Going Mad for Charles Dickens
Two centuries after his birth, the novelist is still wildly popular, as a theme park, a new movie and countless festivals attest
- By Joshua Hammer
- Photographs by Stuart Conway
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2012, Subscribe
In an abandoned Gillette razor factory in Isleworth, not far from Heathrow Airport, the British film director Mike Newell wades ankle-deep through mud. The ooze splatters everybody: the 100 or so extras in Victorian costume, the movie’s lead characters, the lighting engineers perched in cranes above the set. Newell is ten days into shooting the latest adaptation of Great Expectations, widely regarded as the most complex and magisterial of Charles Dickens’ works. To create a replica of West London’s Smithfield Market, circa 1820, the set-design team sloshed water across the factory floor—which had been jackhammered down to dirt during a now-defunct redevelopment project—and transformed the cavernous space into a quagmire.
Dickens completed Great Expectations in 1861, when he was at the height of his powers. It’s a mystery story, a psychodrama and a tale of thwarted love. At its center looms the orphaned hero Pip, who escapes poverty thanks to an anonymous benefactor, worships the beautiful, cold-hearted Estella and emerges, after a series of setbacks, disillusioned but mature. In the scene that Newell is shooting today, Pip arrives by carriage in the fetid heart of London, summoned from his home in the Kent countryside by a mysterious lawyer, Jaggers, who is about to take charge of his life. Newell leans over a monitor as his assistant director cries, “Roll sound, please!” Pause. “And action.”
Instantly the market comes alive: Pickpockets, urchins and beggars scurry about. Butchers wearing blood-stained aprons haul slabs of beef from wheelbarrows to their stalls past a pen filled with bleating sheep. Cattle carcasses hang from meat hooks. Alighting from a carriage, the disoriented protagonist, portrayed by Jeremy Irvine, collides with a neighborhood tough, who curses and pushes him aside. “Cut,” Newell shouts, with a clap of his hands. “Well done.”
Back in his trailer during a lunch break, Newell, perhaps best known for Four Weddings and a Funeral and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, tells me that he worked hard at capturing the atmospherics of Smithfield Market. “Victorian London was a violent place. Dickens deliberately set the scene in Smithfield, where animals got killed in [huge] numbers every day,” he says. “I remember a paragraph [he wrote] about the effluence of Smithfield, about blood and guts and tallow and foam and piss and God-knows-what-else. And then this boy comes off the Kentish marshes, where everything looks peaceful, and he’s suddenly put into this place of enormous violence and cruelty and stress and challenge. That’s what Dickens does, he writes very precisely that.”
Scheduled for release this fall, the film—which stars Ralph Fiennes as the escaped convict Magwitch, Helena Bonham Carter as Miss Havisham and Robbie Coltrane as Jaggers—is the most recent of at least a dozen cinematic versions. Memorable adaptations range from David Lean’s 1946 black-and-white masterpiece starring Alec Guinness, to Alfonso Cuarón’s steamy 1998 reinterpretation, with Gwyneth Paltrow, Ethan Hawke and Robert De Niro, set in contemporary New York City. Newell, who became entranced with Dickens as an undergraduate at Cambridge, leapt at the opportunity to remake it. “It is a great, big powerhouse story,” he tells me. “And it has always invited people to bring their own nuances to it.”
Dickens burst onto the London literary scene at age 23, and as the world celebrates his 200th birthday on February 7, “The Inimitable,” as he called himself, is still going strong. The writer who made the wickedness, squalor and corruption of London his own, and populated its teeming cityscape with rogues, waifs, fools and heroes whose very names—Quilp, Heep, Pickwick, Podsnap, Gradgrind—seem to burst with quirky vitality, remains a towering presence in culture both high and low. In December 2010, when Oprah Winfrey’s monthly book club selected A Tale of Two Cities and Great Expectations, publishers rushed 750,000 copies of a combined edition into print. (Sales were disappointing, however, in part because Dickens fans now can download the novels on e-readers free.) The word “Dickensian” permeates our lexicon, used to evoke everything from urban squalor to bureaucratic heartlessness and rags-to-riches reversals. (“No Happy Ending in Dickensian Baltimore” was the New York Times headline on a story about the final season of HBO’s “The Wire.”) Collectors snap up Dickens memorabilia. This past October, a single manuscript page from his book The Pickwick Papers—one of 50 salvaged in 1836 by printers at Bradbury and Evans, Dickens’ publisher—was sold at auction for $60,000.
Celebrations of the Dickens bicentenary have rolled out in 50 countries. Dickens “saw the world more vividly than other people, and reacted to what he saw with laughter, horror, indignation—and sometimes sobs,” writes Claire Tomalin in Charles Dickens: A Life, one of two major biographies published in advance of the anniversary. “[He] was so charged with imaginative energy...that he rendered nineteenth-century England crackling, full of truth and life.”
In New York City, the Morgan Library—which has amassed the largest private collection of Dickens’ papers in the United States, including the manuscript of A Christmas Carol, published in 1843—has organized an exhibition, “Charles Dickens at 200.” The show recalls not only the novelist, but also the star and director of amateur theatricals, the journalist and editor, the social activist and the ardent practitioner of mesmerism, or hypnosis. There’s a Dickens conference in Christchurch, New Zealand; “the world’s largest Dickens festival” in Deventer, the Netherlands; and Dickens readings from Azerbaijan to Zimbabwe.
London, the city that inspired his greatest work, is buzzing with museum exhibitions and commemorations. In Portsmouth, where Dickens was born, events are being staged thick and fast—festivals, guided walks, a reading of A Christmas Carol by great-great-grandson Mark Dickens—although the novelist left the city when he was 2 years old and returned there only three times. Fiercely protective of its native son, Portsmouth made headlines this past autumn when its libraries at last rescinded an eight-decade ban on a 1928 novel, This Side Idolatry, which focused on darker elements of Dickens’ character—including his philandering. Rosalinda Hardiman, who oversees the Charles Dickens’ Birthplace Museum, told me, “Feelings still run high about Dickens’ memory in the city of his birth. Some people don’t like the idea that their great writer was also a human being.”
Charles John Huffam Dickens was born in a modest four-story house, now the museum. Dickens’ father, John, was a likable spendthrift who worked for the Naval Pay Office; his mother, born Elizabeth Barrow, was the daughter of another naval employee, Charles Barrow, who fled to France in 1810 to escape prosecution for embezzling. The Dickens family was forced to move frequently to avoid debt collectors and, in 1824, was engulfed by the catastrophe that has entered Dickens lore: John was arrested for nonpayment of debts and jailed at Marshalsea prison in London. He would serve as the model for both the benevolently feckless Mr. Micawber in David Copperfield and William Dorrit, the self-delusional “Father of the Marshalsea,” in the later novel Little Dorrit.
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Comments (10)
I have 16 books The first Illitrated by Hoblet KnightBrown (phiz) Walter Black Inc.2 park NY.NY. Charles Dicken's dealing with the Firm of Donbey & Son 1839. Book 2 The first series of Sketcher by Boz 1836-1837 Book 3 the life if Charles Dickens by John Foster 1812-1836.Book 4 Nicklely 5 Christmas Store.6 Short Stores 7 A Tale of two cities &The adventure of Oliver Twist-1867-68 Book 8-The Mystry of Edwin Drood 1870 & MasterHumphrey's Clock 1840-1841 & several short stories. Book 9-The Bleak House.10 Our Mutual Friend 1867-1868 11-The old Curiosity Shop 12-David Copperfield 13- Miscellanous Papers & Plays & poems 1836-1838-1869-14-Pickwick papers 1867-1868 15- Barnaly Ridge where Grip is mention. and 16 is Letters &Speaches 1833-1870
These were given to me by a Neighbor after her Husband died dhe was in his ninety I was in my twenty's I am now eighty one that is how they are in very good condition. I would like to sale the collection to someone that would cherish them as I have before I die, please help, Thank you Clara
Posted by Clara Harris on February 21,2012 | 03:38 PM
One does not need an official "Dickens' World" in Chatham. If you know where to look, London is a theme park of Dickens' novels. Leave Piccadilly Circus and walk up a by-street and you're in Golden Square, where Ralph Nickleby lived. Stare up at the second floor of a certain building and you can imagine Ralph Nickleby's body swinging to and fro, a suicide. Now go to Saffron Hill, just near Grey's Inn, and imagine the Dodger bringing Oliver Twist down this street to Fagin's hideout near what is now Holborn Viaduct.
I have a book called "Dickens' England" which points out all these places. Don't know if it's still in print.
Bob Siegmann
Posted by Bob Siegmann on February 15,2012 | 09:40 PM
Your Dickens article was a very welcome read for me. In the last few years I've gone back and read all his lesser known novels. I'm currently enjoying "Martin Chuzzlewit". The characters he paints in this book are as exquisitely done and the humor as droll as anything I've seen.
I looked to see if this book had ever been turned into a movie. I was overjoyed to see a BBC mini-series from 1994 with Paul Scofield, Tom Wilkinson, John Mills and Pete Postlethwaite heading up its ensemble cast. Unfortunately this fine production has never been made available in DVD here in the US. It would be wonderful if in honor of the 200th anniversary of Dickens birth the BBC would re-release it.
Posted by Doug Covert on February 14,2012 | 10:46 PM
It would have been helpful for Mr Hammer to have noted that the Dickens Museum on Doughty Street will actually be *closed* from May through the rest of the year to complete the construction he refers to. So those travelers who thought it would be nice to visit during the celebrations are out of luck.
Posted by Julie Stielstra on January 30,2012 | 02:25 PM
I live very close to Rochester (Kent) every year we have a Dickens fesitval lasting for three days. People dress up as Dickensian characters and in period dress - young children dress as chimney sweeps and there are parades, dancing and a fair up by the (very) old castle, overlooking the cathedral. The high street is very old, most buildings are 'higledy pigledy' and most are well over 500 years old - some of the tea shops have been given names from a Dickens novel, so there is a Mrs Bumbles tea room for example. If ever you are in England, it is worth a visit - Rochester is around 45 minutes from London by train.
Posted by miranda on January 30,2012 | 08:21 AM
Your article on author Charles Dickens was interesting and timely for the author's 200th anniversary of his birth. In Riverside, California, our non-profit,educational organization held the 19th annual Riverside Dickens Festival. In 2013 it will be held on February 2nd and 3rd. See www.dickensfest.com or call 800-430-4140 for information. Gerald Dickens, the great-great grandson performed last December and the organization hopes to have him next year.
Posted by Carolyn Grant on January 28,2012 | 07:18 PM
I have an orginal by Charles Dickens.
Title: OUR MUTUAL FRIEND. Book The Fourth, a turning
Published in New York: Published by John Bradburn in 1865.
I would like to know if the book is a collector, and if so, how much is it worth.
Ron Van Ness
Posted by Ron Van Ness on January 27,2012 | 06:53 PM
Just a note that there's an annual Dickens Village Festival in Garrison, North Dakota, a town of 1500. It's held on three weekends in late November and early December, sometimes in wind chills way below zero. After over ten years, it keeps on going. Check it out online.
Posted by Jim Lein on January 27,2012 | 09:55 AM
I am a subscriber to your magazine and particularly enjoyed February's cover story about Charles Dickens.
I have three large volumes of the Unabridged Editions of the Works of Charles Dickens with 40 illustrations published in 1879 (I & II) and 1880 (III)by P.F. Collier, New York.
Would you please forward this message to your writer, Joshua Hammer, so that I can get further information on the value of these volumes. Thank you very much.
Posted by Virginia Garesche on January 25,2012 | 01:05 PM