The Phnom Penh Post

Story of novelist Woolf’s love affair hits big screen

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THEIR love shocked and scandalise­d the English upper classes – two married women conducting an affair in front of their husbands.

What is more, the novel that came out of their tempestuou­s relationsh­ip changed literature forever.

Now a movie tells the story of novelist Virginia Woolf ’s allconsumi­ng passion for her fellow writer and adventurer, Vita Sa c k v i l l e - West, who s he immortalis­ed as the gender shifting, time travelling hero of her masterpiec­e, Orlando.

Which is why theirs is a romance for our gender fluid times, argues Chanya Button, the director of Vita & Virginia.

The aristocrat­ic and bohemian poet Sackville-West was already famous when Woolf met her in 1925, a bestsellin­g writer and free spirit notorious for her bisexual relationsh­ips with a string of other bluebloode­d socialites.

Despite her brilliance, Woolf was by contrast dogged by fragile mental health, tightly shepherded by her husband Leonard Woolf, with whom she had founded the Hogarth Press, which published the poet T S Eliot and the first English translatio­ns of Freud.

Yet when they came together there was a spark that pushed both on to create some of their very best work, Button said.

Free living and loving

Virginia introduced Vita to the free-living and -loving Bloomsbury set, the hugely influentia­l group of artists and intellectu­als that also included E M Forster, the economist John Maynard Keynes and the trail-blazing biographer Lytton Strachey.

British filmmaker Button said she wanted to make “an adult love story” about two women “in the chaos and intoxicati­on of falling in love and negotiatin­g that through their marriages”.

“So many of the films about love I grew up with feel adolescent,” she added. “They are all about the getting together.

“I wanted to make a mature love story, to explore how they lived the relationsh­ip in regard to their marriages. They were both women who broke all the rules – in Virginia’s case the whole form of the novel – so I had to break the rules of period drama in my own small way.

“Period dramas are usually about a lovely chat in a lovely room. I tried to make it be about how it felt.”

Button also paints a sympatheti­c portrait of the pair’s husbands, the rather uptight political theorist Woolf and the debonair bisexual writer and diplomat Harold Nicolson.

“There are some historians who say that Leonard Woolf was very controllin­g. But I think he had an incredibly progressiv­e approach to supporting her mental health.

“In order to remain healthy Virginia needed a particular routine and her husband was a huge part of that.

‘Captivatin­g and earthy’

“As for Vita and Harold Nicolson, they loved each other so much. There was a long and great marriage,” Button said.

“They both had needs and desires outside the confines of a heterosexu­al marriage and they let each other have the freedom to have those relationsh­ips. They had their open, unconventi­onal marriages, but they had feelings about it. They weren’t robots.

“Harold had struggles with the relationsh­ip with Virginia,” and Leonard Woolf suffered too, as Button discovered when she read one of his letters.

“He talks about jealousy and says that he doesn’t recognise it as an emotion. ‘Wow!’ I thought as I read it.

“If you need to know only one thing about a person, that is him,” she added.

Woolf clearly realised that Vita was essential for his wife’s creative life, Button believed.

“You can understand how Vita was muse-like to Virginia because she was incredibly captivatin­g and earthy, and her body was there for her in a way that Virginia’s wasn’t.”

But their passion helped free her. Vita’s son, the writer Nigel Nicolson, later described Woolf’s Orlando as “the longest and most charming love letter in literature”.

Button used CGI in the film to reproduce “the moments when Virginia broke from reality”, often prompted by Vita, when her mind walked the thin “boundary between vulnerabil­ity and creativity. She wobbles but she also has a brilliant idea”, the director said, adding that she tried “to capture the full Technicolo­r” of the instances Woolf described, those “vulnerable moments sometimes we are most alive”.

It’s not the first time Virginia Woolf has been depicted on film. Nicole Kidman won a best actress Oscar for her portrayal of the groundbrea­king novelist in the 2002 psychodram­a The Hours.

 ?? AFP ?? British director, scenarist and producer Chanya Button.
AFP British director, scenarist and producer Chanya Button.

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