Laurence Olivier was the wartime heart-throb and Colin firth set the modern-day standard, but Devoney Looser has uncovered an earlier and long-neglected celluloid Mr Darcy
The wet-shirt version of Pride & Prejudice’s Mr Darcy has become such an influential image that it is difficult to imagine the character BC (before Colin). For Janeites of a certain age, Colin Firth’s 1995 BBC portrayal remains so swoon-worthy that any next-generation daughters and granddaughters who would consider opting for Matthew Macfadyen or Sam Riley as their Darcy-of-choice would seem to need their heads examined.
More than two decades on, we blithely repeat the story that Colin Firth is the Original Hot Darcy, his like never before seen in popular culture. To some degree, the claim is true. No previous actor playing Darcy has enjoyed Firth’s exposure or impact. None has had a four-metre fibreglass replica of his torso displayed in the middle of lakes on two continents. (First displayed in London, the Firth-Darcy statue was later sold to the National Trust of Australia.)
When it comes to charting the history of Darcys, however, we’ve been encouraged to go beyond the foundation of Firth. The importance of Andrew Davies’s reinterpretation of the character, remaking him as a man with noticeable libido, has been long touted. Davies, we’re told, was the first to rewrite Pride & Prejudice from the perspective of a desire-filled Darcy.
Davies’s characterisation has been described as trailblazing, because of Darcy’s newly discernible carnal yearnings.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der 88 – July/August 2017-Ausgabe von Jane Austen's Regency World.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der 88 – July/August 2017-Ausgabe von Jane Austen's Regency World.
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How Did Jane Austen's Pride & Prejudice Become A Christmas Story?
HO, HO, HO…how did Jane Austen’s Pride & Prejudice become a Christmas story? Devoney looser investigates
Jane's Beloved Friend
Judith Stove introduces her new biography of Anne Lefroy
Women Of Peterloo
MEN WERE NOT THE ONLY ONES DEMANDING REFORM IN AUGUST 1819. MANY WOMEN CAME TO MANCHESTER FOR A DAY OF PROTEST, AND NOT ALL OF THEM MADE IT HOME, AS SUE WILKES REPORTS
Darcy's Picture Gallery
WHAT MIGHT ELIZABETH BENNET HAVE SEEN AS SHE WANDERED THROUGH THE CORRIDORS OF PEMBERLEY? VICTORIA C SKELLY CONSIDERS HOW THE OWNERS OF GREAT ESTATES IN JANE AUSTEN’S TIME VIEWED ART
Austen's Festive Music
A LARGE COLLECTION OF MUSIC WRITTEN OUT BY JANE AUSTEN REVEALS SOME POPULAR NURSERY RHYMES AND HER CHRISTMAS FAVOURITES, WRITES ROS OSWALD. PICTURES FROM THE NOVELS, BY CE BROCK
Candour And Comfort
Female friendships outside the family group rarely feature in Jane Austen’s fiction, yet she and Cassandra enjoyed a close relationship with the three youngest daughters of many down park, Hampshire as Hazel Jones explores
Keeping The Faith
Quakers, Catholics and Methodists fared badly compared with Anglicans in the Christian Britain of a Jane Austen’s time, writes Penelope Friday
Austen In Australia
The Jane Austen society of Australia
Culture Club
The Jane Austen society of the UK
Last Days In Winchester
Jane Austen left Chawton on may 24, 1817, to seek medical help in the nearby city of Winchester. Elizabeth Jane Timms traces those final weeks of her life. line drawings by Ellen Hill c1901