Visar inlägg med etikett Ruddy Gore. Visa alla inlägg
Visar inlägg med etikett Ruddy Gore. Visa alla inlägg

torsdag 30 mars 2017

Ruddy Gore - TV vs Book

While Ruddy Gore is the 7th book about Phryne Fisher, it is the 6th episode of Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries. Like in most cases this far, the plot has been reduced and changed somewhat for the TV adaptation. To be honest, I really do find part of it to benefit the pacing of the story. The theatre felt quite overcrowded in the book and, like I said in my book entry about Ruddy Gore, I did have some problems taking an interest in all the cast and crew. They are all quite egocentric and in love with each other.

I found the best part with the book to be Phryne's date with Lin Chung and the issues it provoked with interracial relationships at the time. This issue was treated by the TV show in the episode of The Green Mill Murder and I was pleasantly surprised to see Phryne contemplating it as much as she did. Same goes for her finding it sad that she is going to lose one of her lover, Dr Mark Fielding,who returns from Flying too High, to the nurse-trained actress Mollie Webb.

Phryne with Bernard Tarrant and Lin Chung
I do love that Phryne is adventurous and reckless and sort of does whatever she wants and does not care about what people think. However, I do find those moments when she gets emotional. Especially in regards to her relations to other people. It keeps her grounded. Makes her human. Even though she only has loose liasons with men, she does care about them. This caring for her lovers is taken out of the TV show almost entirely except for in the case of Lin Chung. (Again on the subject of recurring characters and plots that is evident in the book, but not on the show.) Besides Lin (and Jack Robinson of course), we do not get to see any of her "gentlemen callers" ever again. The case does rattle Phryne in a slightly different way though. When a sand bag falls, Jack saves her and it falls on Gwilym Evans (the actor Dot Williams has a celebrity crush on) instead, killing him. This incident happens in the book too, but in a slightly different way and for different reasons.
'Don't make the mistake of thinking their emotions are all put on. They're real people underneath, just exxaggerated. They talk to me', she observed, 'because I care for them. They call me Mum. The're quivering little things under all that glamour. They're always afraid that no one really loves them, that they're going to fail. But they're addicted to applause.'
~Miss Pomeroy, Ruddy Gore
The ghost of Dorothea Curtis
Even though I do prefer the simplification of the plot in the TV episode in this case, I do find it sad that they have left out one of the central themes of the book: wanting/needing to be seen. I really think this is a basic human instinct. Not that everyone does need to stand on a stage to fulfill it, but I think everyone feels a need to be acknowledged and taken seriously from time to time. The setting of the plot in a theatre and also to a certain extent the apperance of "a ghost" work well to enhance this theme.
'I bet none of you have ever handled stage machinery.'
The murmurs increased.
'Of course not, we're actors, not technicals', said Cameron Armour. 'If I'd wanted to be a tradesman, I wouldn't have done ll that voice training.' Phryne began to understand Mr Brawn's rage and scorn.
~Ruddy Gore
Phryne and Dot
It is not that the show does not deal with this subject. In fact it does so to a larger extent than the books seem to be doing actually. Phryne's employed taxi driver Bert Johnson tells his partner Cecil Yates that he is hopless when it comes to collecting strays in Cocaine Blues which is a trait also true of their employer. Both in the books and in the TV show, Phryne has an ability to really see people who needs it. She cares for them and encourages them to reach their full potential. She does not ever pamper them, which can be seen by the way she treats the female star of the theatre production Leila Esperance in the book.

Finnish author Tove Jansson is considered one of the giants in the children's litterature of the Nordic countries and her works about the Moomins are known worldwide. I have not talked about her before on this blog, because I have long felt a need to reread her books before I do so. However, one of her short stories, Det osynliga barnet (The invisible child) is very much worth mentioning here.

In the short story the character Tooticki brings the girl Ninni to the Moomin family. Ninni has been taken care of by a horrible older lady who did not like her. Because of this, she has lost all her confidence and turned completely invisible and the only way to know she is there is by the sound of the little bell, the lady had put around the girl's neck. Ninni is placed under the care and love of Moominmamma and little by little she becomes visible again.

I feel like there are certain similarities in Moominmamma's treatment of Ninni and how Phryne handles Dot in the TV show. When she first meets the younger woman in Cocaine Blues, Dot is mainly invisible. She works as a maid at the Andrews's house, but you cannot say that she draws much attention to herself. As she comes to work for Phryne however, Dot starts to develope as a person. She finds her confidence and role in life without giving herself away at the same time. And Phryne is there, nudging, caring and encouraging. You can see her become surprised by Dot's strict religious reasonings of the modern world in Cocaine Blues, but she never judge her.
"When I came to work for you, Miss, I was afraid of everything. And you taught me so many things, and you made me brave, and you made me happy."
~ Dot Williams, Death do us part
Dot is quite different in the books. She is much more timid and not as active in Phryne's cases as she is on the TV show. With Phryne's mentoring, TV-Dot starts learning the detective skills and from time to time ends up solving the crimes to a certain extent. In a way I think Dot is the main character who develope most throughout the show. I prefer the more active TV-Dot over the passive book one. The friendship between the two women in the books is just wonderful and they certainly love and respect each other (even so much that Phryne continue to wear the St Christopher medal that Dot gives her before she goes away to the circus in Blood and Circuses). However, I do miss Dot doing her own sleuthing and Phryne teaching her the ways of the detective. She does participate from time to time (like helping Phryne go through all the dressing rooms at the theatre in Ruddy Gore) but it is just not the same and the character does not go through the same evolution in the books as in the TV series.


The image of the cover of Det osynliga barnet, did I borrow from here.

lördag 25 mars 2017

Kerry Greenwood - Ruddy Gore

Ruddy Gore is the 7th book about Phryne Fisher in which Phryne goes to the theatre to watch Ruddigore and celebrate the aviator Bert Hinkler who has flown from Croydon to Darwin.

The Bert Hinkler of the book is probably Herbert John Louis Hinkler the first man to fly solo from England to Australia, reducing the flight record of 28 days to 15. This all happened in February 1928, which had me somewhat confused about the timeline of the books, so I did a little bit of sleuthing through the books I have already read as to what dates are mentioned.
  • Cocaine Blues: No dates mentioned at all as far as I could discern. (If you have noticed any indication as to any dates, please tell me in a comment.) 
  • Flying too High: Amelia McNaughton mentions that her father wanted to marry her off like it was unbelieveable to happen in 1928. The date for her brother Bill's trial is set to 17th August 1928 as well and there is a mention of it being a winter's day, which for Australia would mean a day somewhere between June and August. 
  •  Murder on the Ballarat Train: The murder of Anne Henderson took place on the night of 21th June 1928 and at the end of May that same year, Bobby Matthew's Megatherium Trust crasched, ruining Anne Henderson.
  • Death at Victoria Dock: Bert and Cec are invited to dinner and mention that there will be a strike on 10th September and Phryne says it is the 1st September that day. Like Amelia, Phryne cannot believe someone was shooting at her because it is 1928.  
  • The Green Mill Murder: No year is mentioned, but it seems to be set in October which is mentioned as Phryne is flying up to the mountains to meet Victor Freeman
  • Blood and Circuses: The date is stated already in the beginning as Mr Christopher's body is found at the boarding house in which he lives. Jack Robinson, Constable Harris and Sergeant Grossmith also talks about the society getting harder and colder in 1928, so a police strike would not be so easy as it had been before. Also, when Phryne feels like her persona is slipping back to its primitive roots, her contemporary identity is refered to as "1928 Phryne"
  • The dates in Ruddy Gore are somewhat diffuse. 1928 is mentioned and based on what the boy Herbert Cowl (I wonder if he is named Herbert because of the other references to Hinkler.) who becomes Phryne's assistent tells her, it sounds like it would be a little before christmas. Phryne also tells the theatre manager Bernard Tarrant that she has had enough performance for a while and tells Dot Williams that this is not going to be like her time at the circus and she will come home every night. Phryne also have the St Christopher medal that Dot gave to her as she was leaving for the circus. So the book is definitely supposed to be set after Blood and Circuses.
Based on the preface of the book, there was a production of Ruddigore in Melbourne in 1928 (but it did not include any murderers). After a lot of hard googling I have not been able to deduce if there where a gala performance of the play for Hinkler for real and books on 1920's theatre in Australia has turned out to be pretty rare here in Sweden. Therefore my thoughts about the timeline will remain what it is. They might just have waited with celebrating Hinkler until November/December?

Anyway, Phryne and her friend Bunji Ross (one of those recurring characters of the books that I have talked about before) are at the theatre to celebrate Bert Hinkler's triumph. However, the performance is cut short when one of the main actors and then his understudy are poisoned. Phryne starts to investigate, but the main suspect seems to be the ghost of the late actress Dorothea Curtis who died playing Ruddigore in London thirty years prior to the events in Ruddy Gore.
'Could you call up a spirit for me? I've been trying to find one lately and she is very difficult to locate.'
~Phryne Fisher, Ruddy Gore
It is also in this book that we meet the character Lin Chung for the first time. On the way to the theatre, Phryne and Bunji helps him and his grandmother out of a fight and they are cleaned up at the Lins's house before they are off to the theatre. Throughout the entire book, Chinese men are following Phryne and she seems a bit worried about it.

Not only is the timeline between the books a bit confusing, but at the theatre history seems to be repeating itself with resemblances to thirty years prior. Phryne is also thinking how her life has turned into a comic opera. There are a lot of references back to Dorothea and Phryne is sure that her death was not an accident.

Hitherto I have liked each book about Phryne Fisher more and more, but this is a break in that trend. I prefer both Blood and Circuses and The Green Mill Murder over this one. I liked the plot and the theatre milieu and the world around the production of Ruddigore, but even though it was depicted just as thoroughly as the circus in Blood and Circuses which I really enjoyed, I thought this a bit tiresome. I also had problems connecting to all the people at the theatre. Everyone seemed to be quite full of themselves and they were all in love with each other and also left each other heartbroken. It was like a drama series on TV. Adding the Chinese and it got a bit messy. I still liked the book just fine. It was a fun read and it did not put me off the books.


onsdag 21 december 2016

Phryne, Freja and the winter/summer solstice

From Murder in the Dark
According to King Memses's Curse, today is Phryne Fisher's birthday. It is also the winter solstice over here (summer solstice in the southern hemisphere).
Phryne: My birthday party 
Jack: Summer solstice 
Phryne: Help me to celebrate.
~ King Memses's Curse 

The episode is the last one of the first series of Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries. It tells the story of the solution to the overarching plot line of season 1: The kidnapping and murder of Phryne's little sister Jane. It is also Phryne's last encounter with Murdoch Foyle who was set up kind of like an archenemy to her. His birthday is also the 21st of December. As is the fictive Egyptian pharaoh Memses who Foyle becomes obsessed with, thinking he is the reincarnation of him.

The episode is stuffed with Ancient Egyptian references, sort of the peak of the running Anthony and Cleopatra theme established in Ruddy Gore. Ancient Egypt also pops up as a theme in the Phryne Fisher book Flying to High. Even the song in the last scene, I am sailing on a sunbeam can be said to have Egyptian references since in Egyptian mythology, the sun god Re is said to sail across the sky in a boat. In this entry however, I will move a bit through time and space to Viking Age Scandinavia and talk about a different mythology and a different goddess than the Egyptian ones. Together with the Norse god Odin, she was associated with the (for Scandinavia) winter solstice: Freja. (I have wondered for awhile how much of the cultic activities surrounding Freja at the winter solstice that went into the Lucia celebration.)

Brooch probably depicting Freja.
from Aska, Östergötland, Sweden
I talked about Freja in the entry about Johanne Hildebrandt's book Saga från Valhalla, but there might be need for a recap.

Freja is the most prominent and well-known of the Norse goddesses (who are all often rather vaguely portrayed). She is the sister of Frej and generally rather dismissively described only as his "seductive sister". However this is an extremely reducing epithet of such an important goddess.

She and her brother are mainly fertility deities (In Sweden, Frej has also been called Frö, which is the Swedish word for seed.) and they are also the personifications of female (Freja) and male (Frej) sexuality. Freja also cares for pregnant women.

But there are more aspects than fertility to Freja! When you study her, you realise that she is not only "the love goddess". She is actually but pretty badass. She is also a war goddess and head of the valkyries.

The valkyries are female warrior spirits/deities dressed in chainmail and helmets adorned by swan feathers and with spears ready to fight. They were said to descend on the battle field on the backs of their ethereal horses, but never participate in the wars of mortals. 

Instead their duty is to pick out the fallen warrior and bring them to the afterlife. Traditionally it is said that Odin is the one who wants them in his home Valhalla to train them for the last battle when the world was supposed to end at Ragnarök, but this is only part of the truth. In fact, Freja was just as involved in this as Odin. She and Odin actually split the fallen warriors in between them. And she got to pick first, meaning she took the best warriors to her home, Folkvang.

So what has this got to do with Phryne Fisher? Well, there names sound similar and I think there are a lot of similarities between her and Freja's personalities. Phryne is powerful and independent just like Freja. She is also connected to death through all the murders that occur in close proximity to her (or someone she knows).
Hugh: Miss Fisher's gone on holiday again Sir.
Jack: Hm, anyone dead yet?
Hugh: Only one so far Sir.
~ Murder under the Mistletoe

There is also a tendency among certain viewers to discredit the series and Phryne based solely on Phryne's many sexual encounters with men. (For a discussion about this including comments by Essie Davis who plays her, you can look here.) This is also something she has in common with Freja who was seriously discredited among the male 19th century scholars who set out to interpret the Norse saga material and other written sources to the general public. They had serious problems with a goddess who was so popular as Freja seems to have been. Not least because of her many sexual adventures (She was a goddess of fertility and female sexuality after all.) She was worshipped throughout Scandinavia and a favourite among the female priestesses known as völvur. The matter of a liberal sexuality, esepcially in women, was also something the male scholars of the 19th century did not look foundly upon and because Freja is still mainly described as Frej's seductive sister or love goddess, it has worked and still works as a way to reduce her power and influence.

Egyptian tomb painting

There is also the matter of some of Phryne's headdresses. Even though the Cleopatra one she wears in the photo from Murder in the Dark above clearly is meant to look like the one from the Egyptian tomb painting above, I think it looks like a valkyrie helmet.

From Ruddy Gore
Phryne also wears a headband in both Ruddy Gore and Blood and Money that is probably some kind of laurel wreath, but those leaves could easily be consider feathers as well.

This rant might make little sense, but after my entry about ways to compare Phryne to other pop-cultural figures, I figured I might as well give some more alternatives to compare Phryne too and this day seems to be special for both of them.

Happy Birthday Phryne! Even though you are fictional, I love you!



Picture of valkyrie helmet was borrowed here, the Egyptian crown was found here and the photo of the Freja brooch from Aska in Östergötland in Sweden was taken by Gabriel Hildebrand at SHMM