BBC
In My Own Words
Kultur, Künstlerporträt • 04.10.2024 • 01:10 - 01:55
Vergrößern
Originaltitel
In My Own Words:
Produktionsland
GB
Produktionsdatum
2024
Kultur, Künstlerporträt
This film celebrates a supremely insightful, funny and sharp-eyed chronicler of our lives and times: Dame Jilly Cooper. Having sold over 12 million books, few other British writers have so consistently held up a mirror to the British as we really are - to our sex lives, class obsessions and the messy reality of our relationships. What does her extraordinary half-century of work reveal - not just about her world but about ourselves? Told in her own words, and with access to her personal archive, the now 87-year-old writer reflects on her life and work, from her childhood in Yorkshire, where her love of horses, dogs and devilishly handsome men were all forged, to her early career in journalism and publishing in the 1950s and 1960s. She describes the "macho" world of both industries at the time and, with unflinching honesty, recounts an incident of attempted rape by a then-famous (and unnamed) author. The film takes Jilly back to the home in Putney she left 42 years ago, where she lived with her late husband Leo and her children. It was here that she first found success in the late 1960s, writing a Sunday Times column about marriage, sex and society that, with its candour and sharp social commentary, was decades ahead of its time. Watching some of her chat show appearances with Russell Harty and Terry Wogan, Jilly talks with humour and frankness about married life, her attitude to sex, moving to the Cotswolds and the breakthrough success of her 1985 novel Riders - the first of a series of racy and thrilling novels that became known as the Rutshire Chronicles, catapulting her to the top of the bestseller lists. And attending a polo match at Cirencester Park, Jilly is mobbed by fans, young and old: a testament to how her writing continues to enthral.