Bridget Jones is back in 'Mad About the Boy'
Jill Lawless | Associated Press - October 14, 2013
(LONDON) —
Readers, there is good news and bad news. Bridget Jones is back. But —
brace yourselves — Mark Darcy is dead.
Fans have been shaken by the revelation, leaked ahead of publication of
“Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy,” the third book in Helen
Fielding’s series about the diary-writing singleton. He may be
fictional, but the demise of Bridget’s handsome lawyer lover —
played on the big screen by a smoldering Colin Firth — was headline
news.
“I turned on the news and there was the Syrian crisis, and then
‘Mark Darcy is dead,’” Fielding said, amazed.
“It’s quite extraordinary for a fictional character to be treated as
if they’re alive. I sort of think, hats off to Colin, because really
he inhabited that character.”
The reaction is a testament to the hold of Fielding’s characters on
the popular imagination. In ditsy, indomitable Bridget, she created an
archetype. (In Darcy she borrowed one, from the brooding Mr. Darcy of
Jane Austen’s “Pride and Prejudice”).
Bridget, created for a series of 1990s newspaper columns, was a
30-something Londoner looking for love and career fulfillment while
enduring the condescension of “smug marrieds” and confessing her
many insecurities in her diaries: “Alcohol units 7, cigarettes 22,
calories 2,145. Minutes spent inspecting face for wrinkles 230.”
In “Mad About the Boy” she is still counting calories and booze,
though cigarettes have been replaced by nicotine gum. Bridget is now a
51-year-old widow with two young children, convinced she will never find
romance again.
Fielding said she had no choice but to kill Darcy so Bridget’s story
could move on.
“The book I wanted to write was not about domesticity, married life.
It was about Bridget struggling with what life throws at you,”
Fielding said over lunch at the London gastropub where she likes to
write in the daytime.
“It was Bridget being single with two children in the age of
technology. And rediscovering her sexuality. She was a mother and she
lost it amid the nappies and the busy-ness. I think lots of women go
through that.”
Breaking the news of Darcy’s demise to Firth, who starred opposite
Renee Zellweger in the film adaptations of “Bridget Jones’s Diary”
and “Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason,” was surprisingly tough.
“I was really nervous, and I had to make sure that he had someone with
him and they were sitting down. And then I said, ‘Colin, I’ve got
something really bad to tell you.’
“And then I suppose I just said ‘You’re dead,’ which is an odd
thing to say to anyone. And we were both upset, but at the same time we
were laughing.”
“Bridget Jones’s Diary,” published in 1996, turned Fielding from a
freelance journalist into one of Britain’s most successful writers.
The novel and its 1999 sequel have sold 15 million copies.
For years, Fielding resisted writing another installment. She was drawn
back into Bridget’s world by a desire to write about the lives of
middle-aged women, who often face stereotyping, just as the single
Bridget did in the earlier books.
“There was the idea of ‘tragic, barren spinster’ because she was
unmarried in her 30s,” Fielding said. “It was real then. You were
Miss bloody Havisham if you didn’t have a boyfriend at 35. And I think
the same is true of the middle-aged woman now.
“When I was in my 20s, I couldn’t imagine that life would continue
beyond 40, really,” she added. “I couldn’t imagine there would
still be dating and going out and getting drunk with your friends and
worrying about calls or texts that hadn’t come, and what to wear.”
In “Mad About the Boy,” Bridget’s romantic misadventures are
overshadowed by loss and the fear of aging — but a strong comic vein
remains.
“I think most of the things I write are a mixture of dark and
light,” Fielding said.
Life is “not all sailing along marvelously, nor is it ‘Oh, we’re
in a well of despair.’ People hit tough times, and then their friends
get round them and cheer them up and then they keep buggering on.”As
in the previous books, Bridget can lean on old friends Jude, Tom and
Talitha, as well as disreputable former paramour Daniel Cleaver.
She navigates the treacherous world of online dating sites and Twitter,
and acquires a 29-year-old boyfriend named Roxster.
The book also introduces Mr. Wallaker, a teacher at Bridget’s son’s
school with whom she instantly clashes. But wait — is that a spark
between them? (Hint: Fielding says her dream casting for a movie
adaptation is Daniel Craig).
Bridget has always contained elements of Fielding, who is 55 and, like
her character, lives in one of the nicer areas of North London with two
young children. She is separated from their father, American comedy
writer Kevin Curran.
There are glimpses of Bridget in the writer’s quick wit and sense of
the absurd — though Fielding exudes a considerably greater sense of
control than her hapless heroine.
“Mad About the Boy” suffered its own Bridget Jones-style mishap when
40 pages from another book, a memoir by actor David Jason, were inserted
into the British edition by mistake.
And some of the reviews have been less than glowing: not everyone hails
mishap-prone, insecure Bridget as a 21st-century heroine. Guardian
newspaper columnist Suzanne Moore wrote a piece headlined “Why I Hate
Bridget Jones,” condemning the character as “vapid, consumerist and
self-obsessed” and the book as anti-feminist.
Fielding has heard that argument before.
She said that if women can’t make fun of themselves, “we haven’t
got very far at being equal, have we?”
“And also, I think that is the way women communicate with each other,
often, privately. They talk about their frailties, their mess-ups, their
weaknesses, their vulnerabilities, and they are funny about it and they
support each other.
“I was surprised with the first book, with the women who told me they
identified with it — powerful, successful women, saying ‘Oh yes, I
have that problem with tights being all tangled up.’ And it’s not
just women, either. (Prime Minister) David Cameron was in the papers not
so long ago … and he said that he’d get in a situation when he’s
got the kids in the back of the car and he gets a head of state on the
phone: ‘Will you shut up, I’ve got the Israeli prime minister on the
phone!’
“Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy” is published in the United States
by Knopf on Tuesday.
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