Friday 31 December 2021

Paul Bettany and Claire Foy introduce A Very British Scandal – BBC / A Very British Scandal 2 reviews


 

A Very British Scandal review – Claire Foy is masterful as the ‘dirty duchess’ out for blood

 

Buckle up and enjoy the ride! … Claire Foy as the Duchess of Argyll in A Very British Scandal.

The crowd outside the divorce court screamed ‘Slut!’ But Margaret of Argyll would not be cowed by them, the judge or the explicit photos – as this mean, lean drama brilliantly shows

 

Lucy Mangan

@LucyMangan

Sun 26 Dec 2021 17.00 EST

https://www.theguardian.com/tv-and-radio/2021/dec/26/a-very-british-scandal-review-claire-foy-is-masterful-as-the-dirty-duchess-out-for-blood

 

Well NOW it’s Christmas. Sarah Phelps has delivered. Not an Agatha Christie adaptation this time but an original drama, A Very British Scandal (BBC One), about the notorious case of Argyll v Argyll – the only one any erstwhile law student ever remembers (and I speak from experience). This is thanks to the fact that it was a vicious divorce case between the Duke and Duchess of Argyll involving multiple allegations of infidelity, one of which was attested to by a photo of the Duchess fellating a man whose face was not visible in the picture but who was not her husband. The duke had various measurements taken so this could be proved in court. The duchess was identified by her pearl necklace. No, really.

 

It’s surprising that no one has brought the story to the screen before now. Here it is a companion piece – or perhaps furtherance of what seems set to become an anthology series about historical media frenzies, national prurience and social hypocrisy – to 2018’s A Very English Scandal, about the Jeremy Thorpe affair.

 

The Argyll case (or the ‘Headless Man affair’ as it was also known, thanks to the photo that quickly became infamous) of course provoked a media storm. A Very British Scandal opens in 1963 with the Duchess (Claire Foy, most recently seen on the small screen as the Queen in The Crown and here bringing the same masterful skills to another aristocratic but wholly different character) facing the screaming abuse of a crowd (“Scum!” “Slut!”) as she enters Edinburgh’s court of session to open divorce proceedings. Inside, the Duke of Argyll (Paul Bettany) offers her one last chance to end things quietly “Because I’m an honourable man. You’ve played a spirited game but we both know you haven’t the stomach for this.” The look on the duchess’s face suggests we should all buckle up to enjoy the coming ride.

 

We flash back to 16 years earlier, when committed socialite Margaret Sweeny (nee Whigham, the spoilt only daughter of a fabulously wealthy industrialist) who is rumoured to have had affairs with everyone from David Niven to Prince Aly Khan and is about to divorce her first husband, meets the dashing Captain Ian Campbell, holder of the Argyll title and lands. They find their interests align quite nicely and – once he’s divorced from Louise (his second wife and mother of his two sons) – get hitched.

 

At first it seems a good match, if only in the sense that they are as monstrous and self-involved as each other. They become the Duke and Duchess, move to the family pile in Inveraray and she pays for everything from the restoration of the castle to the final bills for Louise’s fur coats.

 

Fairly soon, though, the duke reveals himself to be a violent, vicious drunk. Margaret’s own essential viciousness serves her well. She remains uncowed by her situation and by the end of the episode we see her forging letters from Louise claiming that Ian’s sons aren’t his, to secure her place at Inverary which would otherwise pass to them.

 

A Very British Scandal has been billed – I suspect because anything involving a woman and sex in The Past must – as a feminist retelling of the Argyll marriage divorce, but in fact Phelps doesn’t lean too hard into that. Yes, there are moments when the likes of shit-stirring frenemy Maureen (Julia Davis, simultaneously lightly and deeply malevolent, as is her special gift) tries to shame her for her sexual appetite. And it is clear all along that hypocrisy abounded and life in the 60s wasn’t nearly as liberated for women as the men then, or history since, would like us to believe.

 

But there is, thankfully – because it would do both Margaret and feminism no favours – no attempt to make us view her through a new, heroic lens. We are invited to admire her fortitude with the social odds stacked against her, which is a different thing. The duchess was never a champion of women – she was a champion of Margaret Campbell and Margaret Campbell alone. Not inviting pity, refusing to kowtow to others’ opinions – these are admirable qualities and Phelps and Foy showcase them magnificently, but they are not specifically feminist. The very public divorce came about because the equally stubborn duke and duchess had their teeth buried in each other’s necks equally firmly and wouldn’t let go. A Very British Scandal, with its lean, mean script and its refusal to reinvent the duchess as an icon of the movement, is the very best and fairest tribute that could be given her.

 

 This article was amended on 27 December 202. Ian Campbell became the Duke of Argyll on the death of his cousin, not father as an earlier version implied; he had inherited the title before his marriage to Margaret Sweeny; also, misspellings of Inveraray and Prince Aly Khan were corrected.



REVIEW

A Very British Scandal, review: a poor attempt at redeeming a truly unlikeable person

   

Three hours inside one of the most famously toxic marriages in British history – merry Christmas from the BBC

 

By

Anita Singh,

 ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR

26 December 2021 • 10:00pm

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/tv/0/british-scandal-review-poor-attempt-redeeming-truly-unlikeable/

 

Toffs. What a dreadful breed, eh? Utterly callous, frightful snobs, that treat the little people like dirt. Who would want to spend even a minute with these horrors?

 

Such is the tone of A Very British Scandal (BBC One), which recreates the toxic marriage of the Duke and Duchess of Argyll, and a divorce that turned the Duchess into an object of vilification when the infamous “headless man” photo of her and an unidentified lover became public knowledge in 1963.

 

It presents an insurmountable problem in television terms. Because if these aristocrats are so irredeemably awful, spending three hours with them is going to be a pretty grim experience. Do not come to this expecting something in the mould of A Very English Scandal, which was funny and clever, and revolved around a terrifically entertaining performance from Hugh Grant.

 

Essentially, the screenplay involves two people – the Duchess, played by Claire Foy, and the Duke, a reptilian Paul Bettany – being vile to one another. Merry Christmas from the BBC!

 

In interviews to publicise the drama, Foy said she wanted to make Margaret, the Duchess, a sympathetic character – a victim of the patriarchy, punished for being a sexually liberated woman while her also-adulterous husband got off scot-free.

 

But there isn’t a single sympathetic note. Margaret is a spoiled, scheming, pathological liar. At some level, she is the product of her upbringing: an indulgent father and an uncaring mother. But all that can really be said in her favour is that other characters here are even less likeable.

 

The period stylings mean that this production looks very much like the early series of The Crown, and Foy looks very much like the Queen she played in it. Behaviour-wise, though, think of Princess Margaret at her worst.

 

Bettany plays Ian, 11th Duke of Argyll, as a monster – cruel, drunken, violent. When he meets Margaret, he has his sights set on her family fortune. But there is no love flowing in the other direction either: Margaret appears to have fallen for the Campbell seat, Inveraray Castle, rather than the man himself.

 

The most hideous person here, though, is Maureen (Marchioness of Dufferin and Ava, and a member of the Guinness clan). Writer Sarah Phelps gives Maureen a speech in a later episode (all available now as a boxset) stating the British aristocracy’s official position on the Argyll divorce trial. “It’s not just your yawning f---y being shown to the world, it’s all of ours… in newspapers being thumbed by every shop girl and grocer. Our private lives stay behind closed doors. It’s why the little people in the grubby pits look up to us, because we are not them.”

 

The Argyll vs Argyll scandal was all about sex. Here, there is very little of it on screen. The vulgarity is mainly supplied by Maureen, whose speech is littered with references to a---s and c---s and who kicks off racy dinner parties by winding up little clockwork penises and setting them off across the table. We must assume this is based on truth, otherwise it would be too odd for Phelps to make up.

 

I know more about the case than I did before, so in that sense it works as a piece of history. It is effective as an invitation to gawp at the upper classes, and reassure ourselves that we are better than them. And it looks beautiful – the costumes, the make-up, the interiors. The high production values and the quality cast give the impression of a premium product.

 

But the period tropes are lazy. A society beauty walking into a bar, where a photographer jumps out in the lobby wielding a camera with giant flash? Naturally. An unhappy couple eating at opposite ends of an enormous dining table? Of course.

 

The drama has no interest in discovering the identity of the “headless man”. It cares only about showing that Margaret was wronged. But if that's the aim, then it fails, even if the judgment in the case (which took more than three hours to deliver, we are told) was unnecessarily damning: a “completely promiscuous woman” with a “debased sexual appetite”.

 

Odd, then, to cut off the story at that point. What happened to Margaret thereafter? Was she cast out of society, as Maureen threatened? All we get is brief footage of the real Duchess being interviewed in her old age. “I knew I loved him,” she says. After the drama we’ve just watched, I don’t believe her for a second.


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