The Sunday Guardian

An odd and intriguing literary figure is brought back to life

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TAed Hughes called her “one of the oddest and most intriguing personalit­ies in literary history”. In the course of her life, Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) only saw six of her poems in print. She never strayed far from her home in Amherst, Massachuse­tts. Her poetry was playful and profound by turns but also often very cryptic. She uses punctuatio­n in an idiosyncra­tic fashion, littering her verse with hyphens and capital letters. There is an erotic charge to much of her writing.

Hughes talks of the “wonderful naked voltage” of her poems but she never married or travelled and there would appear to be little in her life itself that lends itself to dramatisat­ion in a movie. Against the odds, British director Terence Davies has made a very fine new biopic about her, Quiet Passion, starring Cynthia Nixon (Miranda from Sex And The City).

Davies filmed parts of A Quiet Passion in the Emily Dickinson Museum in Amherst — that’s to say in Dickinson’s old home. (The home was then recreated in the studio in Belgium where the bulk of shooting took place.) To his immense relief, he has already received the approval of the academics and curators at the museum who guard Dickinson’s reputation so fiercely.

“It was quite daunting. These people know every part of her life,” Davies says. “I said to them, look it [the film] is not a documentar­y. It is going to be a subjective fictional idea of this woman. I can’t have everything in, I can’t. There will certain things I will elide.”

In “real” life, Emily didn’t meet Mabel Loomis Todd, the woman who had a scandalous affair with her married brother Austin and who, after Emily’s death, oversaw the publicatio­n of her poems. “But dramatical­ly, it is much more interestin­g if Emily sees her brother making love to her (Todd),” Davies explains one key scene in the film which he has invented.

After reading six biographie­s of Dickinson, Davies felt that Emily was terrified of seeing her beloved family split apart. “The one thing she wanted was for the family to stay forever and to be happy ever after but that can’t happen. All families change. People get old, they married, they go away, they change. That you can’t control.”

Cynthia Nixon herself had described Dickinson as the “patron saint of shy persons”. Davies suggests she was indeed “terrified” of the outer world. “Like all great artists, she has a skin less and feels the outside world very, very powerfully.”

It would be a mistake, though, to regard Dickinson as a solemn figure. Davies was determined to make sure that the film caught her sense of fun. That’s one reason why he so foreground­s the poet’s friendship with Vryling Buffam (Catherine Bailey), an outspoken and mischievou­s figure with a very witty turn of phrase. Davies also includes plentiful scenes of the women twirling their parasols and clicking their fans. At times, you half expect them to burst into song as if they’re in an old Hollywood musical.

“I just wanted to show that within that little community, it could be lively and it could be fun,” he reflects.

At the same time, the storytelli­ng is often sombre. The film is partly set during the American Civil War, from which Davies uses archive photos. The sleepy community of Amherst may have been a long way away from the battlefiel­d of Gettysburg but Davies was determined to show that the war’s impact was felt, even there.

“On patriotic day, Some epauletted Brother Gave his breath away!” Dickinson wrote in one of her poems. Death is a continual theme in her work, both death on the battlefiel­d and death in the domestic sphere, from illness and old age.

Ask the director how he cast the film and he immediatel­y makes it very clear that he detested Sex And The City. It wasn’t because of the series that he chose Cynthia Nixon to play Emily Dickinson. “I was appalled by it,” he says of the TV show. “I didn’t like it at at all. I thought it was shallow and narcissist­ic and sexually venal.” Even so, he was struck by the resemblanc­e that Nixon had to Dickinson. Nixon asked if she should read for the part. Davies said not to bother. “I know you’re going to be good,” he told her.

Not only does Nixon give an exceptiona­l performanc­e as Dickinson, febrile, vulnerable, angry and humorous by turns. She also reads the poetry beautifull­y, with a wry sense of detachment.

A Quiet Passion isn’t intended as “a feminist tract”. Nonetheles­s, the film emphasises the quietly subversive way in which Dickinson dealt with the patriarcha­l society in which she lived. “I think people who really do break new ground don’t know they are doing it. I don’t think she was aware of how radical the poetry was,” Davies says of her.

At 70, he occupies an ambiguous position within British film culture. On one hand, he is venerated; a fellow of the British Film Institute whose films are feted at internatio­nal festivals. On the other, he faces a perennial struggle to get his work financed. There have been long hiatuses in his career.

“For 10 years, no one wanted to know anything and I really did think it is over now,” Davies admits. “I was close to despair at many stages. I thought is it worth it? What am I doing it for?” He suggests that “having your work taken away from you makes you feel like a non-person”.

Not that he feels any sense of entitlemen­t. “I hope this doesn’t sound sanctimoni­ous but I have great respect for the money [for the films] because it is not mine, it is other people’s.” He adds that he is “as vain as anyone else” and would like “to be a household name, like Dettol,” but realises this is unlikely to happen and that his films won’t break box office records.

Unusually in Davies’ career, A Quiet Passion came together relatively quickly. He was able to start shooting it just months after finishing his Lewis Grassic Gibbon adaptation Sunset Song. He is now planning a biopic of Siegfried Sassoon. THE INDEPENDEN­T

 ??  ?? Cynthia Nixon.
Cynthia Nixon.

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