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THE
GOLDEN BOWL
James
Ivory directs Uma Thurman and Kate Beckinsale
to one of Henry James's happier endings
written
by Bruce Handy
photographs by Snowdon
Even
James Ivory couldn't get through The Golden
Bowl, "I read about 100 pages and then gave
it up, like so many people," he says of Henry
James's famously abstruse 1904 novel, the author's
last and a real block of wood even by Jamesian
standards. Having already adapted The Europeans
and The Bostonians, both set in America,
the director was casting about in the early
90s for one of James's more sprawling European
sagas. He and his longtime collaborators, producer
Ismail Merchant and screenwriter Ruth Prawer
Jhabvala, settled first on The Portrait of
a Lady, then on The Wings of the Dove,
but soon ran afoul, respectively, of Jane Campion's
and Ian Softley's versions. So Ivory picked
up the The Golden Bowl again. "And that
time," he adds, "it stuck." As always with James,
beneath the obsessive-compulsive prose flows
a river of molten soap opera. Will sweet Maggie
(Kate Beckinsale), married to an Italian smoothy
(Jeremy Northam), wise up to the treachery of
her best friend, Charlotte (Uma Thurman), who,
as it happens, is also her stepmother? You can
find out (assuming you yourself haven't made
it past page 140) when Miramax releases the
movie later this year. To Ivory's mind, "It's
a piece of luck we ended up with The Golden
Bowl. It has the happiest ending in James."
He pauses. "Well, at least it's more positive
than the other two." - Bruce Handy
costume
design by John Bright
hair by Carol Hemming
makeup by Amanda Knight
For
more information about the article check out
the April 2000 issue or visit Vanity
Fair
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