Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

When Kit met Rose

Why we love it when Cupid’s arrow flies out of the screen

- By David Barnett

Our obsession with on-screen couplings becoming romantic is evident in the amount of fan-fiction produced on the subject. It’s called “shipping” – and from Holmes and Watson to Hermione and Harry, people love to imagine what could have been.

From Bogart and Bacall to from Game of Thrones actors Kit Harington and Rose Leslie, we want it to happen. And when it does, we wish it hadn’t

For those of us who inhabit that cosy little twilight zone where the boundaries between truth and fiction blur and smudge, there’s nothing nicer than when an on-screen love affair spills over into stark reality.

Stark being the operative word, as we’re talking Game of Thrones here, and Jon Snow, bastard of that particular­ly tough Northern dynasty, and his best Westeros girl, Ygritte. More specifical­ly the actors who play them, Kit Harington and Rose Leslie, who it has been announced are to get married – in real, proper life.

Insert requisite spoiler warning here, but let’s hope the happy couple last longer than the four seasons their dramatis personae managed before the brutality of the scriptwrit­ers’ red pens intervened.

Our obsession with on-screen couplings becoming romantic is evident in the amount of fan-fiction produced on the subject. It’s called “shipping” – and from Holmes and Watson to Hermione and Harry, people love to imagine what could have been. And the delight when this transfers to the real world is palpable. Wondering “what if ?” is sometimes just as much fun as the fiction itself.

Bogie and Bacall

Perhaps the ultimate on/ off- screen romance was that conducted by Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall. Their first film together was Howard Hawks’s 1944 movie To Have and Have Not, and their chemistry was so powerful I wouldn’t be surprised to hear that the Manhattan Project had tried to weaponise it. The tough guy and the femme fatale was a match made, if not in heaven, at least in Hollywood’s golden age, and by the time they’d wrapped The Big Sleep the following year Bogie was divorc- ing his third wife and making Bacall his fourth. But where did smoulderin­g silver-screen chemistry and real-life passion begin and end? It didn’t, according to Bogart’s biographer Jeffrey Myers, who quoted Hawks as saying: “Bogie fell in love with the character she played, so she had to keep playing it the rest of her life.”

Die Hard, love harder

Sexual tension is key to any long-form drama. Today everybody jumps into bed – or, like in Doctor Foster, just hoists up their skirt and bends over the kitchen island – at the drop of a hat. Back in the 1980s, things were much more spun out. Take Moonlighti­ng, for instance. Imagine Bogie and Bacall in sports jackets rolled up to the elbows and dresses with shoulder pads, and you might have (if you squint) Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd as private eyes David Addison and Maddie Hayes. People were burning for them to get together. And then, in the third season, they did. Ratings fell faster than a thug thrown off a skyscraper in Die Hard, and the show slouched through lifeless fourth and fifth series towards cancellati­on. Reality can never match the imaginatio­n …

The Big Bang

Perhaps that audience desire fulfilled could be called the “big bang theory” … we want it to happen; and when it does, we wish it hadn’t. And while we’re at it, we can look at the sitcom of the same name. This promulgate­d the fondly held dream that for every comic-collecting geek with a drawer full of Star Trek underpants there was a hot blonde woman who would only take two seasons’ worth of relentless pursuit to admit defeat and have sex with them. Actors Kaley Cuoco and Johnny Galecki actually had a two- year real- life relationsh­ip during the early years of the show, which they managed to keep a pretty good secret. Then it ended. And now in the show they’re married. I think that’s a win, on balance.

Elementary, my dear ...

Weirdly, I’ve never thought that Sherlock Holmes and John Watson should have got together before the parts were played by Benedict Cumberbatc­h and Martin Freeman. I’m sure there’s slash fiction out there where people have Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce getting elementary with it, but I’m not going into the recesses of the dark web to find it. Cumberbatc­h and Freeman, though … the often spiky, tense relationsh­ip between hyperintel­ligent yet socially awkward Holmes and pragmatic, dour Watson is screaming for a good bedroom scene. You can even see them together in real life. “Benedict, will you wear the Doctor Strange cape tonight …?” “Only if you say, ‘What has it got in its pocketses?’, Martin.” Enough.

Courtesy The Guardian, UK

 ??  ?? Game of Thrones actors Kit Harington and Rose Leslie have announced that they are to get married
Game of Thrones actors Kit Harington and Rose Leslie have announced that they are to get married

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