Amanda
Foreman Takes on Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire
THE HIGH LIFE
By Amanda Eyre Ward
February 2, 2001
Imagine Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, preparing
for a night out on the town. It is 1775, and she has fashioned
a three-foot tower on her head, using scented pomade to affix
pads of horsehair on top of her own hair. She has just thought
of the idea of making tiny wooden ships to adorn her horsehair
wig, and has called to her servants. It will take the help
of at least two hairdressers and many hours to create Georgiana’s
sensational hairdo, and yet, notes Amanda Foreman in her
riveting biography, Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire (Modern
Library, $15.95), soon after this fateful night, "women
competed with each other to construct the tallest head, ignoring
the fact that it made quick movements impossible, and the
only way to ride in a carriage was to sit on the floor."
Envied, imitated, and always observed, Georgiana was as
famous as her great-great-great-great niece, Lady Diana Spencer,
would be. Georgiana’s marriage in 1774 to the Duke
of Devonshire cemented relations between two of the richest
families in England, and Georgiana’s life took place
against a backdrop of palaces and ballrooms.
A typical night for Georgiana, Foreman explained in a recent
interview from her home in New York, began with good: "They
would begin the evening with a great feast, and then they
would go to the opera, watch perhaps the first three acts,
and then go back to someone’s house and feast again.
They would eat lots of game: venison, sides of beef. They
drank enormous amounts, wine mostly, this claret that British
love, red wine. They would eat at seven, and then again at
midnight. They had no heat in these days, just the heat from
fireplaces, so it was extremely cold. I didn’t understand
how they could possibly eat so much, but they were burning
all these calories just keeping warm. You have to realize,
these people had no jobs. They didn’t really have anything
to do, and so they gorged themselves".
Georgiana was known to turn her enormous home, Devonshire
House, into a casino, complete with professional dealers
and banks more than willing to lend money to London’s
tony set. "These were very serious gamblers", says
Foreman. "People threw up from the stress. You imagine
ladies playing cards like in a Jane Austen novel, very sedate,
but in fact, they were doing very heavy gambling. " Georgiana’s
game of choice was called faro. "Faro is a game of chance,
essentially, with no skill involved," explains Foreman. "You
bet against the bank, and the bank almost always wins. Georgiana
became addicted to the game, and it was very tragic in the
end. She would let the bankers set up in her drawing room
in exchange for a percentage of the profits. But of course
Georgiana was so addicted that she would gamble too, and
end up basically getting a percentage of her own losses back".
Georgiana would go on to lose millions of dollars, to miscarry
repeatedly, to bear an illegitimate child and three legitimate
ones. She would endure a lifelong marriage to the Duke, a
man who, according to the tabloids, was the only man in England
who did not love her. She would be courted by the Prince
of Wales (whom she called "Prinny"), and would
become instrumental in leading the Whig party to power. She
would fall in love with Lady Elizabeth "Bess" Foster
and share her with the Duke. (The three lived in a ménage
a trios until the end of Georgiana’s life). But imagine
her before all this, surrounded by servants coating horsehair
with pomade, sipping claret, and smiling to herself at the
giddy pleasures the evening holds for her.
Amanda Foreman makes it simple to imagine Georgiana in such
a flattering light. "Biographers," Foreman notes
in the introduction to Georgiana, "are notorious
for falling in love with their subjects." Too often
regarded as dull compilations of dusty facts, biographies
are rarely bestsellers. But Georgiana reads
like a racy novel, complete with enough rocky relationships,
torrid trysts, and illegitimate childbirths to keep Jerry
Springer in business for weeks. In fact, the American version
of Georgiana (which, Foreman admits, omits historical
facts that "Americans wouldn’t give a monkeywrench
about") is proving to be just as successful as the British
version.
"I was a graduate student at Oxford when I discovered
Georgiana", Foreman explains. "I was supposed to
be writing about attitudes to race and color in late 18th-century
London. As part of my research, I was reading a biography
of Charles Grey, who, as a young man, proposed the motion
to abolish the slave trade. The biography also referred to
his tragic affair with Georgiana and quoted some of her letters
to him. But the way the biographer referred to her, dismissing
her as some inconsequential, rather sad figure contrasted
- and I felt wrongly - with the brilliance of her letters.
And from then on I just kept thinking about her, convinced
that someone was wrong, and that this woman whose words had
so moved me had clearly been mistreated. I started to neglect
my thesis to the extent that one day I realized I’d
spent six months reading about Georgiana and doing nothing
on my doctorate at all! So I went to the authorities and
threw myself on my knees and said, "Please, please will
you let me change my subject and write about her?" Fortunately
for me, they agreed".
Foreman talks about being an overnight grad student spending
her formative years in the library stacks ("I’ve
never even been to a keg party," she notes wistfully),
and while she talks, I look at the publicity photographs
splayed across my desk; Foreman, dressed in a glamorous period
dress for an Elle photo shoot, Foreman in a fabulous
bronze, low-cut sheath accepting the Whitbread Prize for
Biography of the Year, Foreman, her platinum hair shining
against her black leather jacket in her author photograph,
and most notorious, Foreman posing nude behind a pile of
books in a Tatler article depicting up-and-coming
Brits with their bare necessities. I mention the discrepancies
between the picture she paints of a shy bookworm and the
articles that call Foreman "the glamorous biographer
who is taking London by storm." As Georgiana would do,
Foreman only laughs. "Well, I would like to say a few
things about that photo in Tatler. I have no regrets.
The article was about the 20 cleverest people in England,
covered up only by the thing that makes them clever. A saxophonist,
for example, had only his saxophone, and an artist, his easel.
So I was covered by books".
Despite the photographs, the creation of a compelling biography
was an arduous and careful task, one that was anything but
glamorous. "I put a little article in every local paper",
she recalls, "asking anyone with any relation to Georgiana
to get in touch with me. I had to pass my drivers test, and
then drove all around England visiting people’s homes.
Many people were basically bewildered, but would invite me
in and leave me alone with a box full of letters. I would
read through them and try to fit the pieces together.
"I re-wrote this book three times," Foreman says. "But
I was not changing the plot, it was more like revealing the
story which was already there, the story of Georgiana’s
journey toward self-actualization. At the same time, I had
to keep readers turning pages. In order to keep the plot
moving along, I had to withhold information. At the end of
the first chapter, for example, I tell readers about the
birth of the Duke’s illegitimate child. I could have
revealed that information anywhere, but finding out about
Georgiana’s husband’s illegitimate child on Georgiana’s
wedding day creates the most dramatic experience for readers."
Foreman’s new nonfiction project is similarly dramatic. "Oh
... I’m so excited about it," she says, "It’s
called My American Cousins, and it’s about these
Brits who thought the Civil War sounded so interesting that
they decided to come over and fight in it. There are five
main characters in the book, though there were hundreds who
came over".
The success of Georgiana has brought Foreman astonishing
publicity for a biographer, but Foreman is no stranger to
celebrity. Her late father, the screenwriter Carl Foreman
(High Noon, The Bridge on the River Kwai, The Guns of
Navarone) was blacklisted during the McCarthy period
when he refused to "name names" during the Communist
witch-hunt. He fled to England, where Amanda was born in
1968. "We moved around so much when I was young," says
Foreman. "I was very shy, so shy that I would walk across
the street if I saw someone I knew rather than deal with
talking to them. I suppose I saw in Georgiana the best friend
I never had. She was so comfortable with herself, and being
in the public eye, and I guess I wished I could be like that.".
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