Q&A with Isobel McArthur

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Lighthouse is excited to welcome the Olivier and Evening Standard Theatre Award-winning West End sensation Pride and Prejudice* (*sort of) for a week’s run from Monday.

Written by Isobel McArthur, who also directs this new production, this is a unique and audacious retelling of Jane Austen’s classic love story in which men, money and microphones are fought over in an irreverent but affectionate adaptation where the stakes couldn’t be higher when it comes to romance.

The show features a string of pop classics including Young Hearts Run Free, Will You Love Me Tomorrow and You’re So Vain. It’s the 1800s. It’s party time. Let the ruthless matchmaking begin…

Here, Isobel McArthur tells us more about the production.

Austen’s original tale is so well loved as a book, television series and film, can you give us an insight into what makes this version of Pride and Prejudice, sort of?

I suppose what I was aware of when watching many of the other adaptations of this novel was that, for whatever reason, the humour of Austen’s novel has repeatedly been sidelined in the interest of… I don’t know – something so reverent that it’s become positively solemn. The original book is a riot. So, this adaptation – told by the servants, using karaoke – is in the spirit of Austen herself and the way she writes. It’s funny, feminist and front footed.

Where did you first have the inspiration for Pride and Prejudice* (*sort of)?

I had a 50p copy of the novel from the second-hand bookshop below my flat in Glasgow. I was in my late 20s and had never read any Austen before. I assumed it would be starchy, unrelatable stuff – all red-nosed dukes and drawing rooms. How wrong I was. Opening at page one, I started laughing. And, crucially, not the knowing laugh of a literature graduate (although I am one, for my sins) – rather, the belly-laugh of a human being who recognised in the matriarch of this novel a woman I’d encountered a hundred times in my own life. I knew instantly that in this book were a set of observations and a cast of characters that needed to be shared with as many people as possible. ‘Don’t believe what you’ve seen at the movies!’ I wanted to shout, ‘Austen is a right laugh!’

It’s been some 200 years since the publication of the novel, what elements did you want to feel very of their time in the piece, and what elements did you want to feel up to date?

Story-wise, it isn’t a question of anything feeling old or contemporary per se because the novel remains so relevant. In our show, Pride & Prejudice is set to a pop-karaoke soundtrack. I began compiling a list of songs at the start of the writing process and discovered quickly that all good artists come to the same conclusions about love. When Jarvis Cocker tries to define it – he does so in the same terms as Austen. It’s no coincidence. Some things just endure.

Aesthetically, however, when it comes to old and new – it’s a free-for-all! The design, music and tone borrow from a full 200 years of romantic history so expect things to remind you, your folks and your granny of when you first fell for someone.

What are the physical challenges of the show, given the number of roles everyone plays?

It’s a run-away train for the performers! There are 119 named characters in the original Pride & Prejudice. We have reduced this to an essential 18 in our production – played by just five actors. Lightning-fast costume changes are required from the cast throughout. They also play the instruments, sing the songs and perform all the scene changes.

However, this is not merely in the interests of economy. In our adaption, the Pride & Prejudice story is told by the female servants of a Regency-era household. During the Napoleonic wars, these women really did it all. They facilitated the making of art for centuries. Without these overlooked and undervalued servants of households like Austen’s – we wouldn’t even have the music, portraiture, or novels of the period (including this one).

Do you have to be an Austen afficionado to enjoy the show?

Not at all. You don’t need to know a single thing about Jane Austen or her books. In fact, please don’t go looking up a synopsis. Theatre should not require homework. If you really like it, you can always go and read the novel afterwards.

The show won Best Comedy or Entertainment Play at the Olivier Awards and then you won the Evening Standard Award, what was that feeling like for you?

I think we’re all extremely proud of our collective achievements with this show. It first played at the Tron Theatre in Glasgow in 2018 with a two-week run planned. To be still doing it now is proof not only that audiences respond to generous entertainment but also that all-female casts with regional accents don’t detract from historical or literary pieces but, rather, enhance them.

:: Pride and Prejudice* (*sort of)plays Lighthouse from Monday 18 until Saturday 23 November and is booking now at https://www.lighthousepoole.co.uk/event/pride-prejudice-sort-of/ or on 01202 280000.