Saturday 22 October 2016

521 Brideshead Revisited


First  viewed :   12th  October  1981

There  is  no  doubt  that  this  was  the  TV  event  of  1981,  a  monumental  adaptation  of  Evelyn  Waugh's  novel  that  proved  that  commercial  television  could  match  the  BBC  in  quality  given  the  right  circumstances  and  a  lasting  memorial  to  the  glorious  reign  of  David  Plowright  at  Granada  Television.

Plowright  commissioned  the  project  as  Controller  of  Programmes  in  1979  and  kept  the  ship  afloat  through  numerous  production  problems  and  changes  in  direction. For  example  though  credited  as  screenwriter  John  Mortimer's  scripts  were  not  actually  used  as  the  producers  tried  to  be  as  faithful  to  the  book  as  possible  over  11  mesmerising  episodes.  The  casting  was  faultless, the  cinematography  sumptuous  and  the  music  almost  a  character  in  its  own  right.

The  story   details  twenty  years  in  the  life  of   Charles  Ryder  ( Jeremy  Irons ). As  an  army  captain  on  the  cusp  of  middle  age  in  1943  Ryder  finds  that  his  unit  has  been  billeted  on  the  Brideshead  estate  and  is  overwhelmed  by  memories  of  his  involvement  with  the  aristocratic  family, the  Marchmains  who  lived  there. From  an  upper  middle  class  background  Charles  bumps  into  the  second  son  Sebastian  ( Anthony  Andrews )  at  Oxford  and  forms  a  romantic  friendship  with  him. Sebastian  is  spoiled  but  vulnerable, clinging  to  his  childhood  teddy  bear  Aloysius  and  drinking  too  heavily.  Depressed  by  his  joyless  home  with  his  fussy , self-absorbed  bibliophile  father  ( John  Gielgud ), Charles  is  spellbound  by  the  architectural  glories  of  Brideshead  and  is  soon  introduced  to  the  rest  of  Sebastian's   family  his  devout  Catholic  mother  ( Claire  Bloom ) , ultra-conservative  elder  brother  Brideshead  ( Simon  Jones ), and  sisters  , socialite   Julia  ( Diana  Quick )  and  pious  wallflower  Cordelia  ( Phoebe  Nicholls ).
Lord  Marchmain  ( Laurence  Olivier  who  was  Plowright's  brother-in-law )   flew  the  nest  some  years  earlier   and  lives  on  the  Continent  with  an  Italian  mistress.

Charles  recalls  idyllic  summer  days  with  Sebastian  but  clouds  begin  to  gather. The  Marchmains  know  their  lifestyle  is  under  threat  from  "the  Socialists "  in  what  Charles  calls  "the  age  of  Hooper "  ( after  his  coarse, philistine  lieutenant ). Sebastian's  drinking  gets  out  of  hand  and  Charles  eventually  has  to  choose  between  remaining  faithful  to  him  and  maintaining  his  privileged  position  as  a  family  friend.  The  result  is  exile  from  both  as  Sebastian   follows  his  father's  example  and  runs  away. As  in  the  novel  there  is  then  a  big  jump   of  some  years   in  Episode  8  where  we  find  Charles , a  fairly  successful but  morose  and  dissatisfied  artist , married  to  Celia  ( Jane  Asher )  and  sailing  back  to  England  with  her  on  a  luxury  liner . She  has  been  unfaithful  to  him  for  which  he  is  grateful  as  it  liberates  him  to  begin  an  affair  with  Julia  when  he  finds  she  is  a  fellow  passenger. They  go  to  live  at  the  Hall  until  Brideshead  informs  them  his  new  wife  couldn't  share  a  house  with  an  adulterous  couple. However  they  are  spared  eviction  by  the  return  of  the  dying  Lord  Marchmain   ( his  wife  having  died  earlier ). The  last  episode  sees  a  prolonged  struggle  between  Brideshead  and  Cordelia  and  their  father   who  they  want  to  reconcile  with  God  before  his  death. The  outcome  moves  Julia  to  renounce  her  relationship  with  Charles  as  a  religious  sacrifice   which  he  accepts  because  he  too  is  moving  towards  Catholicism.  At  that  point  the  action  returns  to  1943   and  a  bittersweet  epilogue.

As  well  as  the  main  characters  there's  an  exceptionally  rich  supporting  cast. Dad's  Army's   John  le  Mesurier   in  one  of  his  last  roles  plays  Father  Mowbray  who  has  the  thankless  task  of  trying  to  explain  Catholicism  to  Julia's  rich  but  terminally  stupid  American  fiance  Rex.
Mona  Washbourne  plays  Sebastian's  beloved  Nanny . Theatre  director  Nikolas  Grace  made  an  impact  with  his  rather  fruity  performance  as  Sebastian's  gay  friend  Anthony  Blanche  who  dissects  Charles's  relationship  with  the  Marchmains  with  brutal  honesty.

Irons  and  Andrews  were  both  31  when  filming  started  so  they  don't  really  look  the  part   in the  Oxford  scenes  but  it's  hard  to  imagine  anyone  else  in  the  roles. Irons  of  course  went  on to  become  an  A-list  Hollywood  star ; it  didn't  quite  happen  for  Andrews  although  his performance  drew  more  awards  at  the  time.  Gielgud  is  splendid  as   the  infuriating  Ryder  Snr and  Olivier  later  regretted  that  he  hadn't  taken  that  part  instead. My  favourite  performance though  is   Simon  Jones  who  somehow  manages  to  make  Brideshead  , a  cold,  repressed  prig,   rather  endearing. Frequent  US  repeats  of  the  series  have  allowed  him  too  to have  a   Hollywood  film  career  , often  in  wildly  incongruous  roles  ( cf  The  Devil's  Own ) .

The  series  did  come  under  attack  later  in  the  decade  from  left  wing  critics   for  supposedly  promoting  "Victorian  values"  in  art   and  helping  to  create  "the  heritage  industry".  I  do  think  that,  had  he  still  been  alive , Waugh,  would  have  sided  with  the  likes  of  Gilmour  and  Pym,  looking  on   aghast  at  the  ascendancy  of  the  decidedly  Hooperite  Margaret  Thatcher  and  her  cronies.

I  only  dipped  into  it  the  first  time  round, not  really  getting  it. I  think  you  have  to  be  in  from  the  start   to  understand  it. I  watched  it  right  through  when  it  was  repeated  in  the  summer  of  1983. Having  spent  most  of  the  last  couple  of  years  mourning  a  lost  friendship ( which  was  in  its  dying  throes  when  the  series  was  first  broadcast ) it  now  struck  a  powerful  chord.  The  harsh  truth  Charles  Ryder  eventually  realises  with  Blanche's  help, that  the  Marchmains  meant  far  more  to  him  than  he  did  to  them,  continues  to  resonate  with  me , reinforced  since by  my  favourite  novel  The  Secret  History  whose  narrator  Richard  Papen  has  a  similar  longing  to  be  with  the  beautiful  people.

Plowright  eventually  met  his  own  Hooper  (  or  "ignorant  upstart  caterer" in  John  Cleese's  words )  in  Gerry  Robinson  and  resigned   rather  than  implement   the  new  boss's  profits  before  quality  policy  in  1992. He  was  found  a  role  as  deputy-director  of  Channel  4  for  five  years   but  there's  little  evidence  to  show  he  had  much  influence  there  and  did  some  lecturing  at  Salford  University  before  his  retirement. He  died  in  2006.


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