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Tara Hanks

~ Author of 'The Mmm Girl' and 'Wicked Baby'

Tara Hanks

Category Archives: History

‘Keeler’ at Theatre Royal, Brighton

13 Sunday Nov 2011

Posted by marina72 in History, Profumo Affair, Theatre

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Brighton Theatre Royal, Christine Keeler, Gill Adams, John Profumo, Justine Michelle Cain, Keeler, Mandy Rice-Davies, Paul Nicholas, Profumo Affair, Stephen Ward, Wicked Baby

Keeler is a touring play about 1963’s Profumo Affair, when a young model and showgirl, Christine Keeler, was revealed to have been involved with both Britain’s Minister for War, John Profumo, and a Russian naval attaché, Eugene Ivanov. The scandal ultimately led to Profumo’s resignation, and contributed to the collapse of Macmillan’s government in 1964. It also triggered a series of trials which saw Keeler convicted of perjury and her mentor, Dr Stephen Ward, commit suicide.

Today, the Profumo Affair is considered a pivotal moment in modern English politics, when the ‘age of deference’ was supplanted by a more candid, cynical outlook. In a voiceover introducing the play, Christine (Alice Coulthard) describes herself as ‘that naked bird on a chair’, recalling the iconic photo taken by Lewis Morley at the height of the outcry.

Ivanov (Andrew Grose) and Ward (Paul Nicholas)

Written by Gill Adams, Keeler is based on The Truth at Last, Christine’s autobiography, published in 2001. The play is produced and directed by Paul Nicholas, who also stars as Ward. It was first staged in 2007 at the Gatehouse in Highgate, North London. At around the same time, a short-lived musical about the scandal opened in Greenwich.

Christine (Alice Coulthard) with Lucky (Chucky Venn)

After a two-year stint as ‘fun-time girl’ Maisie Wylde on the ITV soap, Emmerdale, Coulthard has reprised her role as Keeler.  She exudes a vivacious, naïve charm. However, Adams’ script largely avoids the more contentious aspects of the story, giving only a superficial view of Christine. Though her experiences are sometimes harrowing, their impact is not always clear.

Paul Nicholas – best-known for his role in the 1980s sitcom, Just Good Friends – is quite convincing as Ward, a middle-aged lothario and social climber. Ward’s unconsummated relationship with Keeler is the most interesting part of the story. But the play focuses more on his Svengali-like power over Christine than the wider political stakes.

Christine meets Profumo (Andrew Piper) at Cliveden

The supporting characters are presented as stereotypes – the randy politician, Soviet spy and violent drug dealer, all lovers of Keeler – while Justine Michelle Cain (The Inbetweeners) plays Christine’s brassy, blonde friend, Mandy Rice-Davies, comedically.

The set includes a screen behind which vintage newsreels are played, and the more lurid scenes enacted, while the programme includes a timeline relating the Profumo Affair to other events, from the Cuban Missile Crisis to the launch of Private Eye.

Showgirls: Christine, at left

Showgirls plucked from Murray’s Cabaret Club, where Christine first met Stephen, provide a kind of mute chorus, and their burlesque routines are both titillating and eerie. There are sex scenes and even a little nudity, but the effect is tawdry rather than erotic (which is entirely appropriate.)

Many of the audience at the matinee I attended were old enough to remember the affair, enjoying its kitschy nostalgia while chuckling ruefully at its quaint moral hypocrisy. For anyone who has seen the 1989 film, Scandal, though, it’s hard not to judge Keeler as its shadow, another retelling with a few minor tweaks.

Related posts: Crimes and Immoralities 

Read my own take on the Profumo Affair, Wicked Baby

Madame Tussaud

05 Monday Sep 2011

Posted by marina72 in Books, Fiction, History

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For Books' Sake, French Revolution, Madame Tussaud, Marie Antoinette, Michelle Moran

My review of Michelle Moran’s latest historical novel – set against the backdrop of revolutionary France – is published today at For Books’ Sake

The Pendle Witch Child

19 Friday Aug 2011

Posted by marina72 in History, Television, Witchcraft

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Child Witnesses, Documentaries, Early Modern History, Jennet Device, Lancashire Witches, Pendle Witches, Phoebe Boswell, Simon Armitage, The Pendle Witch Child, Witchcraft

Simon Armitage – one of Britain’s leading poets – was born in West Yorkshire. Like many local children, he would have been raised on stories of the Pendle Witches in nearby Lancashire.

A grimly intoxicating blend of history, crime and folklore is richly evoked in Armitage’s new BBC Four documentary, The Pendle Witch Child. Next year marks the fourth centenary of the notorious 1612 trial, the largest of its kind in England at the time. Continue reading →

Bookish Birthdays: Emily Brontё

30 Saturday Jul 2011

Posted by marina72 in Books, Fiction, History, Poetry

≈ 2 Comments

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Emily Bronte, For Books' Sake

One of my favourite authors, Emily Jane Brontё, was born on this day, July 30th,  in 1818. Read my birthday profile over at For Books’ Sake

More Brontё-related posts here

‘Black Dahlia and White Rose’

27 Monday Jun 2011

Posted by marina72 in Books, Fiction, History, Marilyn Monroe

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Black Dahlia, Crime Fiction, E-Books, Joyce Carol Oates, L.A. Noire, Marilyn Monroe

L.A. Noire: The Collected Stories

L.A. Noire is styled like a detective movie of the 1940s. Aesthetically, it pays homage to film noir, while adapting new technologies like real-time action and multiple camera angles. Set in post-war Los Angeles, it also features a jazz soundtrack. Publication of an e-book of eight short stories by some of the world’s leading writers – in genres ranging from literary to pulp fiction – was announced in May. Each piece is set in 1947, the same year that casino owner Bugsy Siegel  and Elizabeth Short (‘The Black Dahlia’) were murdered. Continue reading →

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