Birmingham Post

Is Bridget Jones still relevant 25 years on?

As a 25th anniversar­y edition of Bridget Jones’s Diary is published, authors and broadcaste­rs reflect on their connection with the famous heroine. finds out more

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LOVE her or loathe her, Bridget Jones is here to stay. Fans of, and newcomers to, the 30-something chardonnay­swilling singleton can shortly bag a 25th anniversar­y edition of Bridget Jones’s Diary, with added extracts from author Helen Fielding’s early journalism and musings about Bridget Jones in the 21st century. Millions of copies of the original, inspired by Jane Austen’s novel Pride and Prejudice and evolved from Helen’s newspaper columns, have been sold globally, spawning three further books and three film adaptation­s starring Renée Zellweger as Bridget, Hugh Grant as Daniel Cleaver and Colin Firth as Mark Darcy.

In the new book, Helen explains: “Sometimes people claim that Bridget was the godmother of chick lit. But the truth is it wasn’t just Bridget or me, it was zeitgeist. The fictional representa­tion of single women had not caught up with reality.” So, do other authors feel that Bridget is still relevant

25 years on?

AUTHOR and broadcaste­r Mariella Frostrup reckons Bridget Jones’s Diary is as relevant today as it was 25 years ago. “It was a revolution­ary text when it first came out. For anyone who was a young woman in the Nineties, it’s like having a book equivalent of the soundtrack to your life, summing up the singleton lifestyle that so many of us were living,” says Mariella, author of Desire: 100 of Literature’s Sexiest Stories.

“There’s nothing in this book, including her many attempts at creating the perfect relationsh­ip, that isn’t relevant today.

“Much as we talk the talk, I don’t think the world has changed dramatical­ly on the romantic front, or in terms of people aspiring to find the right partner. And I think Daniel Cleavers are in great abundance.

Mariella Frostrup

“I don’t really see what would be out of date in the book, apart from the smoking.

“It’s such a relief to read about someone real rather than a prototype of what we think humanity should be like. If every single book about a woman was some prototype feminist saying all the right things and behaving in an absolutely admirable and militantly feminist way, it would be a dreary world.”

She continues: “Increasing­ly, in these rather intolerant times, I think it’s very good for us to be familiar with human foibles rather than constantly seeking human perfection.

“Bridget Jones’s Diary is a totally timeless book. It’s about all of the things that human beings will always aspire to: a connection with others, to find someone to love you, to find someone you can love back and to be the best person you can possibly be while at the same time recognisin­g that we are all deeply flawed.”

ALEXANDRA HEMINSLEY was a junior press officer at Picador when a young woman called Bridget arrived for two weeks’ work experience in 2000. Little did she know it was actually Renée Zellweger who was there to research the part of her alter ego.

“A smiley blonde woman who had a very posh accent and was quite amenable about helping out seemed completely normal,” recalls Alexandra, bestsellin­g author of Some Body To Love. “Only the publicity director knew who she was. I’m sure she had quite a laugh watching me try to befriend Renée. “We sat on opposite sides of the partition, so if I stood up I could see her desk. The phones diverted to me and to her. There was no social media then, you had to answer the phone. After two or three days, I started to hear her say, ‘Hello, publicity,’ just like me, and I wondered if she was taking the mickey. “After she’d left, she wrote me a letter to thank me for looking after her, so I didn’t feel like I’d been taken for a fool – and I had a laugh with my boss about it.”

Alexandra continues: “The whole pressure around body image and counting and quantifyin­g yourself the way those diary entries open with all the statistics, is definitely still relevant and is fuelled by social media. You can get your digital calorie counter and your Apple watch counting your steps.

“She would be counting so much more in those diary entries now, the likes, the steps...”

Nell Frizzell

Renée Zellweger in Bridget Jones’s Diary

VOGUE columnist Nell Frizzell, whose new book The Panic Years explores womanhood and motherhood, recalls that when Bridget Jones’s Diary was first published in 1996, she was 12 and her mother wouldn’t let her read it. “She just wanted to protect me from the archetype of the neurotic self-hating woman. In a funny way that was a real feminist act on my mum’s part. She knew I had enough baggage about my weight and my looks and didn’t want me to have that exacerbate­d by the book.

“But I look back at Bridget Jones and the ‘Smug Marrieds’ and her feelings of being out of sync with so many people around her and of running out of time, and I completely understand. “Bridget Jones is still really relatable because unfortunat­ely, we have not

Bridget Jones’s Diary author Helen Fielding with actress Renée Zellweger, who played the character in the film adaptation and its sequels

changed the way men think about commitment and fertility, and therefore women are (often) still expected to do that heavy lifting on their own.”

In terms of the workplace sexual harassment Bridget puts up with, Nell says: “The #MeToo movement has shown that stuff is still happening in quite a lot of industries which we think of as aspiration­al and glamorous – film, TV, theatre. The way it’s handled in the book and films, in a Carry On, bum-pinching, cleavage-ogling way, is now more uncomforta­ble with an audience.

But a lot of people are still sleeping with their bosses and massively regretting it.”

BESTSELLIN­G novelist Fiona Gibson, whose new book The Dog Share is out in March, reflects: “Recently, I dipped back into the book which grew out of those columns, expecting it to be horribly dated. It is dated, of course; sexism abounds, Bridget tolerates it and believes her life is incomplete until she meets Mr Right. “But so much of Bridget still resonates today – like that feeling that she must better herself and be a proper grown up. Back then it seems almost quaint that, in her world, this amounted to calorie counting while trying – and failing catastroph­ically – to limit her consumptio­n of cigarettes and booze.

“Pre-Botox, fillers, Instagram and the Kardashian-influenced

contouring make-up that grew from it, there’s an innocence about Bridget’s yearnings to be a better woman.

“My daughter, who’s 20, would find her terribly dated. But her peer group is familiar with loneliness and finding solace and joy in the company of friends. I think we’ll always warm to the idea of a young woman bumbling through life, cocking up regularly, making us feel better about our own screw-ups.”

DAISY BUCHANAN, host of You’re Booked – a podcast dedicated to reading – whose debut novel Insatiable is published in February, read the books as a teenager.

“I think it’s relevant today. What’s really sad is that we’ve become a lot more earnest and I wish we could learn to laugh at ourselves a little more. I think in this day and age the single Bridget would have Tinder binges with diary entries like: ‘Must find sensible, functional man and not look at Tinder because it’s all a disaster’ and the next day would write: ‘Hungover. Franticall­y

swiping.”’

Daisy Buchanan

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