I hopped on to the Bridgerton (Netflix) bandwagon with some reluctance because I'm not a huge fan of period pieces which are about the intrigue amongst nobility and the privileged. Someone has described Bridgerton as a mash-up of Jane Austen and a trashy romance novel and that about sums it up for me. I'm hanging on the edge of the wagon with Ruth, but barely.
What has intrigued me is Shonda Rhimes' emphasis on the racial diversity of British society during the Regency period around the turn of the 19th century. Mad King George III was monarch and it has been speculated that his consort, Queen Charlotte (Charlottetown PEI, Charlotte NC) was a Person of Colour because of Moorish heritage. According to the series, this opened the way for a diversity which history tells us disappeared during the Victorian era.
In so many British period pieces the cast is uniformly white, although the recent Sanditon series, based on an unfinished novel by Jane Austen, has a significant Black character, Austen's only one.
It's worthwhile to imagine society outside of stereotypes and Bridgerton certainly does so. Why not?
3 comments:
I binge - watched the Bridgerton series and was surprised to see so many people of colour in prominent positions of society at that time. I first heard about Queen Charlotte when the present Queen Elizabeth reportedly took Meghan Markle to see her portrait in Buckingham Palace after her engagement was announced to Harry. Of course, the "rules" for women in the TV series rankle today!
Doesn't concentrated entertainment sound better than binge-watching Judy!
NO, at this point, during another COVID shutdown, I am bingeing !
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