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29 October 2014
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Tess Of The D'UrbervillesÌý
Screenwriter David Nicholls

Tess Of The D'Urbervilles launches Autumn drama on Ö÷²¥´óÐã



Screenwriter David Nicholls writes...


I read the novel for the first time when I was 16, rather grudgingly, as part of an exam curriculum, and I don't think I can recall ever being so affected by a book.

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Re-reading it nearly 25 years later, it had lost none of its power to engage and move, shock and delight; it's a novel of remarkable power, with a story that grips from its very first scene until its terrible, heart-breaking conclusion.

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It seemed to cry out for a new screen adaptation and I'm delighted with our final version, Ö÷²¥´óÐã TV's first ever adaptation of the work, which I hope faithfully captures the light and shade of Hardy's masterpiece.

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It's commonplace to talk of classic novels as being surprisingly "modern", but this seems especially true of Tess.

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The pleasure, and occasional frustration, of many classic novels is that they revolve around unspoken passions but, in Tess, everything is expressed.

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It's a wonderfully emotionally-charged story, both intensely romantic and startlingly violent.

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The courtship of Angel and Tess contains some delightful, sensual love scenes – almost a romantic comedy at times – and yet this follows an act of startling cruelty and callousness.

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Hardy is justly famed as a writer of the natural world, but he is also tough-minded, provocative, indignant at hypocrisy and injustice, and I hope we've captured some of this dark drama as well as the beauty and romance of the story.

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Perhaps Hardy's greatest achievement is his heroine. It's unusual to read a book where the author is so clearly in love with his creation, and Hardy devises a series of extraordinary highs and lows for her, from giddying romantic love and prosperity to terrible degradation and suffering.

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There is no single personification of "Tess"; she is a schoolgirl, a mother, a lover, a wife, a slave-labourer, a prisoner, a rebel, a courtesan, a criminal, and yet throughout her remarkable journey she never loses her integrity or her capacity for life.

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This Tess is not just a passive victim, but an active, forceful, opinionated young working-class woman.

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It's a daunting challenge for any actress, but I think Gemma Arterton's performance is extraordinary. In four hours of television she is off-screen for perhaps 20 minutes, and yet she maintains a clarity and intensity that is remarkable in such a young actress.

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In our adaptation we were keen to emphasise that this is very much a novel about young people in love – Tess is 17 when we first meet her, her rival lovers are men in their mid-twenties, even Tess's mother is only in her mid-thirties – and I hope we've captured some of that youth and freshness in the casting.

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The danger with any portrayal of Alec D'Urberville is that he becomes merely a moustache-twirling seducer, but Hans Matheson endows him with a compelling mix of arrogance and self-loathing, sex appeal and menace.

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Similarly Angel Clare, supposedly the "nice guy" to Alec's villain, could all too easily come across as priggish and self-righteous, but Eddie Redmayne gives him an easy charm, and his love scenes with Tess are extremely touching.

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In an exceptional cast, it's also worth mentioning Ruth Jones as Tess's manipulative, self-absorbed mother and Anna Massey as the formidable but humane Mrs D'Urberville.

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Jodie Whittaker, Rebekah Stanton and Emily Beecham, are alternately funny and touching as Tess's loyal friends, all unrequitedly in love with the same man.

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To my mind, Tess and Angel's farewell in the morning light at Stonehenge is the most moving scene in English literature, so to be able to recreate it, at dawn, on location at the correct time of year, has been tremendously exciting.

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This production was shot entirely on location on 35mm and while the results are frequently stunning, this inevitably brings with it huge challenges.

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In Hardy, people tend not to sit in front of drawing room fires; they stand in landscapes, frequently in the rain or snow, and shooting outdoors through a particularly unpredictable English spring has made great demands on the production team.

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Any adaptation of Hardy has to capture the beauty of his nature writing without forgetting that this is a brutal, unforgiving landscape too and David Blair, a director who works a great deal with contemporary writers like Jimmy McGovern and Donna Franceschild, has brought a toughness and authenticity to the world and the performances.

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We set out on this adaptation with various aims in mind. The production should be beautiful but not "pretty"; it should be about characters in a landscape, not just the landscape.

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It should grip like a thriller, but also move the audience deeply. Tess Of The D'Urbervilles is a romantic epic, one of the great love stories but a cruel and violent saga too, and I hope we've faithfully captured that high emotion, the mix of light and shade that makes Hardy's novel so compelling and sublime.

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GJ


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