Gosford Park

May 09, 2022 at 15:40 1326

[From our archives] Robert Altman is the director of classic movies such as Nashville (1975) and The Player (1992). In 2001, he has shot his best picture so far, not only from the visual and aesthetic point of view: Gosford Park.

Gosford Park (Amazon.com, Amazon.uk, Amazon.fr, Amazon.de) takes place in a magnificent English country estate in November 1932. The opening scene shows beautiful limousines riding towards the home of Sir William McCordle (Michael Gambon) and his wife, Lady Sylvia McCordle (Kristin Scott Thomas), who have invited an eclectic group of guests including the Countess of Trentham (Maggie Smith), Lady Sylvia’s aunt who is contemptuous of and dependent on Sir William, a broke and desperate ex-officer and World War I hero, Lieutenant Commander Anthony Meredith (Tom Hollander), the British matinee idol, film star and Sir William’s cousin, Ivor Novello (Jeremy Northam) and the American film producer Morris Weissman (Bob Balaban; he is a co-producer of Gosford Park) who makes Charlie Chan movies and is a friend of Novello.

As for the above stairs and below stairs contrasts, several English actors have of course a special affinity: Maggie Smith and Eileen Atkins (Mrs. Croft, the cook) are both Dames, Michael Gambon and Derek Jacobi (Probert, Sir William’s valet) are both Sirs. Furthermore, Eileen Atkins had co-created (with actress Jean Marsh) the British television drama series Upstairs Downstairs.

Robert Altman is a director who prefers improvisation over strict following of a written script. As Kristin Scott Thomas explained: “We didn’t rehearse, we just all turned up! Robert [Altman] described it like throwing pearls onto a parquet floor – would see who was going to bump into whom and how it would fit together. It’s very creative in that you are allowed to take risks and try anything that you are not sure will work.”

The cast assembled by Robert Altman is simply breathtaking: Michael Gambon, Maggie Smith, Alan Bates (Jennings, the butler of the McCordles and head manservant of the house), Helen Mirren (Mrs. Wilson, the housekeeper who presides over the house together with Jennings) and Derek Jacobi, just to name a few. Dressing and setting are equally impressive. Most of the shooting for the above stairs characters took place in a country house just North of London. A few above stairs bedroom scenes were filmed at Syon House in Middlesex. The below stairs set was created at the Shepperton Studios in Shepperton, Middlesex. “Most real below stairs places were like labyrinths which would have been very difficult to shoot. Hence, we added some crossing corridors and windows that are not entirely fictious…”, explained production designer Stephen Altman.

According to costume designer Jenny Beavan, every detail of the costumes was discussed, down to the underwear the maids would be wearing. After the study of original clothes and period photographs of the 1930s, all the costumes were remade for an authentic look.

As for information about real life on a country estate, two consultants with first hand experience were hired. Consultant cook was Ruth Mott. When she was about 14, in the 1930s, she went into kitchen service. Born in 1915 as the son of a butler and a housemaid, Arthur Inch grew up in household service and, at the age of 15, was trained by his father in all the arts of private service. Inch advised all male actors portraying servants and household staff on how they should behave, dress and carry themselves. For him, walking onto the set was like going back in time. Furthermore, cast members were given extracts of Lady Troubridge’s The Book of Etiquette (Amazon USA, Amazon UK), Eileen Terry’s Etiquette for All as well as the Complete Etiquette for Ladies and Gentleman.

The film is deliberately set in 1932, before Hitler came to power and became an issue in England as well. The quintessentially American director, Robert Altman, explores a profoundly English subject. Gosford Park is at the same time a comedy and study of behavior and manners, a portrait of class, gender and tragic personal histories as well as a murder mystery movie. Gosford Park reveals the intricate relations of and between the above and below-stairs worlds, illuminating the pre-World War II way of life of the high society and its servants which is about to come to an end. With Gosford Park, Robert Altman, has created his best film ever. He is the master of large ensemble pieces, here with a rich setting of employers and servants with completely different lives and with different aims, for one weekend all united under one roof.

Order the DVD Gosford Park from Amazon.com, Amazon.uk, Amazon.fr, Amazon.de.

Movie / Film review from August 29, 2002. Added to our new WordPress pages on May 9, 2022 at 15:40 Swiss time.