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Tag Archives: Another Lady

Sanditon – ‘I must not depend upon being ever very blooming again’

23 Thursday Jan 2020

Posted by ninevoices in Books, Classics, heroes, heroines, Humour, Jane Austen, Satire, Tanya, Television

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Andrew Davies, Another Lady, Georgette Heyer, Marie Dobbs, Mr Woodhouse, Sanditon

In rereading Jane Austen, we are able to experience something of that age of elegance which too often eludes us in the twentieth century. We are unrepentant about this form of escapism and turn to her six novels for relaxation… Like Mr Woodhouse, we enjoy the company of these old friends best; and though we prefer their actual company to secondhand discussions and speculations about them, anything concerning them will always hold a fascination for us…. writes Another Lady AKA Marie Dobbs.

In her An Apology from the Collaborator, included at the end of Jane Austen’s Sanditon completed by Another Lady published in 1975, Marie Dobbs admits that she offers her version for our sheer enjoyment, aware that Jane Austen’s language, integrity and meticulous technique cannot be faithfully copied.

She was too hard on herself. Marie Dobbs’ completed Sanditon is peppered with delightful passages poking fun at human vanity and folly, which feel as though they could be written by Jane Austen herself. The Miss Beauforts… were certainly no longer content to remain on their balcony now these two personable young men were to be perceived strolling about admiring the Sanditon views. Indeed, they felt a definite obligation to improve the landscape for them immediately by dotting graceful feminine silhouettes wherever they be most visible. The very next day Miss Letitia carried her easel out of doors and began moving it from sand to shingle, from hill to Terrace with tireless and unselfish activity. No concern for completing her own sketches interfered with her sense of duty to adorn whatever vista might require her presence.

There is some splendid Austen-ish dialogue too, as in this speech from Reginald Catton, one of the only two on-stage characters added by Marie Dobbs: ‘So that was Miss Denham! Predatory female – Sidney warned me. He said I would not be in the least danger from anyone else – could handle all the Miss Beauforts with ease – but Miss Denham would be hanging about me forever if once she caught sight of my barouche. I told the groom to keep it well out of sight in the stables.’ 

Reginald Catton may also remind fans of Georgette Heyer of her comic young men about town, such as Ferdy Fakenham in Friday’s Child. Marie Dobbs makes the hero Sidney Parker resemble the witty, charming, teasing Henry Tilney in Northanger Abbey, but in his unassuming kind-heartedness there are echoes of Georgette Heyer’s endearing Freddy in Cotillion. The later developments of the plot come close to Heyer regency romances too – no problem for those of us who love both authors, as we must suspect Marie Dobbs did  – but perhaps some literary critics might argue that Jane Austen was intending to take a different and sharper line.

It’s difficult not to feel disappointment that Andrew Davies’ recent television adaptation of Sanditon didn’t follow the story and tone of the Another Lady/Marie Dobbs completed version. In the eleven chapters Jane Austen wrote before illness stopped her in March 1817, she set up everything we love in her other novels and Marie Dobbs fulfils the sparkling early promise with grace, respect and humour. Added to this we have in Sanditon a merciless satire of hypochondriacs and medical quackery, speaking to us all the more poignantly when we remember that Jane Austen was only four months away from her death on 18th July.

But as the ever-so-sensible heroine Charlotte says to the would-be seducer Sir Edward who has read more sentimental novels than agreed with him: ‘our taste in novels is not at all the same.’ Nor is our taste in television adaptations all the same, and this is probably a very good thing.

A letter too late to ‘Another Lady’

19 Wednesday Aug 2015

Posted by ninevoices in Books, Reading, Tanya

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Another Lady, Jane Austen, Marie Dobbs, Sanditon, unfinished novels

An obituary caught my eye recently: Author who…finished Jane Austen’s last novel.

Sanditon! The book Jane Austen was writing just before her death, and which was completed so delightfully forty years ago by ‘Another Lady’.

Marie Dobbs, originally from Australia, used the pseudonym ‘Another Lady’ because the early Jane Austen novels were attributed to ‘A Lady’. My copy of her completed Sanditon is as dog-eared as any of my other Jane Austen paperbacks; Marie Dobbs had a remarkable ability to capture something of Jane Austen’s irony and wit. It has to be said that this isn’t true of most other Jane Austen completions and spin-offs.

The break is practically seamless, coming in chapter eleven, after a splendid Jane Austen sentence: Poor Mr Hollis! It was impossible not to feel him hardly used: to be obliged to stand back in his own house and see the best place by the fire constantly occupied by Sir Henry Denham.

Sanditon’s heroine Charlotte is rather like Elinor in Sense and Sensibility, but more impressionable; Jane Austen describes how she is initially attracted by the flattery of Sir Edward: I make no apologies for my heroine’s vanity. If there are young ladies in the world at her time of life more dull of fancy and more careless of pleasing, I know them not and never wish to know them. Sidney Parker, whose character is entirely filled in by Marie Dobbs (a typical Jane Austen clue earlier in the novel marks him out as the intended hero) is as fun-loving and attractive as Henry Tilney in Northanger Abbey.

Every neighbourhood should have a great lady, wrote Jane Austen at the beginning of chapter three, and Lady Denham is as monstrous as Lady Catherine in Pride and Prejudice while Sir Edward develops nicely into the role of self-deluded seducer and the ghastly Miss Beauforts make perfect targets for delicious Austen-like sarcasm.

So what was there left to worry about in completing Jane Austen’s last manuscript? Only the way she wrote it… for deficiencies in this seventh novel I do apologise.  Marie Dobbs in the afterword to her completed Sandition had no need to apologise; her work will continue to bring endless pleasure to all of us who can’t get enough of Jane Austen.

I only wish I had known before now who ‘Another Lady’ was, and written to thank her.

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