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The BBC is known for many things, but strap-on dildos is probably
not one of them. Tipping the Velvet, a three episode mini-series set in Victorian
1890s England about male impersonator and music hall star Nan Astley might change that.
Based on the Sarah Waters novel of the same name, adapted by Andrew Davies (Bridget
Joness Diary, The
Tailor of Panama), and directed by Geoffrey Sax, Velvet is a Dickensian
lesbian fantasy following Nans convoluted rise and fall and rise again betwixt fame
and exploitation. With a Moll
Flanders-like episodic structure, it is replete with rampant sex and melodrama.
Nan (Rachael Stirling, The Triumph of Love) narrates her own
story, first introducing us to her banal family that runs an oyster bar and to her bland
boyfriend, Freddy (Benedict Cumberbatch). Everything changes for her one night when Nan
sees cross-dresser Kitty Butler (Keeley Hawes, The
Avengers) perform. Instantly infatuated, Nan returns night after night to watch
her sing and beguile the ladies in the audience the way only Marlene Dietrich could in Morocco.
Soon her devoted presence is brought to Kittys attention, and the confident Kitty
asks Nan backstage because she says, "I like to hear nice things about myself."
In one of the shows many, often too cute winks at a modern audience, reticent Nan
replies, "You seem so gay and bold." Kitty asks her to be her assistant to which
Nan can only ecstatically assent. But Nans sister Alice (Monica Dolan) warns against
getting too close to Kittys kind, saying about performers, "They dont
live natural lives." Nan, of course, does not listen, and when Kittys manager,
Walter Bliss (John Bowe), decides to take Kitty to London, Nan is only too eager to run
off with her.
The women sleep in the same bed every night, but Nan fears revealing
her forbidden love to Kitty. Then one fateful evening, Kittys jealousy over seeing
Nan dance with a man launches them into a passionate embrace and they tumble into bed.
Kitty comes up with the idea for Nan to be her acting partner, also in drag, and their act
together meets with great success until an unforeseen turn of events.
The second episode deals with Nans life after Kitty as Nan
becomes a streetwalker, dressing up as a boy picking up older men. Renting a room from a
woman and her simpleton daughter, Nan notices beautiful Florence (Jodhi May, The
Last of the Mohicans) across the way. Once bashful Nan now has a new-found bravado
to which Florence is drawn, but fate intervenes and Nan finds herself turned into the
virtual slave of a rich aristocratic dominatrix named Diana Lethaby (Anna Chancellor, Four
Weddings and a Funeral).
In the third episode, Nan is at her lowest ebb, having left her
love-hate relationship with Diana. Delirious, she seeks help from Florence and her
socialist brother, Ralph (Hugh Bonneville, Iris).
The final installment is the most indulgent as wish fulfillment fantasy as Nan uncovers
Florences deep, dark secret, gets to entertain at a lesbian bar, saves Ralph from
stage fright at a socialist rally, and is thrown into a final, fateful audience-rousing
choice.
While Tipping the Velvet isnt traditional Masterpiece
Theater material, its not all that far from it either. For all the sex and S&M,
it is downright tasteful to the point of being arid. As is usually the case with
television, the too clean, too precisely arranged sets dont help in this respect.
Still, if not taken seriously as a period piece art, Velvet works as guilty
pleasure entertainment. Saxs direction and the editing are often ludicrously
overwrought, though Sax does put together at least one particularly inspired sequence
Nans first time on the stage is intercut with her rehearsals and it all
culminates in a kiss between Nan and Kitty, both playing men. The most annoying element in
Velvet is Nans narrating voice-over, which too often simply states what is
readily apparent on the screen. Its also where Davies dialogue is at its worst
with lines like "open an oyster and its like a secret world in there."
Throughout, Tipping the Velvets saving grace is its
actresses, who ease it past more than one rough patch. All three gorgeous leads, Stirling,
Hawes, and May are magnificent, illustrating a vast and subtle range of emotions and
reactions. They have a grace and sincerity often missing on American television where
actors dont just act, but have to make a show of "acting." Here, the women
just are. Stirling is convincing in her transformation from frightened sparrow
into audacious hawk; Hawes shows how Kitty hides the turmoil of social pressures beneath a
buoyant veteran demeanor; and May, who has always excelled as emotionally-battered
characters, does the same here. Special mention must also go to Janet Henfrey (My Uncle Silas, The Ideal Husband). Playing an old, sassy tart
named Mrs. Jex, she is one mean scene-stealer.
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