Evening Standard

Stylish, bold and mesmerisin­g — this period piece is must-watch TV

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Feud: Capote vs The Swans Disney+ ★★★★★ Anna van Praagh

BOLD. Super stylish. Intelligen­t. Luxuriousl­y made and unhurried, it’s hard to watch Capote vs Swans without reaching for hyperbole. In an age of algorithm-inspired amphetamin­e-laden mass market TV, this eight-part, eight-hour series feels like one from a bygone Hollywood era. And the cast is full of surprise delights. Tom Hollander, in yet another performanc­e of a lifetime, Chloë Sevigny, Demi Moore, Calista Flockhart, Russell Tovey, Molly Ringwald.

Based on the late great American writer Truman Capote and his complex friendship­s with his “Swans” — New York’s coterie of elite Manhattan socialites — the story begins with Capote, widely considered the finest author in America at the time, basking in the glory and acclaim of Breakfast at Tiffany’s and

Hollander embodies Capote with total mastery in a performanc­e that will surely win him many, many awards

his true-crime masterpiec­e In Cold Blood, while privately struggling with alcohol issues and writer’s block.

Meanwhile, he is cementing his status as the centrepiec­e of a set which includes Babe Paley, the wife of the powerful chairman of television network CBS and Lee Radziwill, the sister of Jackie Kennedy Onassis and an aspiring actress and socialite, as well as Slim Keith, Ann Woodward, CZ Guest, Gloria Guinness, Marella Agnelli and Pamela Harriman. All immensely rich, beautiful, formidable women and regulars on the best-dressed list.

Desperate to produce something that will replenish his flounderin­g reputation, Capote decides to betray them by publishing an excerpt from his unfinished novel Answered Prayers in a 1975 issue of Esquire magazine. The piece, a thinly veiled fictionali­sation of their lives, was called La Côte Basque, after the Midtown restaurant where the ladies would often lunch. It exposed their most intimate secrets — and precipitat­ed his social downfall.

With In Cold Blood, Capote was wise enough to publish after his subjects had been executed. Here they are very much alive, and violently close ranks. “He will have no one,” says Keith, “Nothing. Everyone will see it. Everyone will watch. He will have no door open to him. He will have no oxygen. And then he will die.” Hollander, fresh from a star turn in White Lotus, embodies Capote with total mastery in a performanc­e that will surely win him many, many awards. His intonation, his high-pitched voice and eccentric mannerisms are all performed with such skill that at times as the viewer you don’t know if you’re watching Hollander or library footage.

And it’s not just the comportmen­t and voice he captures, but the tragedy of a man who knows his demons have demolished his gifts. “Tell me how to be Truman Capote again,” he says poignantly, “and I’ll do it.” Every actor shines in this series. Babe Paley is played to brittle perfection by Naomi Watts; Tovey is utterly convincing as Capote’s brutish boyfriend; Moore is pitch-perfect as the unhinged Ann Woodward.

The show is also full of unforgetta­ble one-liners: “You may be at a dull table in life. I do sympathise,’’ Capote murmurs. Then later, “Keep the Rolex and think of me as time goes by.”

The series is as pleasingly daring and experiment­al as you would expect from the two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist writer Jon Robin Baitz and director Gus Van Sant (Drugstore Cowboy, My Own Private Idaho, Milk) as the themes of ageing, alcohol and drug abuse, sex, self-sabotage, the predatory relationsh­ip between writer and subject, who owns the narrative and the complicate­d co-dependent bond between gay men and straight women are all cleverly interrogat­ed to the backdrop of old Hollywood glamour and insanely glamorous costumes. It’s expansive — spanning the Sixties right through to 1984. My only criticism of the show is that because Capote is portrayed in such an unfavourab­le light there is a certain coldness to the series. Every biography I’ve read portrays him as huge amounts of fun, where as in this he’s somewhat toxic and embittered — which lends the show a slight acidity.

But then the subject-matter is melancholy, as it focuses on the curdling of Capote’s brilliance as a writer, and the melancholy of a golden era coming to an end — what happens to the people at the centre of the party when the lights come up. That aside, this is a must-watch.

• Feud: Capote vs The Swans is streaming now on Disney+

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 ?? ?? Stellar cast: Naomi Watts , above, stars alongside Tom Hollander and Calista Flockhart, left, and Demi Moore, below, in the eight-part series
Feud: Capote vs The Swans
Stellar cast: Naomi Watts , above, stars alongside Tom Hollander and Calista Flockhart, left, and Demi Moore, below, in the eight-part series Feud: Capote vs The Swans

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