Written
by Max
Thornton.
If people see a list of
things I love – science fiction, fantasy, progressive rock, movies
about zombies, witty and
charming sitcoms that you will watch on NBC Thursday nights at 8/7c
starting February 7 – they might be surprised to learn that I
think ballet is awesome.
If people see a list of
my favorite authors – a small selection: China Mieville, Ursula
LeGuin, Alan Warner, J. G. Ballard, Margaret Atwood – they might be
even more surprised to learn that some of my most dearly beloved
childhood books are about ballet.
This odd and rather
niche enthusiasm neither stemmed from nor translated to any interest
in performing myself. Slightness of build, grace, agility, physical
stamina, a right and a left foot instead of two lefts: I have never
in my life possessed any of the attributes necessary for success in
the field of ballet dancing. My single semester of lessons was a
comedy of ineptitude for my watching family, and a crushing
humiliation for me.
![]() |
| Me. |
All of
which is to say, the depth of my love for Noel Streatfeild's 1936
children's classic Ballet Shoes might
initially seem baffling. Until you read it, and learn how very very
awesome it is. Alternatively, you could watch the 2007 BBC adaptation
starring Emma Watson, which is very nearly as charming as the book.
Ballet
Shoes is the story of three
sisters, Pauline, Petrova, and Posy Fossil. Adopted from assorted
circumstances of orphanhood by the eccentric fossil-collector
Great-Uncle Matthew, or “Gum,” they are brought up by his
great-niece Sylvia and her beloved nurse Nana while Gum is off on a
decade-long expedition around the world. When poverty compels Sylvia
to take in boarders, the Fossils' lives change dramatically: they are
sent to a stage school to learn dancing and acting.
Much of the story's genius lies in the characterization of the three
sisters. Beautiful Pauline is a talented actress who feels the
responsibility of being the eldest sibling; dreamy, waifish Posy
thinks of nothing but dancing, to the point of complete
otherworldliness; Petrova is the tomboy, the middle child, and the
odd one out, who loathes being onstage and is happiest around
engines. This set-up creates a lovely interplay of strong, distinct
personalities who are united by the loyal bonds of sisterhood, which
is really the heart of the story.
![]() | |
| Petrova (Yasmin Paige), Posy (Lucy Boynton), Pauline (Emma Watson) |
The adaptation is fairly faithful, notwithstanding the inevitable
glossing over of details and eliding of the timeline. Two notable
changes that, in my opinion, weaken the story are the character
assassination of Winifred and Theo's happy ending. Winifred is an
enormously gifted actor and dancer, who is consistently overshadowed
by the classically beautiful Pauline. In the book, she is also a
genuinely sweet person and a stalwart friend to the Fossils; in the
film, she's rather bratty and unkind. Theo, one of Sylvia's boarders,
has no personal life to speak of in the book, but gets an unlikely
reunion with a long-lost lover at the end of the film. I understand
the motivation for these changes – they heighten the story's
fairy-tale feel: every character, good and bad, gets what she
deserves – but they're unfortunate from a feminist standpoint.
Female friendship is undermined in order to perpetuate the tired
trope of the jealous, spiteful girl; while the cleaning
up of romantic loose ends reinforces the old chestnut that a
single woman couldn't possibly be happy.
Probably the biggest alteration made from the book to the film is the
Sylvia and Mr. Simpson subplot. The book Simpsons are a happy couple,
both boarders who act as friends and parental figures to the Fossils;
movie-Simpson is a widower who lost his wife (and child, for added
Tragic Backstory) to typhoid. Seeing that Mr. Simpson is the only
male character of any presence in the story, he and Sylvia somewhat
inevitably get a little romance.
This subplot has overtones of a lot of tedious cultural tropes, from
the above-mentioned Unhappy Single Woman thing to the Wounded Man Who
Can Only Be Healed By The Love Of A Good Woman, but on balance I
think it's a good thing. Sylvia gets very little characterization in
the novel outside of her noble devotion to her girls; the love story
is only one of several ways in which she is fleshed out for the film
– she also gets an ongoing health problem and a rather charming
unlikely friendship with Theo.
![]() |
| Theo (Lucy Cohu) and Sylvia (Emilia Fox) |
What I really love about this story (apart from the “lady doctors,”
who are certainly a couple) is that it's ultimately a story about
sisterhood and chosen family. Three orphans, a young woman, an older
nurse, two retired professors, a dancing teacher, and a widower –
none of them related by blood – come together, mostly by chance,
and constitute a family. That's pretty progressive for 1930s Britain.
The three sisters love each other dearly, but they also have dreams
and big ambitions. Their familial devotion and their wild ambitions
are never presented as being in conflict; in fact, it's those very
ambitions that bind them together, as they vow on every Christmas and
birthday: “We three Fossils vow to put our name in the history
books, because it is uniquely ours, and ours alone, and nobody can
say it's because of our grandfathers.”
At the end of the story, Gum – the patriarchal male figure who has
been totally useless and absent from the entire thing – returns
after a decade abroad. He asks in surprise, “Who are all these
women? … I brought entrancements! I brought babies!” To him, the
girls were souvenirs, fossils, which he brought back as presents from his globe-trotting exploits. In his absence, they have grown
into a close family of faithful sisters and strong, ambitious women, and it's because of their guardian and their wealth of female role models, and certainly not because of their grandfathers.
Max Thornton blogs at Gay Christian Geek, and is slowly learning to twitter at @RainicornMax.
Max Thornton blogs at Gay Christian Geek, and is slowly learning to twitter at @RainicornMax.




1 comment:
I watched this film on Netflix a few months ago and found it really charming. I agree with most of your praises for the film and your criticisms - especially the contrived love story for Mr. Simpson and Sylvia. And yeah, I kind of enjoyed the subtext of the Professors' relationship. Fairly progressive for a family film.
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