"GEORGIANA" EXUDES
CHARACTER
18th century aristocrat was Di ahead of her day
by Deirdre Donahue
USA TODAY
For eight years, Oxford graduate student
Amanda Foreman labored away on a biography about an obscure
English aristocrat, Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire, who
lived during the licentious reign of George III.
"There was a total lack of interest", says Foreman,
32, while on vacation in the Caribbean.
Today, the critically admired biography is a best seller
in Britain and the USA (available from Modern Library, $15.95).
An eight-part BBC radio adaptation starring Judi Dench will
begin airing April 3 on local NPR stations. The upcoming
film adaptation has famous actresses clawing for the role,
and Foreman has won Britain’s coveted Whitbread prize
for biography.
Resplendently reclaimed from history’s shadows, Georgiana
(pronounced George-ayna) reigns once again. Born Lady Georgiana
Spencer in 1757, she married at 17 to the very rich but emotionally
stunted Duke of Devonshire, the only man in England not in
love with her, newspapers would later claim. Beautiful, very
intelligent, a gifted writer, a desperate people-pleaser,
Georgiana would transfix the emerging media.
"She was the first woman celebrity who was not a queen,
a prostitute or an actress," Foreman says. Georgiana’s
intricate hairdos, her convoluted love affairs and substantial
political influence would make her as closely observed as
a later Spencer; Diana, Princess of Wales. (She is Georgiana’s
great-great-great-great niece and is buried at Althorp Park,
Georgiana’s childhood home).
Like Diana, Georgiana struggled. As Foreman details, she
drank. She took opiates. She gambled to utter ruin. (At one
point, her debts totaled the modern equivalent of 6 million
pounds). She alternately starved and binged on food. She
consulted quack doctors to remedy her infertility. (She gave
birth to four children, one illegitimate).
As a graduate student researching 18th century attitudes
toward race, Foreman found passages from a letter that Georgiana
had written to her lover, Whig politician Charles Grey. "Her
letters were so intelligent and self-aware", she says.
Foreman changed subjects and drove around England reading
more than 10,000 letters that concerned Georgiana. (About
4,000 were written by her; others were either sent to her
or discussed her). Some passages had been blacked out by
censorious relatives.
As long as one maintained the surface appearance of propriety,
avoided divorce and produced male heirs, life among the aristocracy
was surprisingly fluid. Lovers were taken; illegitimate children
blended in among their siblings. Georgiana and her husband
lived for many years with the grifter Lady Elizabeth Foster,
who bore the Duke at least one child and possibly two. She
also was Georgiana’s best friend and probable lover,
and went into exile with her when Georgiana bore Grey’s
daughter.
The Duke would recall them both from exile. He married Foster
after Georgiana’s death at 49 and then took a new mistress. "She’s
the Becky Sharp or Eve Harrington" of the story, Foreman
says.
Georgiana is not just frothy bedroom hijinks. A close friend
of Charles James Fox, Marie Antoinette and the Prince of
Wales, Georgiana evolved into a substantial political figure
not unlike Pamela Harriman. She also developed a passion
for science. "This was a most fantastic world, with
extraordinary emotional, intellectual and sexual freedom," Foreman
says.
Few who knew Foreman as a teenager would have predicted
she would become an admired biographer. "I was never
a good student," she says. Her father was the black-listed
Hollywood screenwriter Carl Foreman, who wrote High Noon
and The Bridge on the River Kwai. (Her mother is British).
Foreman was born in England, lived in Los Angeles for a
time, then went to English boarding school at 10. She lives
in New York and is working on a history of British volunteers
during the American Civil War. It’s a good project,
she says: "I’m half English, half American"
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