
#CAST PBS THE CHAPERONE MASTERPIECE SERIES#
With the new film currently number one at the box office with a $31 million opening, and having beaten even the likes of Brad Pitt in Ad Astra, fans nostalgic for the original series can head to Passport anytime and watch it all again. PBS Passport has been keeping up, with several new series and returning favorites added to your must-watch list.Īs always, PBS Passport offers an entire range of Masterpiece programs, including all six seasons of Downton Abbey. But even though this is the era of Peak TV, viewers are no longer tied to a national airing schedule to watch their favorite programs or check out PBS' brand new offerings.
#CAST PBS THE CHAPERONE MASTERPIECE TV#
As the equinox passes, the days grow shorter and the nights colder. It's a perfect time to start settling in around the electronic hearth of the TV and binging the nights away. It may still be hotter than Hades here in the Nation's Capital, but technically, Fall is officially here. Because The Chaperone’s second fiddle doesn’t soak up the spotlight as readily as its star, the film leaves the viewer with an unsatisfied longing for more Brooks.(Photo: © NRK, Courtesy of GSN/Walter Presents) It is not a prequel to what has been passed down as the legendary but cautionary Louise Brooks story. But make no mistake: This is a story about a fictitious chaperone and her times. Nevertheless, there are numerous little moments between Richardson (who captures Brooks’ mannerisms but whose face is a bit too round to fully replicate the look) and McGovern (always a pleasure) that are precious enough to be frozen in amber. Through flashbacks, we learn the reason she is shown as lukewarm toward her marriage – and like her parental search (and the film’s pie-in-the-sky closing sequence) Norma’s concerns seem more suited to the 21st century than early 20th. While Louise is at class during the day, Norma, an adoptee, engages in some sleuthing to learn the identity of her birth parents. And surprise: A little of each rubs off on the other.Īdditionally, the film throws in references to the changing times with unsubtle references to the beginning of Prohibition, women’s newly won right to suffrage, the abandonment of corsets, the cruelty of schadenfreude, etc. The storyline concocts a tale in which Brooks’ insouciance and focused ambition are contrasted with the decorum and social acquiescence of her chaperone Norma Carlisle (McGovern). It’s a gap that allowed author Moriarty and screenwriter Fellowes to imagine quite a lot. Denis and Ted Shawn, Brooks’ father refused to let her go unaccompanied, hence “the chaperone,” about whom next to nothing is historically known. Despite having earned an opportunity to study at Denishawn, the famous modern-dance school formed by Ruth St. The Chaperone mostly takes place in 1922 when Brooks (Richardson) was 15 and a dancing scholarship in New York City became her ticket out of the cultural backwater of Wichita, Kan. Her career never reached such heights again. Then and now, Brooks’ carefree onscreen demeanor and helmut bob defined the popular idea of the modern Jazz Age woman. After an unsatisfying career in Hollywood films in the late 1920s, Brooks broke out in 1929 as Lulu, the star of Pandora’s Box, a film made in Germany by acclaimed director G.W.

Two of McGovern’s compatriots from Downton Abbey – Julian Fellowes (the show’s writer and creator) and one of its directors, Michael Engler – have joined her in this endeavor, which tells a story about the silent-movie star Louise Brooks during her formative years prior to becoming an iconic screen presence and universal symbol of the era’s new independent woman. The film is based on Laura Moriarty’s popular novel of historical fiction, The Chaperone, whose audiobook version is read by Elizabeth McGovern (who stars in and is also a producer of this film). Although the terrific cast manages to deliver some small, lovely moments, The Chaperone keeps its corset fully laced and its narrative intentions in check. No chaperones are necessary to watch this genteel movie.
