Empire (UK)

ANNE BOLEYN

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★★★★ OUT NOW (CHANNEL 5) EPISODES VIEWED 3 OF 3

DIRECTOR Lynsey Miller CAST Jodie Turner-smith, Mark Stanley, Paapa Essiedu, Lola Petticrew

PLOT England, 1536. Henry VIII’S (Stanley) second wife Anne Boleyn (Turner-smith) has been queen for two-and-a-half years, delivered a daughter, Elizabeth, and suffered two miscarriag­es. Although the most powerful woman in the country, her failure to provide a son, plus the looming presence of her lady-in-waiting Jane Seymour (Petticrew), are threatenin­g her status.

THINGS HAVE CERTAINLY become more exciting since the refresh button was hit on the period drama. Armando Iannucci’s The Personal History Of David Copperfiel­d pivoted on the earnest charms of Dev Patel as its beleaguere­d yet talented lead. Rachel Weisz’s leather trousers in The Favourite become a significan­t symbol of queer culture. Now we have Jodie Turner-smith — the first Black woman to play Queen Anne — the Queen & Slim star lending a singular agency to the doomed monarch.

The three-part series begins with all but a ticking clock, as an intertitle informs us that Boleyn has just five months left to live. Newbie screenwrit­er Eve Hedderwick Turner ekes maximum drama from the slim yet significan­t number of facts on record about Boleyn in her script: the queen is fighting a losing battle to give Henry VIII an heir, while Jane Seymour (Lola Petticrew) begins to win over his attention from the sidelines.

With a predominan­tly female creative team behind the show (director Lynsey Miller, producer Faye Ward, writer Eve Hedderwick Turner), the blank pages of Boleyn’s history book are filled with a modern, empowered interpreta­tion of the queen. She is shown to enjoy sex with the king beyond the call of duty, bolstered by the kinetic, primal chemistry shared by Turner-smith and Mark Stanley as Henry VIII. She confidentl­y navigates through the inner politics of the court, her treatment as a female monarch feeling fresh and mined from contempora­ry celebrity culture, as whispers from the shadows brand her everything from a whore to a witch.

It’s an inevitably demanding role for Turnersmit­h; in the opening episode alone, Boleyn suffers severe physical and emotional trauma in quick succession. Yet the actor exudes a lioness level of self-protection and leadership as the blows come thick and fast, leaving no doubt as to how she became queen in the first place. A small but well-assembled supporting cast elevates her performanc­e. Stanley’s portrayal of Henry VIII translates as temperamen­tal and insecure over nefarious. I May Destroy You’s Paapa Essiedu lingers as Boleyn’s brother and support network George, and Lola Petticrew commendabl­y embodies the chaste but slippery Seymour.

As a progressiv­e and engaged entry in the modern period-drama canon Anne Boleyn succeeds, but it endures as a showcase of Turnersmit­h’s resilience as a performer; her Anne seems to lure those around her into her own gravitatio­nal pull. Though her fate is sealed from the opening credits, Boleyn’s final months are no less delicious to behold, and pose the devastatin­g question of what could’ve been had her husband not ended her life so soon

VERDICT

Anne Boleyn proves that a modern spin on a historical milestone doesn’t have to be radical to make its mark. A dazzling showcase of talent, that cements Turner-smith as one of the finest emerging actors working today.

 ??  ?? Anne (Jodie Turner-smith) with brother George (Paapa Essiedu).
Anne (Jodie Turner-smith) with brother George (Paapa Essiedu).

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