The New Zealand Herald

Did TVNZ's biopic Jean deserve to win big?

Worthy salute to ‘world’s most eligible air girl’ and difficult woman

- Alex Casey

At the New Zealand Television Awards last week, one production, one story and one name ruled the night: Jean. It became something of a running joke as Jean, the Sunday Theatre production that first aired on TVNZ1 in 2016, managed to be nominated in almost every single category.

The rowdy comedians in the front even began a slow, quiet chant of “Jean, Jean, Jean” towards the end of the night. It won for Best Feature Drama, Best Director: Drama, Best Script: Drama and Best Actress: Kate Elliot, so I thought it was about time I bloody well watched it.

A recipient of NZ on Air’s platinum grant, Jean received $3,256,700, the largest sum ever allocated to a one-off drama.

The result? An impressive-looking production that sits comfortabl­y alongside any internatio­nal biopic period drama you’d happily take your parents to, with the added bonus of preserving a lesser-celebrated piece of New Zealand history. But, just like the journey which made Jean Batten worldfamou­s, there are stretches where it feels

like a bit of a slog. Starring Kate Elliott as Batten, the TV film charts the preparatio­n and execution of her successful world-beating solo flight from England to New Zealand in 1936.

Referred to on her Wikipedia page as “the Greta Garbo of the skies”, Batten was a glamorous enigma, who was known to apply lipstick in the cockpit and smile for the cameras but remained a fierce recluse in her private life. Elliott is well-deserving of her award for Jean, balancing the beaming, charming public persona with the dark, steely obsessive in private.

Miranda Harcourt as Jean’s mother, Ellen Batten, provides a Dance Moms character from a near century before Dance Moms existed. Pushing her Jean to strive for greatness at all costs, her command over Jean’s life seeps through the silences when they are together.

Whether she is enforcing a strict biography-writing regimen of 400 words a day, or protecting her private life from the press — a secret fiance in Australia does not gel well with her “world’s most eligible air girl” persona — it’s made clear, in more ways than one, there was no Jean without Ellen.

The whispered, breathless conversati­ons that appear throughout Jean run a real risk of slowing the momentum to a sputter but are saved by the dramatic in-flight action sequences. Violent Mad Maxlooking dust storms and a near-death experience in the middle of the ocean work to drive up the stakes far more effectivel­y than people talking in hushed tones about “what happened to Amelia” (Earhart). In the last 15 minutes, Jean’s previously infallible world becomes jeopardise­d and we see just how treacherou­s her pursuit really was.

Aside from a few shonky green screens here and there, Jean is an absolute stickler for detail. Whether it’s the light catching through the white jumpsuit she lays out the night before the big flight, or her crunching an Oddfellow under the stars, bored in the cockpit, the world of Jean feels fully realised.

When Kate Elliott took out her award for playing Jean, she thanked the “difficult women” of the world, our more complicate­d heroes who, due to their gender, have not been remembered and regaled in the same way as our great men.

As Jean herself says, what is outrageous for a woman is courageous for a man. A fact sadly as true now as it was back then.

 ??  ?? Kate Elliot captures the enigma of Jean Batten.
Kate Elliot captures the enigma of Jean Batten.
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