Can
we love the Forsytes as before?
The
remake of a classic serial about money and sex brings a tear to the eye of
Malcolm Bradbury
For
someone like me - a sentimental lover of, as well as a writer for, the once
splendid, now sagging story of British television drama - the news that ITV has
decided to risk a remake of The Forsyte Saga brings a tear to the eye and a
smile to the lips. A tear because, for anyone with a sense of cultural history,
The Forsyte Saga represents one of the high moments of screen dramatisation. A
smile because, after this nadir of a summer, when even the television repeats
were repeats of last year's repeats, a major investment in a classic project is
exactly what we and the television business need.
For those who
were not watching BBC2 on Sunday nights in 1967, possibly on the grounds of not
having been born, the television magic that was The Forsyte Saga may be hard to
understand. But this was the start of something, the show for which the phrase "TV
blockbuster" was actually coined.
The project,
begun by Donald Wilson, then head of BBC Serials, was for an unprecedented 26
one-hour episodes, dramatised from nine novels by John Galsworthy about the
history of the Forsyte family over about 50 years. It took a team of five
writers (Constance Cox, Leo Lehmann, Vincent Tilsley, Anthony Steven and Wilson
himself) to work out 1,500 pages of script. The show cost around £500,000 to
make: a formidable sum in the mid-Sixties but, nowadays, scarcely enough to keep
Carol Vorderman in designer clothes for her round of small-screen appearances.
The scripts were
excellent, and the brilliant casting and dramatic chemistry between the lead
characters set a new standard, holding a fascinated audience for 26 weeks. The
"modern" classic serial was born. Shown on the new channel, BBC2, on
Sundays at 7.25pm, class, sex and mammon brought even God to a standstill.
Churches stood empty and vicars despaired for the next half-year. Susan
Hampshire became a universal love object. Eric Porter, at 40, became one of the
most famous actors of the day, as the formidable Soames. The scene in which he
rapes his estranged wife, Irene (Nyree Dawn Porter), became one of the most
famous on British television.
Why did it work
so well? Television executives still ask the question, but clearly all the
instincts were right. It had the ideal story. Although Galsworthy did win the
Nobel Prize for literature in 1932, he is not a classic novelist in the same
sense as Jane Austen or Charles Dickens. Nor is he one of the greatest
20th-century novelists. But he did produce a great example of something that
has always been basic to the novel - the bourgeois family saga, the tale of the
generations.
The first
volume, The Man of Property, appeared in 1906, at the peak of Edwardian
bourgeois wealth and confidence. By the time the ninth volume appeared, the
Great War had come, and it was all nearly over.
The Forsyte Saga
is also a major story of Englishness - about the ambitions, possessions, loves,
lusts and dynastic ambi- tions of a well-dressed and well-endowed family at the
centre of commercial society.
It tells of a
time when Britain was rich and powerful, when the bourgeoisie was rich and
powerful, and when the family was everything. The Forsyte story was that of a
class and nation at its last great moment, before the collapse following the
First World War.
Galsworthy
intended his books to be a satire of what he detested: class, wealthy hypocrisy
and the British preference for property over passion. As he himself said, he
started his tale with an instructive sight - "an upper-middle-class family
in full plumage". This family is arrogant, offensive and "brilliantly
repugnant". It is even dangerous, when it thinks its own interests are threatened.
Yet somehow, as the characters deepened and the saga extended, it became a more
intimate, affectionate presentation of a rich, if often repellent, way of life.
When Galsworthy started writing, he was a bitter critic of his times. When he
finished, he was recalling a wonderful world that was almost done.
Still, in the
1960s, Galsworthy's Edwardian world was not so far away. The Edwardian
generation still lived. Many things he wrote about - property, possession,
class and, above all, the power, importance and security of family - still
mattered. Britain was still a bourgeois society, concerned with home, family,
property and place. Today, perhaps, it is not. The central images of The
Forsyte Saga - of women as possession and property, of children as our own
genetic promise for the future, of the stability of households as the guarantee
of a good society - mean less in our age of populist solitude. A modern adapter
will have to look with fresh eyes at material that worked very well in the
Sixties.
Interestingly,
although the BBC began to develop the project, it is now to be made by Granada
Television, while the BBC contents itself with "contemporary" drama.
This looks like a reversal of roles, although it was Granada that made two
other of the greatest British television epics, Brideshead Revisited and The
Jewel in the Crown.
What this
promises is a serious modern classic done to a serious standard.
Will it work?
Perhaps yes, but to a different formula. The first Forsyte Saga was upmarket
Dallas - far less slick, but cleverer, deeper, more aware of social complexity.
It told an understandable truth about society; and its mixture of love and
criticism of Britishness worked.
Will it work
now? If it does, it will be because of a different theme - the war of the
genders, central to the story, and now the most topical theme on television.
What is clear is that early modern "classics" are now harder material
to work with, because the glimpses of patriotic, patriarchal, imperial
Britishness are matters of anxiety. In 1967, it was still half-contemporary
drama; now it is the story of a past just slipping beyond familiar memory. So
how will we feel about it now? And can we come to love it as we did before?
Published 21 August 2000 © New Statesman 1913–2008
http://www.newstatesman.com/200008210004
Other interesting social articles: [Next] [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]
Página creada y actualizada por grupo "mmm".
Para cualquier cambio, sugerencia,etc. contactar con: bargasca@uv.es
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés López
© Bárbara Gasquet Carrera
Universitat de València Press
Creada: 06/110/2008
Última Actualización: 06/11/2008