The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Puzzles  |  Sports  |  Television  |  Videogames

Masterpieces and mysteries

‘The Complete Jane Austen’ on WGBH, and making book on the Austen detectives
By JEFFREY GANTZ  |  January 14, 2008

080111_austen_main
NORTHANGER ABBEY: A wide-eyed, radiant Felicity Jones as Catherine Morland, plus a director with a sense of humor.

The WGBH line-up
Persuasion | January 13: 9-10:30 PM
Northanger Abbey | January 20: 9-10:30 PM
Mansfield Park | January 27: 9-10:30 PM
Miss Austen Regrets | February 3: 9-10:30 PM
Pride And Prejudice | February 10, 17, 24: 9-11 PM
Emma | March 23: 9-11 PM
Sense And Sensibility | March 30, April 6: 9-10:30 PM

Click here for a list of the major film and television adaptations of Austen's ix novels.

It is a truth universally acknowledged, that there cannot be too many Jane Austen adaptations for film and television. To be sure, Hollywood has turned out just five major-motion-picture versions of her novels — the 1940 Pride and Prejudice (with Greer Garson and Laurence Olivier), the 1995 Sense and Sensibility (with Emma Thompson, Kate Winslet, Alan Rickman, and Hugh Grant), the 1996 Emma (with Gwyneth Paltrow and Jeremy Northam), the 1999 Mansfield Park (with Harold Pinter), and the 2005 Pride and Prejudice (with Keira Knightley and Matthew Macfadyen) — alongside ancillary efforts like the 1995 Clueless (Emma goes to Beverly Hills) and last year’s Becoming Jane and The Jane Austen Book Club. So perhaps Jane can’t compete with James Bond and Star Wars on the big screen, but she remains a hot public-television property on both sides of the Pond. Defying those benighted few who, grousing that there has already been too much Austen power, wonder whether English literature has nothing better with which to tempt us (“Is there no Thackeray? Is there no Trollope?”), Great Britain (ITV, Granada Television, Company Productions, and the BBC) and America (Boston’s WGBH Channel 2) have teamed up to produce a new Masterpiece Theatre series, “The Complete Jane Austen,” that will start this Sunday and run through April 6 (with a three-week pledge-break hiatus March 2-16).

Six new Austen adaptations? Well, four. Along with new productions of Persuasion (January 13), Northanger Abbey (January 20), Mansfield Park (January 27), and Sense and Sensibility (March 30 and April 6), we’re getting the 1995 BBC/A&E five-hour Pride and Prejudice mini-series (February 10, 17, and 24) and the 1996 A&E/ITV Emma TV movie (March 23). As compensation for there being no new Pride and Prejudice or Emma, the series is throwing in a new bio-pic, Miss Austen Regrets (February 3), that dramatizes all the proposals Miss Austen is alleged to have turned down.

Although MGM’s enjoyably airbrushed if minimally authentic (for starters, the costumes were handed down from Gone with the Wind) Pride and Prejudice came first, the bedrock of Austen adaptation is the set of six TV versions that the BBC produced between 1971 and 1986. The last of these, Northanger Abbey, is a 90-minute TV movie; the other five are mini-series running between three and five hours. The budgets are low, the sets are stage sets, the acting can be stolid, and the pacing tends to the British theatrical/television drawing-room standard of slow if not obvious. But these productions make room for the details of Austen’s 300-page books, and in Austen the details count. Moreover, they give audiences time to observe, to evaluate, to reflect and consider — just what Austen’s heroines do as they endeavor to separate what seems from what is. The more-recent two-hour theater releases feel more realistic and more immediate and are easier to take in, but at a cost.

1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5  |  6  |   next >
Related: What would Jane do?, Becoming Jane, Dead white females, More more >
  Topics: Television , Celebrity News, Entertainment, Felicity Jones,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
HTML Prohibited
Add Comment

PHX @ SXSW 2010
SXSW-2010
Today's Event Picks
ARTICLES BY JEFFREY GANTZ
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   PLAY BY PLAY: MARCH 19, 2010  |  March 17, 2010
    Boston's weekly theater schedule.
  •   REVIEW: THE SECRET OF KELLS  |  March 17, 2010
    It's early-ninth-century Ireland, and young, flame-haired Brendan is agog over the arrival of Iona refugee Aidan and his white cat, Pangur Bán, at the Abbey of Kells.
  •   THE GOOD OLD DAYS  |  March 11, 2010
    As if it weren’t enough that the venerable Paramount Theatre on Washington Street was open for the first time since 1976, the Celebrity Series of Boston brought in as the initial act to play the new 600-seat mainstage Max Raabe and his Palast Orchester.
  •   PLAY BY PLAY: MARCH 12, 2010  |  March 10, 2010
    Boston's weekly theater schedule
  •   INTERVIEW: MAX RAABE  |  March 02, 2010
    "It was so crazy in the '20s, in the Weimar Republic. Everything was so open-minded and wide, and that is why I love that period so much."

 See all articles by: JEFFREY GANTZ

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2010 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group