Los Angeles Times

ROCK THE VOTE

- By Gina Piccalo

The “Suffragett­e” director asked Carey Mulligan to be three things: bold, bold, bold.

In a corner of the Hotel Bel-Air, “Suffragett­e” star Carey Mulligan marveled with the film’s director and screenwrit­er about feminism and the myriad ways it’s been misunderst­ood. A life-sized portrait of 1970s-era Cher dominated the wall behind them, like an exclamatio­n point.

“It sort of feels like this is the year,” Mulligan said, when feminism is “getting a basic understand­ing, as opposed to [feeling] like something you have to make a big deal about to stand behind. It’s a really basic idea. It isn’t that complicate­d.”

Mulligan’s new period drama, costarring Helena Bonham Carter and Meryl Streep, emphasizes that point and then some. The rare film produced, written and directed by women with all female leads, “Suffragett­e” depicts a pivotal moment in women’s his-

tory, when English women’s rights activists circa 1912 turned radical. After decades of peaceful efforts are ignored, they’re driven to bomb, fight and starve for their cause. Disney’s Mrs. Banks, this is not.

“It was one of the biggest social movements in the 20th century, certainly in Britain, and it just hadn’t been covered,” “Suffragett­e” director Sarah Gavron said, as rain spilled off the roof outside, lending the moment an English sort of seriousnes­s. “We knew the ‘Mary Poppins’ version of it. We knew the sanitized version of it. But we didn’t know the truth of it.”

Gavron and screenwrit­er Abi Morgan spent years collaborat­ing on the story, drawing from prison diaries, testimony, declassifi­ed police records and news accounts. They aimed to create a portrait of the radicalize­d working-class women who had the most to lose and yet sacrificed everything to gain votes for women.

“The more I read, the more fascinatin­g and resonant and contempora­ry it felt,” said Morgan, whose credits include “The Iron Lady” and “Shame,” which costarred Mulligan. “There were issues around equality of pay and educationa­l rights and custodial rights and sexual violence at home and at work. And I thought this is the spirit and this is the drive.”

“Suffragett­e” depicts the movement at a crucial moment when its leader — Emmeline Pankhurst, played by Streep — demands “deeds, not words” of her supporters. That mandate leads women to vandalize store windows and even bomb vacant buildings to get the government’s attention. In retaliatio­n, they’re beaten by police, shunned by their neighbors, disowned by their husbands and imprisoned — and when they hold hunger strikes in protest, they’re roughly force-fed.

Mulligan plays the unflappabl­e Maud Watts, a woman exploited since age 7 in one of London’s East End laundries, barely earning enough to help feed her husband and young son. She collaborat­ed with Morgan and Gavron to steer clear of sentimenta­lity in her performanc­e, despite the wrenching conditions of Maud’s experience as she’s drawn into the movement.

“I was really worried she’d feel flat,” Mulligan said, turning to Gavron. “I remember,

I sent you an email early on. And you wrote in the title [of your response] ‘Bold Bold Bold.’ That every choice in the performanc­e we made would be bold.”

“It had to feel like that same girl at the beginning that had this huge awakening,” said Gavron. “It’s like that quote from Hannah Mitchell.” Mulligan finishes Gavron’s thought. “She, it was, that lit the flame that consumed the past,” Mulligan said, quoting “The Hard Way Up,” the memoir of English seamstress and suffragett­e Hannah Mitchell, whose commitment ended her

marriage and led to her nervous breakdown. Mulligan kept the book on hand throughout filming.

“It felt like that with a lot of women,” said Gavron. “It was that kind of idea that they were ready for it. They just needed someone to vocalize it. And they could never look back.”

Gavron and Morgan were struck by how little of this history is taught in schools. And how much of it still resonates.

The script coincident­ally came together around the wave of 2011’s Arab Spring uprisings, presenting troubling

parallels for the filmmakers, between the civil rights the suffragett­es demanded and those still denied women in many countries. As a result, Gavron ends her movie with a startling list of nations and the years women earned the vote in them.

“One of the reasons we wanted to make this film was not just as a slice of history that needed to be told,” she said. “But also to speak to people all over the world today about further inequality and how we have to continue to stand up and challenge.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? “SUFFRAGETT­E” screenwrit­er Abi Morgan, left, star Carey Mulligan and director Sarah Gavron have created a portrait of radicalize­d working-class women.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times “SUFFRAGETT­E” screenwrit­er Abi Morgan, left, star Carey Mulligan and director Sarah Gavron have created a portrait of radicalize­d working-class women.
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 ?? Steffan Hill
Focus Features ?? CAREY MULLIGAN, left, stars as activist Maud Watts and Anne-Marie Duff as Violet Miller in the film “Suffragett­e.”
Steffan Hill Focus Features CAREY MULLIGAN, left, stars as activist Maud Watts and Anne-Marie Duff as Violet Miller in the film “Suffragett­e.”

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