Fanny Price?

ROSE: I think Fanny Price has a much worse situation. While Anne Elliot is certainly the Cinderella of her family, the Elliot's are less dysfunctional. She doesn't have Aunt Norris's and she obviously is the official daughter of the house, Anne's not the poor relation. Anne hasn't suffered trauma and abuse as Fanny price has. Plus, Anne's almost 10 years older, so, maybe, she was like Fanny price when she was younger. 

I ask does Rose think Fanny Price is a much maligned character? She does not seem to evoke the affection of other Austen heroines, Mansfield Park is often cited as fans least favorite novel. What are her views on Mansfield Park and Fanny Price?

 ROSE: She's a fascinating character, I like Mansfield Park. I don't have a full unified theory of it as a work of art. She is certainly the most likable person in the book. As a character study it feels very real, you know Fanny. Some families, including their neurosis, feel quite authentic to me as a reader.

The relevant themes of Mansfield Park of class, and particularly the issue of the East India Company, are prevalent as readers debate the place of Jane Austen's fiction and in particular Mansfield Park. Rose, again the eternally curious Janeite, is keen to know what I think? I reply that my opinion has always been that the fact that Thomas Bertram is portrayed in such a bad light may be a subtle hint as to Austen’s covert opinion.

ROSE: I quite agree with you. I'm sort of disturbed by the fact that Fanny is reconciled with him in the end. I guess that’s the thing about Mansfield Park, it is just a heavy novel. It does feel so critical of the Society, but then the last couple of chapters, it just all gets swept away under the rug.  

So, does Rose think Austen was trying to appease the audience?

ROSE: I agree, all those things, and also it's difficult to conceive if let's say I'm Jane Austen, and I'm trying to come up with a happy ending for this poor girl, what better fate is there for her? She doesn't have a better option than marrying Edmund and staying with his family. She's tried being out in the world in the Portsmouth section, she obviously does not want to go. This is a world, as we see throughout the course of the novel, the white, supremacist, patriarchal structure, dominates everything. In the end, she doesn't escape, she gets a little bit more of a comfortable seat. So, I guess it's uncomfortable as a reader, but it's probably also realistic, we know that Austen was quite interested in social realism. That's what Walter Scott called out in his review of Emma at the time, she was seen as really experimenting with a naturalistic style of writing that other authors had not explored so much.

Again Rose looks to me eager for my opinion, I reply that I feel that i suppose in those times, like Shakespeare, Austen was limited as to how much she can say overtly and remain popular. Therefore, through characters like Thomas Bertram, she takes us by the hand and leads us to subtle hints and guides us as to how we should think.

ROSE: I tend to agree with you certainly. It's interesting that people have so many different views that we can project ourselves. People have so many different ideologies, and different cultures, throughout time and space. People see themselves in Jane Austen, she is somehow a very inviting writer for the reader to connect with. I don't know exactly what it is about her world, it's not universal that everyone in the world loves Jane Austen, but a lot of people do. A lot of very different people love Jane Austen.

 Again, Rose is interested to find out why I think Austen still remains so popular?  

I answer that i think that is because she writes about human nature and that this is something that does not change.  

ROSE: A friend of mine is the author of Unmarriageable, which is a contemporary retelling of Pride and Prejudice. It takes place in Pakistan, her name is Soniah Kamal and she's my colleague on the JASNA (The Jane Austen Society of North America) equality diversity inclusion committee. I've heard her speak about how she grew up in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, and how much she identified with Jane Austin's characters because Austen’s stories exist in a larger world, but they are primarily focused on interpersonal relationships and those really can translate to many different worlds. Family dynamics, and romantic relationships etc, these things are fairly universal.

I ask Rose what would she say were the differences between Persuasion and other Austen novels and how did these differences impact her writing?  

ROSE: Persuasion is not a long novel, it has relatively few major events and characters for Austen, or a 19th century novel,  I did cut some things that I had mixed feelings about. One thing that is interesting about Persuasion specifically, is that it has relatively little dialogue. I heard some lecture say that they analysed it, and it has proportionally the least percentage of words, or dialogue, of any of Austen novels, which makes sense. Persuasion has very much narrated thoughts and consciousness, and of course the two main characters hate being in a room together. It is not like Pride and Prejudice where they hate it, but they talk about how much they hate it. Pride and Prejudice adapts well for many reasons, It's delightful, but also it has great dialogue between the two central characters and Persuasion has very little of that, until the end. So that was interesting, thinking all about how to build without words, or without having access to a lot of words. I had to figure out how to lead the audience, to track what Anne was feeling, to be invested in this relationship, and to have a sense of the tension, even when it's unspoken. That's been an interesting challenge, it's been something I've been through throughout all the stage readings and workshops. This draft, over the last few years, has become more fully explored now that we've done a full production. My director was very innovative and had staging ideas, I had so much fun working on it! Some of the strategies that I used to try and create that sense of identification, and investment, which you need from a protagonist In a work of dramatic literature, which is done in a completely different way in the novel. It is told from Anne’s perspective, but actually she's very passive. So, I added flashback scenes, and I did a lot with music. It's not a musical, but there's music from the period that people sing, or play to each other, that I think mysteriously taps into what's going on with her. I've tried to think of none linear ways of getting that, It is an interesting challenge for the story in particular.

I wondered which Rose found the most challenging, adapting Austen’s work, or venturing into her life in Manydown?

ROSE: Well, that's a good question, Manydown is a short play. The experiences were quite different. I don't know I would say either is more challenging, by the time I wrote Manydown I had completed Persuasion. I was a more experienced playwright. The concerns are different, I was interested in Manydown, and trying to come up with something that is more realistic, and I'm making interpretive choices, but it's not at odds with anything, or any known history, that we have, however, it required a lot of research. I suppose one difference is that with Persuasion the main reference text was a novel, whereas for Manydown I read more books. It was a pretty smooth experience writing the first draft, Manydown was pretty much like it is now, it hasn't gone through a lot of revision.

With that in mind, what advice would Rose give to writers, particularly those tackling adaptations?

ROSE: That's a good question, I think it's interesting and worthwhile to be aware of what your goals are as an adapter. I'm not a person that says adaptations have to be very faithful, faithfulness is a fraught term in adaptation studies. I don't think it has to be faithful, but I think it has to be coherent. The film adaptations of Austen that I've seen, that I feel don't look too well, are ones where they leave something, they change one thing, but then they leave something else the same. So it's like you give a character a new personality, but make them get in the same way they do in the original text, how do you justify that? For example I'm doing the same Fanny Price stick but I'm doing it in a sassy manner! I'm concerned about internal coherence for the adaptation, figuring out how one thing affects another.

What issues does Rose think Austen would tackle in society today?

ROSE: Well, that's an interesting question, I imagine that she wrote about assertive, embellishing pictures of the life experiences that she had. People who were class wise similar to herself, or to those she studied, as a woman, she focused her stories almost entirely through women. So, I imagine she would stick with that. Whatever her life experience was in the 21st century world, it would be based on that. Of course, she would have possibility had a much wider experience. Austen, as far as we know, never left Great Britain, she may have gone to Wales, but we only know for sure that she was in England. So, I suppose that would alter ones perspective, ones sense of possibility. I think the kind of detailed realism is the heart of what I perceived to have been her project as an artist. Now we tend to see her as a romantic artist, especially people who come to it through movie adaptations, and of course there is that too, then we see Austin as representing principal history, like the past. There is this old timeline, and also this great love and so forth, and I think she would be very surprised by the interpretation of her work. That type of fiction did exist. It was Ann Radcliffe who wrote that type of fiction, that specific, that was not what she was interested in doing. She explicitly said’ I couldn't write a romance to save my life’. A friend of mine, who is also a playwright, and was in the cast of my production, has a wonderful play called Lyme Park. It is a loose retelling of Northanger Abbey where she has a modern day girls love of Jane Austen which tracks with Catherine's love of the Gothic. She has to let go of her ideas that everything is going to be like a Jane Austen novel, In the way that Catherine has to let go of everything is going to be like a Gothic adventure story, and it's just really clever. It works so well as a satire of modern Janeite culture, but also a homage, it's really highly recommended!

I agree with Rose, I think Austen would feel surprised about some peoples perception of her work as romantic fiction.

ROSE: Wouldn't Jane Austen be stunned to think that that's how we read her?! It’s not necessarily bad, I don't want to police people's enjoyment of her works, they are appealing on a lot of different levels and you can take whatever you want from her. It's not like I don't enjoy it, I picked up Persuasion which is obviously the most sexy, romantic one, however, I think she'd be amused.

As a writer well versed in all things Austen, I wanted to know If Rose had adapted Sanditon, where would she have taken the story?

 ROSE: I've thought about that. I haven't seen the TV series yet. I watched the first episode at an event, and I haven't made time to catch up. I know they've released a second series now. I think what's interesting about Sanditon, the fragment that we have, is that it doesn't necessarily seem like it's going to be a marriage plot. Obviously, we don't ever meet Sidney, who some people think is supposed to be the hero, from the thing’s others say, he could be a jerk. It's not clear, and she's probably not going to end up with Arthur or Sir Edward Denham either. In the novels we have, the heroine who always ends up with the first eligible male character to appear on stage, so to speak. If that's the case, that would be Edward Denham, but it's clearly not going to happen. She has a strong interest in Clara, that's the person she kind of fixates on and is interested in thinking about. Then of course this Miss Lambe is potentially a really interesting character. I think I would be interested in thinking about setting something in this Austen world, but that has a different structure, and this may be about these female friendships. Somebody suggested at a book club, that it seems like the setup to a murder mystery, like the Agatha Christie version of that.

If Austen were writing today, where does Rose think she would be placed on the bookshelves?

ROSE: We don't know, that’s an interesting question, I suppose one possibility is that she would have been dismissed as what they call 'chick lit', which is a rather misogynistic term. Women writers, however innovative, often do get slotted into a patriarchal niche in the marketplace, which implies that they are interchangeable or not artistically interesting. That's the main thing about her work, that it seems to me, to be so rigorously, intellectually stimulating, funny, and so emotionally satisfying. It just has these different facets, and she nails them all. So, I mean it really could be in the eye of the beholder what she belongs in.

What Austen quote does Rose use to inspire or comfort her?

ROSE: That's a good question, one from her letters, I actually have a friend, who is also a writer, who has it hanging above her desk ‘I'm not in the humor for writing, I must write on until I am’. I tend to quote that; I don't know why, but it seems to come up a lot!

Another lovely one is ‘”My idea of good company, Mr Elliot, is the company of clever, well-informed people, who have a great deal of conversation; that is what I call good company” ”’You are mistaken, said he gently, “that is not good company; that is the best”’  That’s a Janeite password for being interesting!

Rose has just returned from a research trip to Chawton, i ask her to tell us about it. 

ROSE: The Jane Austen Society of North America, has a program they do in collaboration with the Jane Austen society in the UK, called the international visitor program. So, I procured a grant from JASNA to go and spend a month in Chawton, and intern at the Austen sites there, and do research for another play. I was awarded that grant for the year 2020. It was postponed due to the pandemic i was finally able to visit in July. The plan is I'm actually interested in writing another full-length play about the Austen family, along the lines of Manydown, but longer and more characters, about Chawton and falling in different moments in their lives.

Rose recently returned from England and never one to stand still, Rose organized the virtual mini festival 'Open to Persuasion' on Saturday 13th and Sunday 14th August, having attended, i can tell you they held a series of fascinating talks and discussions by Austen experts. Proceeds went to The Holy Theatre Persuasion Workshop Fund.   

So, as Rose continues to search for lost secrets as she follows in the footsteps of Miss Austen, i know that wherever that path leads, Janeites can be persuaded to follow. 

  • Sarah Rose Kearns Persuasion can be seen on September 3rd and 4th at 2 P.M at 46 Bowen Road, Warwick, New York.
  • Manydown is available to purchase on Audible. 
  • Rose has just revealed that The Holy Theatre will be co-producing a full production of Persuasion in the Spring. You can keep up to date on this and other news at: 
  • https://www.theholytheatre.org/ 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

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Review of Miss Austen Investigates by Jessica Bull

  It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a Janeite fan in possession of a good novel, must be in want of a mystery. Every Janeite ...