THE
MAKING OF PRIDE AND PREJUDICE
Sue
Birtwistle & Susie Conklin, 1995
This
BBC/Penguin book accompanied the TV series starring Colin Firth and Jennifer
Ehle. It is lavishly illustrated with photographs, drawings, design notes and
sample music scores. The authors are the producer and script editor.
Adapting
a treasured book is always going to be difficult. Andrew Davies was well aware
that he wanted the story to be more visual – a lot in the book happens
off-stage, is reported. So he purposefully created scenes that did not contain
Elizabeth. He observes that ‘the central motor which drives the story forward
is Darcy’s sexual attraction to Elizabeth. He doesn’t particularly like her,
he’s appalled by the rest of her family, her general circumstances, the
vulgarity of her mother and some of her sisters and he fights desperately
against this attraction…’ All this is perceived between the lines in the book.
Here, in the dramatization, it’s made flesh (in the nicest possible way). In
the book, several quite lengthy letters are pertinent – again, Davies
re-imagines these visually, to good effect.
There’s
a section on casting, which posed a problem as the production was planned to
take five months, so actors had to be available for a lengthy time. Another
section relates the difficulties of location hunting – ideally finding villages
and homes within easy reach of each other – with a map. For example, Angela
Horn, owner of Luckington Court, which served as Longbourn, the Bennetts’
house. The crew virtually took over the place and Mrs Horn cried when they
left, though was consoled by the thought that she would ‘now have enough money
to re-roof the west wing.’ The Wiltshire village of Lacock, owned by the
National Trust, became Meryton. Five months of negotiation, then preparations,
consultation with the residents, traffic diversions, security etc – all for a
week’s filming…
The
entire process takes months in the planning stages – more like a military
campaign, assembling all the tactical, technical, personnel, and logistics for
the duration.
Other
chapters cover production design – from furniture to wallpaper, creating the
right ambience; costumes, make-up and hair designs; the music and the dancing,
both integral to the visual and dramatic scenes; the lighting, where there were
practical problems in the old, historic and protected houses.
A
section describes a typical filming day, which can last up to twelve hours.
Finally, there’s a chapter that covers post-production, including editing,
sound dialogue, the effects and dubbing.
This
is an excellent book which provides insight into the making of a film and goes
some way to explain why such productions are expensive to stage. It's also of help to budding scriptwriters.
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