logo
It's time to meet the mystery woman behind Hitchcock's greatest hits

It's time to meet the mystery woman behind Hitchcock's greatest hits

Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again.' It's often cited as one of literature's greatest openings: in just a few words Daphne du Maurier's Rebecca conjures its narrator's voice, its haunting setting and the tone that will carry the rest of the mysterious novel.
In the 1950s du Maurier was Britain's highest earning female author. This year Malthouse Theatre will mount an adaptation of her story The Birds, while Melbourne Theatre Company will take on Rebecca. If you know du Maurier's name but not much more, it's a fine time to get better acquainted.
Melbourne film writer Alexandra Heller-Nicholas lists du Maurier among her favourite authors. 'I'm actually surprised that more of her work hasn't been adapted. Her short stories are made for film. There's something really slippery about them that I find so beautiful, but also quite discomforting.'
Like many, Heller-Nicholas came to du Maurier through Alfred Hitchcock. The master of suspense adapted three of du Maurier's tales – The Birds, Rebecca and the novel Jamaica Inn – but the long shadow he cast means that today most people associate those titles with the director, not the writer.
For all their strengths, Hitchcock's films don't capture the extraordinary intimacy of du Maurier's prose. Heller-Nicholas calls Rebecca one of the great Gothic stories, comparing it to Henry James' The Turn of the Screw. 'It's a story about how reality can't keep up with a fantasy. It's powerful and it's dark and it's beautiful and it's intimate. Rebecca reads like somebody's whispering into your ear.'
MTC artistic director Anne-Louise Sarks was living in London when she first happened upon a copy of Rebecca. She was bewitched. 'She draws you into the inner world of the characters, their fears and their fantasies, and then suddenly things get very complicated and the drama escalates. It is thrilling. This is a romance that becomes a mystery and it is thick with suspense.'
The other reason Rebecca stayed with Sarks is that 'it was so ahead of its time. It's bold and her writing captures a wit and humour that still feels very fresh. Daphne du Maurier was speaking in a very sophisticated, coded way to women at the time and all these years later she still speaks to me.'
Sarks says that du Maurier's ability to create landscapes through language is a gift to anyone trying to adapt her work. '(Her) writing is incredibly evocative. It's poetic and muscular. She crafts vivid descriptions of the trees, the flowers, the rhododendrons and azaleas, and of the woods surrounding Manderley. The natural world is another character in the book and in our production too.'
Then there's the haunting (and perhaps haunted) setting of Manderley. The gothic manor was modelled on Menabilly, a gorgeous country home in Cornwall that du Maurier discovered as a teenager and later restored. In private letters she often spoke of her love for the estate she called home for more than 20 years, and in a later essay on Rebecca she described it in terms as lavish and vivid as any of her fictions: 'At midnight, when the children sleep, and all is hushed and still, I sit down at the piano and look at the panelled walls, and slowly, softly, with no one there to see, the house whispers her secrets, and the secrets turn to stories, and in strange and eerie fashion we are at one, the house and I.'
Du Maurier's life off the page was as interesting as anything she invented. Born into a sprawling dynasty of actors, authors and artists, she led a tomboyish childhood that translated itself into what she called the 'male energy' that fuelled her writing. She was rankled when people cast her as a romance novelist, but as the decades have passed her reputation as a serious literary talent has grown.
She was a contradictory figure, described by some as reclusive and by others as a warm and witty host. She could be proud, but her own family only discovered she'd been made a Dame when they read it in the newspaper.
Loading
Du Maurier's elusive character is mirrored in her writing; even when grounded in reality, something unsettling hovers beneath the surface. Du Maurier's delicate use of the paranormal brings to mind Shirley Jackson, another mid-century author whose work frequently produced a sense of the eerie.
'The parallels with Shirley Jackson are really interesting,' says Heller-Nicholas. 'Whether we want to call them capital-F feminist writers or not is obviously open to debate, but certainly these are two writers who at their best were interested in the gendered experience. They really understood how the fantastic is a language to explore that.'
The Birds is one of du Maurier's most effective short stories. Unlike Hitchcock's sunny version, the original takes place in grey Cornwall, where a farmer and his family find themselves under inexplicable avian attack. As it becomes clear that this violence is both coordinated and occurring across the country, the beleaguered victims find their chances of rescue dwindling while their questions only grow.
Malthouse artistic director Matt Lutton hit upon du Maurier's short story while pondering the possibility of 'adrenaline and terror in the theatre. How can we create something that will really have a big bodily impact on audiences?' He recalled that Hitchcock's adaptation had terrified him, but when he came to the original tale he found so much more to play with.
He took the idea to writer Louise Fox. She called it a no-brainer: 'Du Maurier's a deeply adaptable writer, for theatre, for film, for other mediums ... Her metaphors stay open, and her use of genre and the paranormal and the mysterious is very evocative. It's weird because she was always considered a romance writer. But actually, she's a writer about anxiety and paranoia and fear and overthinking. She's probably got more in common with Kafka than she has with a romance novelist.'
Critic Mark Fisher has attributed the eeriness of du Maurier's tales to the way they reveal how our attempts at making sense of the world are laughably fragile. Birds shouldn't attack en masse. Rebecca should stay dead, or at least have the decency to out herself as a ghost.
Fox agrees that the sense of fighting something you can't even explain is something people of all eras can understand: 'The desperate attempt to try and make sense of something that is incomprehensible or unexplainable or hard to define.'
Lutton and Fox's adaptation will be performed by one woman (Paula Arundell) complemented by a rich soundscape piped through headphones straight to audience members' ears.
The director says his aim is 'to tap into that very primal animal instinct of what it means to feel attacked. We all know what it is to be swooped by birds. You naturally protect your eyes, your ears, and I think that's about feeling, in a metaphorical way, like something much larger than you, that you definitely can't control, is assaulting you.'
He jokes that audience members fleeing their seats would be a sign of success, but also notes that 'there are no birds in the theatre. It's sound and it's light and it's a performer. It's the power of a ghost story or a campfire story. When you tell a campfire story, you start to see the story in the shadows around the fire.' As long as we keep telling stories, hopefully, du Maurier's shadows will keep offering up their secrets.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Jerry O'Connell and Rebecca Romijn keep their money separate
Jerry O'Connell and Rebecca Romijn keep their money separate

Perth Now

time3 days ago

  • Perth Now

Jerry O'Connell and Rebecca Romijn keep their money separate

Jerry O'Connell and Rebecca Romijn keep their money in separate bank accounts. The couple - who have been married since 2007 and have twin daughters Dolly and Charlie together - lifted the lid on their finances during a joint appearance on SiriusXM's Andy Cohen show, revealing they keep the money they earn but pay into a "community pot" for parenting expenses. Host Cohen turned the conversation towards money by describing Rebecca as the breadwinner in the household since Jerry's run co-hosting The Talk TV show ended last year, and the actress, 52, said: "We keep our money completely separate ... There's, like, a community pot." The X-Men star went on to explain the couple made the decision to keep their money separate right at the start of their marriage, saying: "That's like one of the first conversations you have when you decide to enter into a legal agreement together." Jerry also pointed out how much money they put into their "community pot" varies and depends on how much work is coming in. He said: "I have to say, we actually throttle how much money we put into that account sometimes," and his wife added: "The one who's not working gets a little bit of a break and the one who is working puts in a little more. And we really tag-team with work." Rebecca revealed the couple's work also depends on childcare because they promised to always make sure one of them was home to care for their daughters, who are now 17 years old. She said: "We also decided when our girls were born that one of us would always stay home with our daughters. So, no one else was ever going to raise them besides the parents." Jerry previously admitted he hopes his girls follow him into showbusiness after he started his career at the age of 11 with a role in Stand By Me. He told UsWeekly: "I have one daughter who's auditioning for the school musical. They're doing Urinetown, so we went to [dinner] last night and we went over her lines in the diner, so that was really funny. I'm going to have a couple nepo babies! "I'm throwing it out there. It's the family business!"

Rian Johnson teases 'Gothic' third Knives Out film
Rian Johnson teases 'Gothic' third Knives Out film

Perth Now

time14-07-2025

  • Perth Now

Rian Johnson teases 'Gothic' third Knives Out film

The next movie in the Knives Out series, Wake Up Dead Man, is "much more Gothic and grounded in tone". The whodunnit franchise's creator, Rian Johnson, has revealed the third film will revert "back to the origins of the genre" and is more like that first movie, 2019's Knives Out, than 2022's Glass Onion. He told Rolling Stone: 'It's incredibly different from Glass Onion. 'We put out a teaser trailer a month ago. It's much more a Gothic, much more grounded tone. It's more similar to the first one in that way. It kind of gets back to the real origins of the genre, which, predating [Agatha] Christie, go back to [Edgar Allan] Poe.' The Star Wars: The Last Jedi director insists he never wants to "repeat myself". He explained: 'If I feel like I'm repeating the same thing, or turning the crank on the handle and turning out more of what I did last time, I'm not good enough to hide that from the audience. 'So what I end up chasing is the experience of each of these things. It's not necessarily where I'm going to flip and do a totally different tone, but after three years of working on something that has a particular tone, it's like you've been eating the same thing for lunch every day for three years. I'm more excited about doing something that feels new. That's similar with the show. It's not so much a conscious decision. In order to keep it exciting for myself, I don't want to repeat myself.' Johnson would love to continue the franchise for as long as possible. Asked if more films starring Daniel Craig as private investigator Benoit Blanc are on the cards, he replied: 'I feel great! Because I have genuinely taken a swing each time that I didn't think would work. 'Ultimately, that's the thing you're trying to avoid. The second you feel like you know how to do this, that leads nowhere good. So I feel fantastic. And with the movies, we can keep doing that. I don't have something in my head right now. You kind of burn the ship into the sea each time and ask yourself, 'How will I make anything ever again?' But I would keep doing them as long as I can.' In the meantime, Wake Up Dead Man, is due to hit cinemas in December.

Stan Grant is used to war zones. His ‘crazy' next act comes close
Stan Grant is used to war zones. His ‘crazy' next act comes close

Sydney Morning Herald

time11-07-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Stan Grant is used to war zones. His ‘crazy' next act comes close

Apart from the obligatory high school roles, Stan Grant has never done any acting. The veteran journalist and author wasn't expecting the call that's lead to him doing a solo show at Malthouse Theatre this month. 'It's something that I would never, ever have planned for myself. It wasn't something at all that I'd had ambitions or aspirations to do, which makes it even more of a pleasant surprise.' The play is ECHO: Every Cold-Hearted Oxygen, and every night a different person will take up the challenge of performing the script sight unseen. It's the latest 'cold read' production from the acclaimed Iranian playwright Nassim Soleimanpour, whose daring and playful works attract the cream of the crop from across the artistic spectrum and beyond. Previous productions of ECHO have seen the likes of Daniel Kaluuya, Jodie Whittaker, Benedict Wong and Milly Alcock sign on for the mystery role. The seven locals range from theatre actors such as Nadine Garner to musical icon David Campbell to journalists like Grant and Jan Fran. When he was offered the role, it took Grant about 30 seconds to say yes. The spontaneity of the experience resonated with him. 'When I was a foreign correspondent I'd be dropped into volatile situations where we didn't know what was going to happen next, but we were confident in our capacity to handle whatever happened.' Comedian Michelle Brasier will be the first to tackle ECHO in Melbourne. Though she trained as an actor, the unknown aspect of the show is its greatest appeal. 'I think that might be what drew me to comedy in the first place. I always knew there was something else I wanted to do when I was doing theatre because there's something that feels restrictive when you do the same thing every night. Whereas with this, it's so alive.' It does make it difficult to decide what to wear, she says, but otherwise she's going in with confidence. 'Worst-case scenario I have a heart attack. But even then I've got so many witnesses to call an ambulance.' ECHO is the third in a trilogy of works that explore aspects of Soleimanpour's life. The first, White Rabbit, Red Rabbit, was written while the playwright was forbidden to leave Iran after refusing mandatory military service. Unable to travel, the play travelled for him, putting his words in the mouths of hundreds of actors all over the world. His follow-up, NASSIM, was a similar cold read but saw Soleimanpour himself take to the stage alongside that evening's fresh recruit. Taking part in more than 500 performances of the show taught him just how versatile the same script can be in different hands. 'Tonight you do it with Tony Shalhoub, it's theatre, theatre, theatre. Tomorrow it's the announcer of the local basketball team who is 75 years old and he's an amazing guy, but his understanding of theatre is different, you know?' he says from his current home in Berlin. Soleimanpour and his regular director, Omar Elerian, don't suggest names to perform their works. 'We decided years ago that that's the beauty of it. The producers invite whoever they want. We just give this general advice, go diverse, use different genders, ethnicities, backgrounds, because this is what it's designed for.' The conceit might seem like a gimmick, but Soleimanpour is also one of the sharpest writers for the stage right now. I first spoke to him in 2018 ahead of the Australian premiere of NASSIM, and he was already talking about the narrative algorithms required to write a work that can be performed by anyone. ECHO pushes that complexity to the next level. 'It's more ambitious. It's very technical, filled with creative technology, it has AI. It's a beast,' he says. It's also the first show produced by Soleimanpour's own company. Over the years he has expanded his role well beyond playwright. 'I've studied set design. I am a producer now. I am an actor. I am a writer. When we were at Stanford University, one of the technicians was not there and I sat behind the [lighting] desk, and I was giving them the light cues. They were like, 'You're the only playwright we've seen who can work the light desk.'' Loading Soleimanpour says that the structure of ECHO is so complex that it has broken software. Were he to write it as a conventional script, it would be more like a novel. He sometimes uses the metaphor of architecture to describe his role – he creates the columns that keep the whole thing standing, and then editors and dramaturgs come in to contribute the interior designs. The actors move in as occupants, and the audience finally arrives as their guests. He only insists on one thing: 'Do not move the columns.' He might create the building, he says, but what unfolds inside is always supposed to be a party. 'It might be emotional, it might be exciting, we might laugh a lot or cry at the end, but it is a party.' He wants both performer and viewer to be energised and enriched by the experience, which is why his previous work has always suggested a huge generosity of spirit and compassion for anyone who might take up his scripts. They're full of surprises, but Soleimanpour's works aren't tricks at their performers' expense. 'I always say: honest communication, happy negotiation. I think that's what's not happening in the Middle East now or in the rest of the world. The communications are not honest. They're negotiating through throwing bombs at each other.' The open-ended nature of Soleimanpour's plays means that they are conversations between writer and performer. Given today's global landscape, Brasier is especially interested in exploring that relationship with an Iranian artist. 'All art is political. I don't know if [ ECHO ] will touch on anything at all, but just to be able to have an Iranian voice on stage is really important and exciting.' Grant agrees: 'There's such a rich Persian literary culture and dramatic culture. That really appealed to me.' At the same time, he has deliberately avoided seeking out reviews or interviews that might shed more light on the upcoming experience. 'I don't want to go in there with any expectations. I'd rather be really open to the experience itself. And in many ways it does mirror what I experienced as a reporter in the most vulnerable places. When you're reporting in a war zone you really don't know from one day to the next what you're going to experience and whether in fact you're going to survive.' Dying on stage might be a little less consequential, but many people would probably think twice about taking to the spotlight with zero clue as to what they'll be asked to do. Not Grant. 'Some people have said to me, 'You're mad. What are you doing? You must be crazy.' And I'm thinking: What's crazy about it? It's really exciting. I mean, how often do you get a chance to do something like this?' He laughs. 'I'll probably never be asked to do theatre again.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store