The Critic

Arty Types

Smallscree­n scriptwrit­er

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D.J Taylor on Sandy Devereux

if not quite in the stratosphe­ric class of Andrew Davies, to whom he has been known to refer as “my mentor”, Sandy Devereux has, over the past 30 years, carved out quite a career as the adaptor of “classic” novels for peak-time television. His version of H.G. Wells’s Love

and Mr Lewisham won a Bafta back in the days when Stephen Fry was merely a promising young comic actor, while the

Radio Times declared that his work on a brace of Iris Murdoch titles “lingered long in the memory”.

What qualities distinguis­h Sandy’s approach to his task? Is he the kind of adaptor who dutifully applies himself to teasing out the author’s true intentions from beneath a pile of surface clutter? Does he simply transfer the original dialogue to the small screen with a minimum of fuss? Will he blaze off along new and unexpected trails, searching out hidden agendas and unseen currents? No, the signature mark of practicall­y every script he has ever filed is a resolute determinat­ion to bump up the sexual content.

And so, with Sandy’s tender hand on the tiller, a chaste kiss in a Victorian novel usually ends up as a five-minute snog; a wink over the dinner-table turns into a frenzied shagathon; and the scene in his take on Mansfield Park in which Fanny Price wallowed suggestive­ly in her bath produced an angry letter to

The Times from the Jane Austen Society. Asked to justify these exaggerati­ons, Sandy invariably replies that, constraine­d as they were by the Victorian censors, Dickens, Thackeray and Co would have warmly approved of them. There is also the fact that, as he regularly reminds audiences at literary festivals, nineteenth-century fiction can be just the tiniest bit dull to the modern viewer and badly needs gingering up.

Ten years ago, all this was enough to supply a raft of commission­s and admiring profiles in newspaper arts supplement­s. Just lately, on the other hand, Sandy — well into his seventh decade now and recently divorced — is finding the going unexpected­ly tough. A well-known actress is supposed to have walked off the set of a BBC Two production of Where Angels Fear To Tread on the grounds that a protracted scene of corset removal was “gratuitous”, and a Professor of Victorian Literature recently took to the

Times Literary Supplement to denounce him as a “vulgarian”. It is all very odd and Sandy, for three decades the undisputed master of bonnets, carriage rides and heaving decolletag­e, can’t understand it.

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