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Los Angeles Times
Friday
January 12, 1996
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The Latest Chapter in the Austen Renaissance
By HOWARD ROSENBERG
At a Santa Monica movie
theater showing genteel "Sense and Sensibility," a fight broke out in the
packed audience just prior to the feature when a slender man who looked
to be in his 60s tried to evict a fairly small boy from one of the seats
he was holding for his parents. Ignoring squatters' rights, the aging ruffian
demanded the seat for himself. Shouts and pushing ensued, and soon a couple
of rows were involved in the scuffle.
Amazing how Jane Austen
turns people into animals.
So hold your temper,
be cool and enjoy. Coming to cable's A&E channel are three nights of
"Pride and Prejudice," six hours from the BBC that parcel out Austen's
best-known comedy of manners, courtships and teacups, and that use humor
and gaiety to lighten the gloomy social constrictions of late 18th century
England.
The sumptuous sights
of countryside grandeur and mansions right out of Architectural Digest
aren't hard to digest, either.
An earlier BBC production
of "Pride and Prejudice" aired on PBS' "Masterpiece Theatre" in 1980, naturally
without commercials. A&E, on the other hand, not only depends on commercials
(which you accept), but generally hacks out space for them with a chainsaw
(which you don't accept).
Not to worry when it's
a rerun of "Banacek," "McCloud" or "Law & Order." Otherwise? Unless
A&E's leatherfaces have been recently sensitized, expect all-too-frequent,
uncivilized jolts with no regard for timing or what the commercials are
interrupting. Expect to see the stately country green of Mr. Bingley's
Netherland Park or Mr. Darcy's Pemberley crashing into an ad for a sushi
restaurant.
But listen: So fabulously
feel-good is this latest "Pride and Prejudice" that even clumsily applied
pit stops aren't likely to drain its pleasures.
A large chunk of America
surely knows by now about the curious Austenizing of the arts these days,
about the movies "Persuasion" and "Sense and Sensibility" and the praise
they've earned from most critics, about "Emma" being the loose model for
the contemporary comedy "Clueless," about the dramatic leap in sales of
some of Austen's novels as a bonus.
And given the fiscal
and critical high marks driving this phenomenon, who knows what plans are
afoot by TV literati to further extend Austen's accessibility and cash
in on her renaissance. Perhaps a "Pride and Prejudice" sitcom a la "Friends":
Sisters Lizzie, Jane,
Lydia, Kitty and Mary kick back in their Derbyshire dining parlor with
Mr. Darcy, Mr. Bingley and Mr. Wickham, taking refreshment while recollecting
the inferiority of their connections. The fun and high jinks begin when
the insolent and disagreeable Lady Catherine de Bourgh pops in unannounced
to discuss a report of an alarming nature.
Well, perhaps not.
For now, we have before
us the decidedly agreeable "Pride and Prejudice" on A&E. Purists may
quibble with Simon Langton's direction or Andrew Davies' script, which
takes some liberties (although fewer than Emma Thompson's did with "Sense
and Sensibility"). Yet even if, in the manner of yours truly, you've missed
the 1940 film of "Pride and Prejudice" with Greer Garson and Laurence Olivier,
read only a bit of Austen and forgotten many of "Pride's" nuances, you
still may find yourself irresistibly immersed and fighting with others
over the best seat in front of the set.
The seduction begins
almost immediately. Although appearing quite comfortably situated in their
Longbourn house with servants to tend many of their needs, the Bennets
are said to be of relatively modest circumstances. Because Mr. Bennet (Benjamin
Whitrow) has willed his estate to his clergyman cousin, that smarmy toad
Mr. Collins (David Bamber), Mrs. Bennet (Alison Steadman) is terrified
that she and their five daughters will be penniless and homeless upon her
husband's death. So she is determined--foolishly in a panic, in fact--to
wed her favorite, eldest and supposedly prettiest daughter, Jane (Susannah
Harker), to a rich new neighbor, Charles Bingley (Crispin Bonham-Carter),
who is good for a cool 4,000 to 5,000 pounds a year.
"At least," chirps Mrs.
Bennet, happily.
Although mutually attracted,
however, their romance is initially stunted by the epic money and class
gaps separating them.
Looming largest in this
rigid universe are not Jane and Bingley, however, but the next eldest daughter,
the smart and spirited, witty and radiant Lizzie (Jennifer Ehle), and her
adversarial connection to Fitzwilliam Darcy (Colin
Firth), an even wealthier and loftier young man who at first is so contemptuous
of the Bennets and their lesser rank ("so decidedly below my own") that
he can hardly stand being in their presence. He scowls, he broods. An easy
man to dislike, you think. Nor is the strong-willed Lizzie any less tolerant
of him.
His pride, her prejudice.
A standoff.
Yet their eyes are always
locking across crowded ballrooms, signaling a stirring sexual tension that
will dissolve to a gradual softening of animosity en route--several hours
ahead, after Lizzie learns what's what about the scandalous George Wickham
(Adrian Lukis)--to a pleasing resolution that also will extend to Jane
and Bingley. They're happy, you're happy, it works.
As do Firth's smoldering
Darcy and Ehle's luminous Lizzie, who while spiny, undaunted and with good
reason her father's favorite, remains a woman of her repressive times.
Aglow, yet limited. Ehle is lovely to watch in the role, rising to Austen's
own anointing of Lizzie as being "as delightful a creature as ever appeared
in print."
She supplies occasional
humor, too, although that falls largely to the garishly fawning Mr. Collins,
the frivolous, loud-jabbering Mrs. Bennet, whose life's work is to see
her daughters marry well, and her caustic husband, who remarks at one point
about his silly trio of youngest girls, "I shall not hear two words of
sense spoken together."
You'll be happy to hear
that "Pride and Prejudice" is many words of sense spoken together.
* "Pride and Prejudice"
airs Sunday at 5 and 9 p.m. and continues Monday and Tuesday at 6 and 10
p.m. on A&E cable.
Copyright, The Times
Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times, 1996.
ROSENBERG, HOWARD, HOWARD
ROSENBERG / TELEVISION; The Latest Chapter in the Austen Renaissance; Home
Edition., Los Angeles Times, 01-12-1996, pp F-1.
Copyright
© 1995-1996 Infonautics Corporation. All rights reserved.
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