The Denver Post

Jane Austen’s “Sanditon” unfinished no more

- By Roslyn Sulcas

“Charlotte, are you not excited to be returning?”

When that question is posed in the opening moments of the trailer for the second season of “Sanditon,” it sounds very much like a humorous nod to the show’s own history.

“Sanditon,” based on

Jane Austen’s unfinished final novel, first aired in Britain in 2019 and wasn’t renewed by its principal broadcaste­r, ITV, after disappoint­ing viewing numbers. But the show, which had largely positive reviews, garnered a passionate following, and after a well-focused campaign by fans and a successful American run in early 2020, “Sanditon” is now returning for at least two more seasons. The six-part Season 2 premiered Sunday on PBS’ “Masterpiec­e.”

The fan movement started in Britain with a barrage of outraged messages on social media after ITV canceled the show in December 2019. This eventually led to the formation of a fan group called the Sanditon Sisterhood, which began a mass Twitter campaign organized around #Savesandit­on.

“When I heard it wasn’t coming back, I was appalled,” said Leilani Battiste, an attorney from San Francisco who participat­ed in the effort. “It was so well done, there was a group of incredible women, a great romance, and then, like the book, the story was unfinished at the end of the season. Come on!”

Austen had written 11 chapters of “Sanditon” and begun a 12th when she stopped working on it in early 1817, a few months before she died, at 41.

The incomplete novel, which wasn’t published until 1925, is set in the quiet seaside town of Sanditon, which entreprene­ur Tom Parker (played by Kris Marshall in the series) is trying to turn into a fashionabl­e resort. Charlotte Heywood (Rose Williams), a young woman from a modest farming family, befriends the Parkers after their carriage crashes near her home. Soon, she meets Tom’s dashing brother Sidney (Theo James) and learns about Georgiana Lambe (Crystal Clarke), a young heiress from the West Indies and Austen’s first major character of color.

That’s about as far as the Austen plot goes. But by the end of the first season of the series, both women have had their romantic dreams dashed, leaving fans with a cliffhange­r regarding the fate of the Charlotte-sidney romance.

“The exciting thing about having an unfinished Austen novel was that we could keep the story going, and we set out to do an ongoing series,” said Belinda Campbell, executive producer and managing director of Red Planet Pictures, which produced the show. “We ended on the main love story not resolving because we hoped it would return.”

Although ITV was underwhelm­ed by the ratings in Britain, the show was a hit with U.S. viewers when it debuted on PBS in January 2020. The premiere was the most-watched “Masterpiec­e” episode of the year and the show’s average audience was more than 20% higher than that of the season’s other “Masterpiec­e Classic” period dramas. None of this came as a surprise to Susanne Simpson, executive producer of “Masterpiec­e.”

“We have done a lot of Austen adaptation­s — I knew our audiences would love ‘Sanditon,’ and they did,” she said in a video call. “We reached 8 million people, had 4.5 million streams of the show, and attracted a much younger audience than we usually do, which is something we are always looking for.”

But by then, ITV had already pulled the plug. However, the show’s popularity on PBS added more voices to the outcry when American viewers such as Battiste joined the Twitter campaign. The Sanditon Sisterhood also organized a letter-writing operation aimed at the producers and broadcaste­rs.

“We had tweet goals, like 20,000 tweets a day, we were doing Zoom calls, communicat­ing with each other every day,” Battiste said in a video call. “It turned into a really great community thing.” (She added that the sisterhood included “a few Sanditon bros.”)

By the time the pandemic lockdown started in March 2020, Red Planet was getting “lorry-loads” of fan mail, Campbell said. “They were the most extraordin­arily thoughtful, funny, creative efforts to demonstrat­e their passion for the show.”

As “Masterpiec­e” was putting the financing together, Justin Young, who took over as lead writer from Andrew Davies, and the rest of the producers began to think about what a second season would look like.

“We really wanted Charlotte and Georgiana to drive the season now,” Young said. “In the first series, we saw Georgiana through the lens of Charlotte and Sidney; now, there was a real opportunit­y to make a character of color an equal protagonis­t.”

In a video call, Clarke said she had initially been unsure about returning to play Georgiana. “I had concerns about the representa­tion of the character and about inclusion behind the camera as well as in front of it,” she said.

But the production added more cast and crew members of color for the new season, she said. And she grew excited to return after “seeing all the love from Twitter” and hearing about new storylines that would delve into the complexiti­es of her character’s background.

“I loved that we explored issues like the sugar boycott,” Clarke said, referring to a late-18th-century campaign by the abolitioni­st movement that encouraged people to eschew goods produced by slaves in the West Indies. “Georgiana is questionin­g her identity, and the contradict­ion that her money, which allows her to have privilege and freedom, comes from the oppression of people that look like her. Those ideas come up in Season 1, but they are really central now.”

Also central is the female independen­ce of mind and spirit that Georgiana and Charlotte embody. Despite the Austenesqu­e plethora of suitors — a dashing colonel! a brooding widower! a flamboyant artist! handsome solders! — the series takes pains to show that the two central women are forging their own paths.

“I wanted to focus on Charlotte’s defiance and strength against the societal pressure of getting married,” Williams said in a video call. “I always come back to the first time you see Charlotte in the first series: She is holding a hunting rifle, and to me, that embodies the confidence, capability and independen­ce she has always had.

“This second series feels like Charlotte finding a true sense of self.”

That will be music to the ears of the show’s most ardent supporters. Battiste, of the Sanditon Sisterhood, said the spirit and independen­ce of the female characters and their close friendship­s were a big part of what made the fan group respond so passionate­ly.

“They take their destiny in their hands more than the other Austen heroines we know,” Williams said. “We love that.”

 ?? PBS ?? Rose Williams and Theo James star in “Sanditon” on PBS.
PBS Rose Williams and Theo James star in “Sanditon” on PBS.

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