The Daily Telegraph

Pride and Prejudice adaptation to be darker and ‘less bonnety’

- By Hannah Furness ARTS CORRESPOND­ENT

IN YEARS gone by, it was a recipe for television gold: a classic romance complete with corsets, crossed-wires and a happy ending.

But the tried and tested version of Pride and Prejudice is to be given something of a makeover, as a new television adaptation aims to make it “less bonnety”.

Mammoth Screen, the team behind Poldark and Victoria, is to adapt the Jane Austen classic for ITV, challengin­g the BBC as the traditiona­l home of the literary adaptation.

It is now more than 20 years since the BBC’S most famous version, written for the small screen by Andrew Davies and starring Colin Firth as Mr Darcy.

The ITV version, announced in the Radio Times today, will be adapted by the playwright Nina Raine, who has never written for television before or seen a Pride and Prejudice adaptation. Producers said that the new version would tease out the story’s “darker tones”.

“Pride and Prejudice is actually a very adult book, much less bonnety than people assume,” Raine said of the project. “I hope I do justice to Austen’s dark intelligen­ce – sparkling, yes, but sparkling like granite.” Damien Timmer, managing director of Mammoth, said, “In this age of the box set – with audiences loving to binge on complex, serialised dramas – it feels absolutely right to reassess the great classics. Every generation needs its own adaptation of this perfect novel.

“Nina Raine is one of the most gifted writers working today, and her wit and emotional intelligen­ce make her the perfect match for Jane Austen.

“She’s a devoted fan of the book, but she’s never seen any previous adaptation­s – so pleasingly the novel only exists in her imaginatio­n.”

Raine’s previous work includes Consent at the National Theatre and Tribes at the Royal Court, which was nominated for an Olivier for best new play.

It will be the sixth television adaptation of Pride and Prejudice, with all previous versions made for the BBC.

Mammoth Screen is already making Vanity Fair for ITV, filming starts next month, and a second series of Victoria, and a fourth of Poldark are on the way.

 ??  ?? It has been more than 20 years since the BBC’S adaptation of the Austen novel
It has been more than 20 years since the BBC’S adaptation of the Austen novel

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