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WSWS : Arts
Review : Film
Reviews
Some things are clearer than others
Topsy-Turvy, written and directed by Mike Leigh
By David Walsh
10 February 2000
Use
this version to print
British filmmaker Mike Leigh is a significant figure. In the
1970s and 1980s he took a sharp but personal look at social and
political life in a series of television films ( Bleak Moments,
1971; Hard Labour, 1973; Nuts in May, 1976; Abigail's
Party, 1977; Four Days in July, 1984).
His Life is Sweet (1990) and Naked (1993) were
two of the most troubling English-language films of the last decade.
The first was a deeply sympathetic portrait of a suburban working
class family. One remembers in particular the self-despising teenage
daughter and her mother's desperate, futile efforts to ease her
pain. Naked dealt with a group of traumatized individuals,
the walking wounded of Thatcher's Britain. The shattering of elementary
social ties and obligations had reduced them to an almost animal
existence.
After the darkness of Naked, it appeared that Leigh
wanted to enter into the light. Secrets and Lies (1996)
, the story of a white mother and the daughter, by a black
man, she had given up for adoption, had many remarkable moments,
but ended quite falsely, with a general and contrived reconciliation.
One had the sense that Leigh, responding to the criticisms of
others about the hopeless tone of Naked or
perhaps his own misgivings, wanted to offer some comfort or encouragement
to his audience. He seemed, however, to be taking too much of
a shortcut. The spectator was not likely to be convinced that
the heartbreaking difficulties the filmmaker had addressed in
Life is Sweet and Naked could possibly be overcome
merely by individual acts of honesty and generosity.
Career Girls (1997) took up the situation of some of
those who had survived the previous decade, their mode of survival
and its cost, as well as those who had been morally or psychically
destroyed. The film revisited certain themes and social situations
Leigh had treated in other works. It seemed like something of
a holding operation. Where would Leigh go from there?
It is not entirely unheard of for a filmmaker to turn to an
historical piece as a means of finding his or her way out of an
impasse. However, no one, I suspect, could have predicted, on
the basis of his previous work, that Leigh would choose to treat
the collaboration of W. S. Gilbert (1836-1911) and Arthur Sullivan
(1842-1900), creators of 14 comic operas.
Topsy-Turvy begins with the hectic opening night in
London of Princess Ida, the eighth Gilbert and Sullivan
production, in January 1884. The piece is met with mixed reviews.
There is a feeling in some quarters that the pair is stagnating.
A critic, somewhat condescendingly, labels Gilbert the King
of Topsy-Turvydom. Sullivan announces his plan to write
no more light operas with Gilbert and to devote himself to serious
music. He goes off to Paris for rest and recuperation, where he
consorts with prostitutes.
Months later a heat wave is cutting into the theater trade.
Richard D'Oyly Carte, the impresario of the Savoy Theatre, plans
to replace Princess Ida with a revival of a previous success,
The Sorcerer. Sullivan remains adamant about his decision,
evenor perhaps especiallyafter Gilbert reads him his
new proposed libretto, a flimsy story set in Sicily and involving
a magic potion. A meeting of the two with Carte and his assistant,
Helen Lenoir, goes nowhere.
Kitty, Gilbert's wife, suggests a visit to a Japanese exhibition
currently in London. Gilbert rejects the idea, but ends up going.
He watches with fascination a spinner, a calligrapher, a female
dancer accompanied by a girl playing a traditional stringed instrument
and a theater performance. Gilbert is inspired by the visit to
write a piece with a Japanese theme, The Mikado. Sullivan
greets the new libretto with enthusiasm and sets to work writing
the music.
The remainder of Topsy-Turvy is devoted to the first
production of The Mikado. On the eve of rehearsals in February
1885, several actors discuss the significance of the killing of
Britain's General Gordon in Sudan, engaged in the scramble for
Africa. In subsequent scenes performers ask for raises, discuss
their personal woes, bicker with costumers. Gilbert directs the
performers in one extended scene. In another, he brings in three
Japanese women to show his actresses how he would like them to
carry themselves. Sullivan rehearses singers and musicians. The
decision to remove a particular number leads to a successful protest
by the entire cast.
The new operetta is a great success. Gilbert and his neglected
wife, Sullivan and his pregnant mistress, discuss what it all
means to them. Gilbert notes that there is something inherently
disappointing about success. The last moment is left to one of
the actresses, who recites a soliloquy from The Mikado
about being lovely and a child of nature. She sings The
Sun Whose Rays from the same piece.
Leigh's methods
There are many remarkable aspects of the work. Leigh's methods
are well-known by now. He asks his actors to devote a good deal
of timesix months or moreto each project. Beginning
with an overall concept, Leigh works out the characterization
and story with the actors through discussion, improvisation and
research. He then writes a loosely structured scenario. The individual
sequences are subsequently rehearsed and finally scripted on location
prior to shooting.
For his latest film Leigh established a research department
that operated for a full year before shooting began. Various aspects
of late Victorian life were carefully examined. A musical director
and choreographer worked with Leigh and a 90-strong cast throughout
the rehearsals. All those who sing or play in the film can really
do so.
These painstaking efforts have paid off in many respects. Topsy-Turvy
is a strongly appealing and authentic work, that conveys a genuine
feeling for the time and for its protagonists. Many commercial
filmmakers, equipped with substantial amounts of cash and aided
by talented set designers and decorators, are capable of reproducing
the external features of a given historical period. Leigh, with
limited resources, has done that and considerably more. The rough,
unfamiliar texture of virtually every scene suggests historical
vision at work. Leigh can imagine relationships between people,
both in the musical theater and outside it, quite distinct from
the present ones and finds the dramatic means to express them.
The film is something of a tour de force.
Not least of Topsy-Turvy's accomplishments is its reminder
that Gilbert and Sullivan produced some remarkable work. The sequences
from The Mikado in particular impress one with their wit,
their biting satire and their musicality. These were very gifted
figures.
The piece is also intelligently performed. Jim Broadbent, the
stubborn, obsessive Gilbert, whose entire face seems to open wide
and then snap shut as he carries on a conversation, confirms his
status as one of the finest film actors of the day. Lesley Manville
as Gilbert's long-suffering wife is also memorable. Indeed the
entire cast is excellentAllan Corduner (Sullivan), Timothy
Spall (Richard Temple), Ron Cook (Carte), Eleanor David (Fanny
Ronalds), Shirley Henderson (Leonora Braham), and others.
Topsy-turvy means upside down, or in a disorderly
or muddled state. Leigh has never been a kitchen-sink realist.
He searches with his actors for a means of manifesting his characters'
internal dilemmas by heightening certain features of their speech,
gesture and movement. There has always been a fantastical, sometimes
grotesque side to his work (which occasionally descends into caricature).
He appears relatively at ease treating Gilbert and Sullivanwhose
field was musical caricatureand the late Victorian agewhose
ornamentation, manners and general spirit seem so absurdly outsized
and exaggerated.
The contradictions of Victorian society, including the immense
effort to repress the elementary needs of the body, seemed to
encourage a certain topsy-turvydom in art: Lewis Carroll's
Alice adventures, Edward Lear's nonsense poetry, the sexual double
entendre and delirium of Oscar Wilde (a figure lampooned by Gilbert
in Patience). The solid structure of late nineteenth century
English life is haunted by various specters in Leigh's film. In
a drawing room in the middle of the day Gilbert's father is visited
by terrifying hallucinations. Sequences from The Sorcerer
suggest some of Gilbert's nightmares. One actor in The Mikado
relies on morphine, another on alcohol. On the opera's opening
night, in a filthy alleyway, a poor, mad Irish woman insults Gilbert
and tells him that God made the world. In the closing moments
of the film, Kitty proposes a surreal new work in which hundreds
of nannies would push empty baby carriages around on the sand,
while the heroine's oppressive husband strangles her with her
own umbilical cord every time she tries to be born!
Our perceptions too of Gilbert and Sullivan are turned upside
down, or perhaps right side up. It first seems that the film will
focus on Sullivan, the more serious of the two, and
his tragedyas a composer of light music, chained
to the contrarian Gilbert (who says, for example, I won't
go to the dentist, I won't attend the Japanese exhibit,
I won't write a new libretto, and then does all three.)
The film transforms itself, unexpectedly, into an appreciation
of Gilbert's remarkable skill, wit, tenacity. Sullivan, for all
his semi-bohemian lack of inhibition, seems the less substantial
figure.
One is left with the impression that Topsy-Turvy, from
one point of view at least, is the story of how Sullivan and Gilbert
(as their names are printed on an old advertising poster) became
Gilbert and Sullivan. Presumably Leigh is making a point
here, that he admires the unpretentious but not uninspireda
sort of workmanlike brilliance in an artist or in
art. Kitty suggests, in the final scenes, that it would be wonderful
if ordinary people received applause at the end of each day.
Nagging questions
The film's strength lies in its richness, its expansiveness,
its refusal to follow a recipe of any kind. The number of filmmakers
who work at this level of seriousness is very small. Yet, once
one has paid tribute to Topsy-Turvy's many genuinely admirable
qualities, certain nagging questions and doubts remain.
The film touches upon many things. Too many? It seems to tease
the spectator by raising and then not pursuing a series of problems.
There is the matter of General Gordon in Khartoum in January
1885. Two of Gilbert and Sullivan's actors bemoan Gordon's death
and express a racist White Man's Burden view of Africa.
The issue is never referred to again. The opening up of Japan
allows Gilbert access to its culture. Are there elements of imperialist
appropriation (as well as trivialization and condescension)
in The Mikado? Or is Leigh suggesting that such borrowing
in the field of culture has a more benign character? Or is there
no connection whatsoever between Gordon's death and the subject
of the new opera?
The film is so evenhanded at times that it loses definite shape.
Sullivan wants to write grand opera. Gilbert plows ahead doggedly
with his comic scripts. Sullivan is entirely won over by The
Mikado. Why? Does the new work represent some kind of radical
departure for the two? There's no conclusive evidence that it
does. After Gilbert reads her one of his new songs, Kitty observes
with heavy ironyin close-uphow rich in human
emotion and probability it all is. There is no leap into
the unknown in The Mikado, it seems, but rather the perfection
of an already developed and somewhat limited form. (Is there a
parallel, incidentally, between Leigh's decision, apparently out
of the blue, to make a film about comic opera in the 1880s and
Gilbert's unanticipated choice of Japan as subject matter?)
And what about the glimpses we're provided of the actors' offstage
lives? In one scene Leonora Braham, obviously afflicted with a
drinking problem, complains that her young son is an obstacle
to finding the right man; only older ones are attracted to her
in any case. Meanwhile Jessie Bond (Dorothy Atkinson) has the
varicose vein on her legfrom years of (over)work on the
stage?bandaged by her dresser and urges Leonora to perform
at late-night parties, as she does. This is as much, for all intents
and purposes, as we ever learn about those two: enough to be intrigued,
not enough to form the basis for any intelligent opinion. Isn't
there a principle of triangulation, or some such,
in art too, i.e., that a phenomenon has to be viewed from a number
of vantage points before its features have much meaning to us?
What are we to make of the protracted scene in which Gilbert
rehearses Jessie Bond, George Grossmith (Martin Savage) and Rutland
Barrington (Vincent Franklin)? Gilbert instructs his performers
on their movements, their line readings, their interpretations
of the piece. He's patient, sarcastic, somewhat authoritarian.
The stage manager is obliged to stand in for two actors who are
absent without explanation. Jessie asks for and receives permission
to use her cane. The sequence is a sort of set piece, presumably
based on historical fact. But it seems, in the end, to be little
more than an elaborate red herring. Leigh doesn't appear to be
criticizing Gilbert's directorial style, so diametrically opposed
to his own, nor is there any reason why he should. The scene simply
sits there, on its own, a little enigmatic, but not suggestive
enough to justify its length and detail.
There are numerous aspects of theater life, or artistic life,
that the film brushes up against: the single-minded dedication
creative work requires and its emotional costs; the almost inevitable
self-centeredness of everyone involved (a case of food poisoning
overshadows Gordon's debacle for Gilbert and Sullivan's company);
the relations between individual and collective effort in the
theater (or film); the relations between low and high, the comic
and the serious, the empirical and the fantastic, in art; the
specific peculiarities (enormous strengths, maddening limitations)
of British culture.
It's all very tantalizing and, in the end, dissatisfying, because
little of it is developed, worked out. Every significant piece
is an argument for something. What is Topsy-Turvy arguing
for?
If Leigh simply set out to recreate as richly and authentically
as possible the working methods and personalities of Gilbert and
Sullivan (whose music he was introduced to as a boy), that has
certain implications. Then the film's argument becomes one for
Gilbert and Sullivan as artists and the tendency they represented
and against other artists and tendenciesfor lightness
versus darkness, for the low brow versus
the high brow, etc.
I find it difficult to believe that this was Leigh's intent,
but, by default, due to its nearly faultless objectivity,
the film tends to take on this character. Because one has to assume
that Leigh chose his subject matter with some purpose in mind.
Otherwise why not make a film about Wilde, or George Bernard Shaw,
or J. M. Barrie, or Arthur Wing Pinero?
It causes some concern when one considers Topsy-Turvy
in the light of Leigh's self-deprecating comment that he is merely
a storyteller and an entertainer. Perhaps
the film is less about the two artists per se and more about the
working out of a possible approach toward their art, and, by analogy,
the problem of the contemporary audience's attitude toward Leigh's
art and its expectations of him.
The filmmaker seems to be engaging in deliberate self-limitation,
as though he were saying, in part, I'm not what you took
me to be, this society's conscience or something like that, I'm
just like them, Gilbert and Sullivan, a song-and-dance man.
If this is the unconscious message, then it's something of a problem.
There's a potential danger, I think, in doing difficult, demanding
work and then offering what could be interpreted as a half-apology
for it.
Remarkable as Gilbert and Sullivan no doubt were, there still
seems to be some kind of disproportion between the care lavished
on the subject and the latter's relative slightness, so that one
almost gets the odd feeling of a surplus of artistry accumulating
in the film, artistry which, at times, doesn't have enough substance
to occupy itself with and eddies about on the screen. (In this
regard, it reminds me a little of Hou Hsiao-hsien's historical
film, Flowers of Shanghai [1998].) If Leigh believes that
Gilbert and Sullivan were great artists whose work has been insufficiently
appreciated (which he apparently does believe), he should have
given us more to go on.
Wouldn't a slightly different attitude have been possible?
If Leigh had said, for example: here are a couple of fascinating
and contradictory individuals, fully worthy of attention, through
a study of whom I'm going to take up the problem of low and high
in art, or the artist's public and private realms, or art and
commerce, or sexuality and sublimation. Instead, it seems to me,
we get so much about Gilbert and Sullivan as historical figures
in the end that everything else is squeezed out toward the margins
of the piece. Leigh appears to have fallen victim to that sort
of obsession with empirical fact, with getting all the details
right, which can become a means of avoiding thornier, perhaps
more rewarding problems.
These criticisms may seem unfair, since Topsy-Turvy
is intelligent, dense, praiseworthy, but Leigh himself is to blame,
by creating the expectation in his audience that he would pursue
the most difficult matters to the end. Perhaps he still will.
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