And sometimes it’s even better
when it is adapted for TV or a movie
If you are a fan of Elena Ferrante, and
(like me) are suffering withdrawal pangs after having devoured every word she
has ever written, then I have some good news for you. The Italian film and
television production company, Wildside, has announced that it is working on
adapting Ferrante’s Neopolitan quartert into a TV series, along with producer
Fandango. The series will be shot in Italy, and in Italian.
The four novels, which trace the
friendship of Lenu and Lina over half a century, will be adapted into a
four-season TV series, which each novel taking in eight episodes, making it a
32-episode blockbuster. Ferrante is believed to be involved in the production,
though nobody quite knows in what capacity or how closely. But then, given that
nobody even knows who Ferrante is – she is still jealously clinging tight to
her anonymity – that can’t be very surprising.
No release date has been announced but I
am already salivating with anticipation. The story of Lenu and Lina consumed me
entirely as I raced to the final book in the quartet, The Story of the Lost
Child, and I can’t wait to see this tale of female friendship retold in a
visual medium.
Of course, this anticipation is tinged
with a dash of fear. It is the same fear that every book-lover experiences when
a well-loved book is turned into a movie or a TV series. I felt that fear when
the first series of Game of Thrones was released, not sure how that tale of
kings and knights, love and lust, pride and passion, would work on the TV
screen.
Would it all look a bit ridiculous, like
some costume dramas tend to do? Would the story have the same power on TV as it
did in the book? Would the characters be reduced to caricatures because of the
demands of the visual medium? Would it just become yet another bodice-ripper of
the kind that litter the television universe?
You can imagine my relief when the TV
series proved to be as much of a triumph as the books. Of course, I felt a
little miffed that I already knew what was going to happen, thus losing out on
the thrill of anticipation that other viewers, who hadn’t read the book, were
feeling. But then, George R.R. Martin, rather obligingly, went off script in
the later seasons, and I could watch with the same edge-of-the-seat excitement
that non-readers were privileged to experience.
So, yes, I am a tad nervous about how the
Ferrante will survive the transition to our TV screens. Just as I am both nervous
and excited about the movie adapation of Longbourn that is in the works. Random
House Studios and Focus Features have acquired the film rights to Jo Baker’s
novel about life below stairs in the Bennet household made famous by Jane
Austen (Pride and Prejudice), and the release date is tentatively set for 2017.
I just hope and pray that this adaptation remains true to the original and
doesn’t go down the Downton Abbey route.
But the one author whose works I long to
see on television is Georgette Heyer (just one of her books, The Reluctant
Widow, has been made into a film – and a pretty bad one at that!). The prolific
author of Regency Romances has given us such amazing characters as The Grand
Sophy, Arabella, Frederica, Venetia, and it would be an absolute treat to see
them come alive on the TV screen. But for some reason, British TV companies are
too busy filming Pride and Prejudice again and again and again to pay any
attention to the possibilities inherent in these Heyer heroines.
And that is an absolute pity, if you ask
me. Heyer tells absolutely cracking stories, intricately-plotted and leavened
with wit and humour. And her heroines are the absolute best; plucky little
creatures who do their best in a society that hems them around with strict
rules of etiquette.
Who else but Heyer could come up with a
heroine like Sophia Stanton-Lacy who comes visiting her aunt with a little monkey
to gift her young cousins, and thinks nothing of confronting an evil
moneylender with an elegant but effective pistol? Or the impish Leonie de
Saint-Vire, who masquerades as a young page in Parisian society, before being
unveiled as an aristocratic beauty? Or even the stunningly beautiful Deborah
Grantham, relegated to the fringes of polite society as Faro’s Daughter, who
makes the greatest conquest of them all?
I could go on listing the marvelous,
resourceful, witty, intelligent, beautiful women who people Heyer’s stories
(the headstrong Lady Serena Carlow, Judith Taverner, Mary Challoner are just
some names that come to mind) but then we’d be here forever. Instead you could
go over to petitionbuzz.com and sign a petition asking that Heyer’s novels be
made into a movie.
Though, if you ask me, television is
better suited to telling Heyer’s stories (in my view, movies are like short
stories, only TV series can do justice to the sweep of a novel). Surely the BBC
or ITV, which spends millions on period dramas of dubious quality, could pick
up one Heyer Regency Romance – my personal favourite would be The Grand Sophy –
and adapt it into a six-part series. I would bet my entire collection of
tattered copies of Heyer’s novels that it would do so well that production
companies would be scrambling for the rights to the books yet to be filmed.
So, come on guys, look sharp. This is a
world of fiction beyond Jane Austen and Julian Fellowes that beckons.
1 comment:
Thank you for introducing me to Georgette Heyer .The grand sophy is now one of my favourites. I definetely want to see its adaptation. Thanks a ton!
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