PERIOD DRAMA: Gugu Mbatha-Raw (left), Amma Asante, and James Norton on the set of Belle.

By Roger Moore

Folding fans flutter, people move about in Empire-waisted dresses and class distinctions get in the way of true love.

But in the 18th century romance Belle, the young British aristocrat trying to find her place, in society, and in love, is black, the daughter of a black woman and a white sea captain of noble birth. Still, try to find a review of the new costume romance that doesn’t mention “Jane Austen.”

The comparison to the works of the author of Emma and Pride & Prejudice may be too obvious to avoid. However, Belle is about something Austen rarely came close to addressing: Britain’s contemporaneous debate on the financially important but morally indefensible slave trade.

“It wasn’t something polite people talked about,” Amma Asante, the film’s director says, explaining Austen’s omission of the subject, itself the topic of Austen studies and scholarly debate.

“There’s even a breakfast scene in our movie that demonstrates that, where Lady Mansfield interrupts and says ‘This is a vulgar topic,’” Asante says.

“Austen’s world was more concentrated on the domestic,” adds Gugu Mbatha-Raw, the British actress of mixed race who plays the title role in Belle. “That’s what makes Belle so new. We still have Austen’s world, that domestic, marriage market life. It may have the familiar Jane Austen feel of it, but there’s something more at stake here than marrying well.”

Dido Elizabeth Belle grew up in the home of a very famous uncle. William Murray (played by Tom Wilkinson in the film) was Lord Mansfield and Lord Chief Justice. After raising Belle in his home, Lord Mansfield decided the pivotal case in the history of Britain’s early abolition movement — the “Zong Massacre” — in which an insurance company refused to reimburse a slave ship owner for the human cargo he tossed over the side in an effort to commit fraud.

“The Zong Case really does something that no Austen novel or film ever does,” Mbatha-Raw says. “It gives a political context, with the abolition movement as a big part of that.”

The title of Austen’s Mansfield Park may not just be a coincidence. As the literary critic Edward Said has pointed out, Austen’s only direct mention of the slave trade comes in that novel, where character Fanny Price “reminds her cousin that after asking Sir Thomas about the slave trade, ‘there was such a dead silence’ that spoke volumes.”

But Belle wasn’t filmed as an anecdote to Austen’s concentration on the domestic rather than the worldly. After all, Austen never mentioned the late 18th, early 19th century Napoleonic Wars, any more than the slightly earlier Belle focuses on Britain’s losing efforts in the American Revolution, which was going on as the Zong Case was decided and Dido Belle was coming of age and being presented to British society. Asante saw the film as a chance to “blend politics, art and history” into an Austenesque romance.

The film depicts Belle’s life, growing up with a cousin the same age, a white woman also being raised by her aunt and uncle. And its inspiration was a contemporaneous portrait of the two young women made by Johann Zoffany.

“The producer sent me a picture postcard of it, and it drew me in,” Asante says. “I knew how unusual that representation was. People of colour were accessories in European portraits of that age. Pets, almost. They were always lower in the frame, looking up in awe to the white protagonist in the painting.

“Dido was higher in the frame, dressed in expensive clothes, grinning and pointing at herself. You ask questions when you see a painting like that.”

The portrait was the main thing the screenwriter, director and star had to go on in creating Belle – “a lovely starting point, for all of us,” Mbatha-Raw says. “It’s so unusual, seeing a black woman, of that time, in a painting with her white counterpart, Elizabeth, her status plainly equal in the composition of it. Her gaze is mischievous. There’s a brightness to her eyes, looking directly at the viewer.”

There’s documentation of how Dido Belle was not exactly treated as an equal in the household — an American businessman’s diary noting how Dido wasn’t allowed to dine with guests, but then “he was ‘shocked’ to see ‘a black’ emerging, after dinner, to socialise with the family,” Mbatha-Raw says, with a laugh.But the Mansfields all left Dido money in their wills, “showing the degree of love and affection they had for her, “Asante says.

Asante, who uses lots of close-ups “as sort of my signature, taking you into the mind of the character,” knew she’d found her Belle when she met Mbatha-Raw, best known in this country for a supporting role she played in the Tom Hanks film Larry Crowne.

“She has the innate sense of grace that made her seem absolutely at home in this world,” Asante says. “The corsets help,” jokes Mbatha-Raw. “Your posture, your movement, it makes you fit in.” — MCT

 

Brad Pitt buys Bieber portrait for son

 

Actor Brad Pitt has reportedly bought a painting of singer Justin Bieber to gift to his son Pax, who is a fan of the musician. Pitt got the portrait by street artist Bambi after her agent offered him the artwork. “Pax loves Justin and so Brad thought this would be the perfect gift for him. Brad loves Bambi’s unique style and this is his third purchase from her,” dailystar.co.uk quoted a source as saying. “When he found out she’d done a piece with Justin, he knew he’d have to get it for Pax. The Justin artwork is done on a panel of wood and he loves how unique it is,” added the source. The painting portrays the pop star alongside the words, “Rebel without a clue”. — IANS

 

Hilary Duff banking on Ed Sheeran for music career

Actress-singer Hilary Duff is turning to British singer Ed Sheeran to help re-launch her music career. The former Lizzie MCGuire star said that she is due to record a song by Sheeran and is writing and recording material for the new album, which will be her first foray into music since her 2007 album Dignity, reports contactmusic.com. “I’m working with a lot of people. I’m still writing, so that process is still going on. I’m cutting an Ed Sheeran song next week, which I’m really excited about,” said Duff. — IANS

 

 

Kate Hudson to marry ‘sooner rather than later’

Actress Kate Hudson, 35, says she has no plans to walk down the aisle with her beau Matt Bellamy as of now, but she’d definitely like to get married in the near future. “We still don’t have any plans to get married, but eventually we will... probably sooner rather than later,” femalefirst.co.uk quoted her as saying. Hudson, who has 10-year-old son Ryder from her marriage to Chris Robinson and two-year-old son Bingham with Bellamy, has already ruled out the current season for starting her wedding plans. It is because the two, engaged for three years, are too busy with their respective careers at the moment. — IANS

 

Hugh Jackman was scared of darkness

Actor Hugh Jackman says he was a “fearful” child and was particularly scared of the dark.  The Wolverine star has admitted that when he first became a parent to his adopted children, 14-year-old Oscar and 8-year-old Ava, with his wife Deborra-Lee Furness, he didn’t have any idea how to be a father and thinks it’s because he was an anxious child who had various fears, reports contactmusic.com. The 45-year-old said: “I was surprised how little my own parenting instincts kicked in. I was a bit of a pain at first, insisting he couldn’t have a bottle straight before bed because I’d read up on it. “My own mother finally said, ‘Look, you may have read a lot of books, but the kid (Oscar) hasn’t, so put them down.’ But I was quite a fearful kid myself. Heights, the dark...”

He also admits he even incorporated a fear into his X-Men character Wolverine because he didn’t want to play someone who isn’t capable of feeling scared. — IANS

 

Injuries and Arnold Schwarzenegger go hand in hand

Action Hollywood star Arnold Schwarzenegger says he has been injured in every action movie he has featured in. The 66-year-old has been hurt throughout his film career spanning over four decades, with many mishaps resulting in him ending up in the emergency room, reports contactmusic.com. He explained: “(Producers) don’t like you to get injured, I get injured in every movie, but it’s small things like banging your head on the camera — and you just go and get stitched up quickly in the emergency room and then you come right back and continue shooting — but when you injure your leg or shoulder that’s when things shut down.” The Sabotage star has been in a good physical condition throughout his career and first made a name for himself as a champion bodybuilder. — IANS

 


 

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