Fireworks Logo

Latest Lesbian Additions...

  • How to Blow Up a Pipeline
  • Willem & Frieda
  • 1946: The Mistranslation That Shifted Culture
  • 5 Devils (The)
  • American Horror Story
  • Tom Daley: Illegal to Be Me
  • Passion
  • Big Proud Party Agency (The)
  • Law of Love (The)
  • Gateways Grind
  • It Runs in the Family
  • First Kill
  • Along Came Wanda
  • They/Them
  • Last Thing Mary Saw (The)
  • Beauty
  • Anaïs in Love
  • Joe Lycett's Big Pride Party
  • Motherland: Fort Salem
  • Please Baby Please
  • Secret Love (A)
  • Anonymous Club
  • Wet Sand
  • Nico
  • Ultraviolette and the Blood-Spitters Gang
  • Camila Comes Out Tonight
  • Invisible: Gay Women in Southern Music
  • Death and Bowling
  • Benedetta
  • Scary of Sixty-First (The)
  • Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy
  • Alone with You
  • Saint Maud
  • And Just Like That...
  • Ahead of the Curve
  • Novice (The)
  • Titane
  • Bird Flew In (A)
  • Compartment Number 6
  • Silent Night

Daphne

Country: UK, Language: English, 90 mins

  • Director: Clare Beavan
  • Writer: Margaret Forster; Amy Jenkins
  • Producer: Kim Thomas

CGiii Comment

Well...this doesn't pull any the punches.

It basically 'outs' Daphne du Maurier & Gertrude Lawrence - those with 'Venetian tendencies'.

There is one scene when the look of hurt is utterly devastating...Janet McTeer really is a damn fine actress.

The allegories are...mesmerising - perhaps a little too convoluted at times.

As to the veracity of the piece...well, that's a matter for debate.

Daphne does come across as a miserably frustrated frump - painted with lighter brushstrokes, she may have come across as a trifle more likeable which would have added to the charm of the film.

Nonetheless, a damn fine piece of speculation.


Trailer...

The(ir) Blurb...

Set during the years between the "Rebecca" trial and the writing of Du Maurier's short story "The Birds", including her relationship with her husband Frederick 'Boy' Browning, and her largely unrequited infatuations with American publishing tycoon's wife Ellen Doubleday and the actress Gertrude Lawrence.

Cast & Characters

Tim Ahern as Dickie;
Andrew Havill as Tommy Browning;
Jenny Howe as Tod;
Christopher Malcolm as Nelson Doubleday;
Elizabeth McGovern as Ellen Doubleday;
Janet McTeer as Gertrude Lawrence;
Felicity Montagu as Director - 'September Tide';
Nicholas Murchie as The New York Prosecutor;
Shane Nolan as Waiter;
Malcolm Sinclair as Noel Coward;
Geraldine Somerville as Daphne Du Maurier;
Aaron Sweeney as Photographer / Waiter;
Jay Taylor as Evan Davies;
Phillip Whiteman as Italian Waiter