Becoming Jane
Film explores Jane Austen’s own romantic evolution
By Angela Fox
Jane Austen’s novels were certainly popular during
her lifetime, but 190 years after her death her works have more fans than their
author could ever have imagined – thanks to Hollywood. For decades, filmmakers
have delighted in adapting Austen’s novels for the screen and audiences have
embraced the cinematic versions of Pride and Prejudice, Emma, Sense and
Sensibility and Mansfield Park with equal enthusiasm.
Becoming Jane, the latest cinematic spin on Austen,
however, turns on Austen herself rather than one of her books. Happily, it is as
witty, romantic and sophisticated a tale as any the celebrated 18th century
novelist ever spun herself. It’s also probably completely imaginary, but then
romance is rarely rooted in fact, as anyone who has ever been in love well
knows.
The film takes the sketchy details of a real-life
acquaintanceship of Austen and an Irish lawyer Tom Lefroy and paints a plausible
star-crossed scenario that begs the question of whether this relationship
inspired Jane, the spinster daughter of a poor country clergyman, to become
writer that she did. All along the way, the film ingeniously evokes characters
and themes from her novels without ever hitting the viewer over the head with
the references.
The film opens in 1795 and Jane Austen (Anne
Hathaway) is a 20 year-old beauty with a brain to match – not an accepted
combination in rural England at the time. She is also an emerging writer who
delights family and friends with readings of her work that express both sense
and sensibility. Still, her loving but flighty mother (Julie Walters) and wise
but poor clergyman father (James Cromwell) lean toward common sense when it
comes to Jane’s future and are searching for a wealthy, well-appointed husband
for her. They are eyeing the dull Mr. Wisley (Laurence Fox), nephew and sole
heir to the formidable Lady Gresham (Maggie Smith). Wisley is agreeable; Jane is
not. But even she begins to wonder if her dream of marrying for love is only the
stuff of novels after all.
Enter the handsome, roguish and financially
challenged Tom Lefroy (James McAvoy). Sparks fly when the two clash, very much
in the style of Elizabeth Bennett and Mr. Darcy in Pride and Prejudice. But
romance, of course, ensues. Both realize that such a match flies in the face of
late 18th century conventional wisdom: in short, if they marry they risk family,
friends and fortune. If they don’t – ah, well, therein hangs the tale.
Gorgeously filmed in England and Ireland, with a wonderful
original score by Adrian Johnston, Becoming Jane is deftly directed by Julian
Jarrold and superbly scripted by Kevin Hood and Sarah Williams. It is utterly
disarming entertainment that stands on its own and also serves as spirited
salute to all things Austen.
If you’re truly besotted with Austen, of course,
you really should head for her home turf in the green rolling hills of southern
England. Jane Austen was born in the tiny village of Steventon, near Andover in
Hampshire, and it was here that Austen wrote first drafts of both Pride and
Prejudice and Northanger Abbey. The scenes in Becoming Jane of Anne
Hathaway/Jane scribbling away in her nightgown at her bedroom window beautifully
recreate the writer’s youthful awakening to the power of words. Austen’s father
was vicar of the parish here and the tiny 13th-century church of St. Nicholas
where he and other members of her family were rectors, remains much as it was in
Austen’s day. Many of the Austen family graves in the churchyard also remain,
though not the rectory where they lived.
The Austens were themselves tourists, so a true Austen-phile
might follow in their footsteps to Devon where the family spent summer holidays
in the resorts of Dawlish, Teignmouth and Sidmouth in 1801. The South West
Coastal Path goes through all three towns, as well as Lyme Regis in Dorset,
which the Austen discovered in 1803 and of which she once wrote “a very strange
stranger it must be who does not feel charms in the immediate environs of Lyme.”
The film Persuasion was shot in Lyme.
After her father's retirement, Austen and the rest of the
family moved to Bath, where the writer lived from 1801-1806. Walking up Beacon
Hill to the village of Charlcombe, which Austen described as being “sweetly
situated in a little green valley,” was a favorite destination, as were
Claverton Down and Weston. Her knowledge of the Bath is reflected in Northanger
Abbey and Persuasion, which are set in the city.
Visit the Jane Austen Center, in a Georgian house on Gay
Street, where a permanent exhibition explores the effect that living in Bath had
on Austen and her writing. Costumed tour guides add to the authentic period
atmosphere. There’s also a fine gift shop and the Regency themed Tea Rooms where
you can enjoy a pot of tea, homemade sweets or a light lunch. The Tea Rooms
offer excellent rooftop views of the city, still very much as Austen knew it,
preserving in its streets and historic buildings the world evoked so beautifully
in her novels.
The last place Jane lived was at Chawton, near Alton, in
her home county of Hampshire. While here, she completed and published all her
novels. Her house in Chawton is now one of the most popular literary museums in
England, with displays of her writings, her small writing table and a quilt she
made with her mother and sister. There is also a flower garden and an old bake
house in the courtyard with a brick bread oven, brick washtub and Austen’s
donkey cart. The writer lived in the 17th century house from 1809 until her
death in 1817. Austen was only 42 when she died, probably of Addison’s disease,
and is buried in Winchester Cathedral. She never married.
courtesy of Miramax Films.
For more information on Becoming Jane:
www.becomingjane-themovie.com
For more information on visiting Jane Austen’s England:
www.visitbritain.com
www.visitsouthengland.com
www.visit-easthampshire.org.uk |