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Theatre

Theatre review: The Watsons

This adaptation of Jane Austen's unfinished novel has a mind of its own

October 3, 2019 16:35
2 min read

As Jane Austen herself said after changing her mind about accepting a proposal of marriage, “anything is to be preferred or endured rather than marrying without affection.”

And yet the gob-smacking surprise in this delight-filled adaptation of Austen’s unfinished novel is that her heroine opts not for affection, but for the cash. Obviously things are not going to plan. Not Austen’s plan nor that of writer Laura Wade who has taken on the daunting job of finishing what Austen started in 1803. 

Its heroine is (a different) Emma who, after being raised by a rich aunt, returns at the age of 19 to the relatively poor family home into which she was born and back into the lives of her two older sisters and their bed-bound, gravely ill, widower father.

Ben Stones’s simple design is a minimalist version of a Regency-period room, only with enough doors to serve a farce. But nothing about this show, which was first seen at Chichester and is directed by Wade’s partner Samuel West, signals that it is anything other than an attempt to transpose Austen’s intentions to the stage as faithfully as possible. Indeed, Grace Molony’s Emma is perfectly judged as someone who is highly skilled at 19th century social etiquette while at the same time having the strength of character to push against the conventions and expectations with which women of the period were saddled.