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  • Hello lovely people!

  • I went to see the film The Favourite this weekend, the latest costume drama with lesbians,

  • and it sparked so many things flying around in my brain that I just had to make a video

  • about it!

  • I’m going to discuss the film itself- without spoilers- and who on earth Queen Anne actually

  • was and then well move onto the spoilery bit with how historically accurate the film

  • really was and my thoughts on it. I’ll put the timecodes in the description down below

  • and on screen at the start of each segment

  • So if you'd like to remain unspoiled you can

  • You can also skip ahead, or backwards depending on what you want to see.

  • I felt I had to make this video because I am both a bit of a history buff and-

  • Super gay.

  • If you enjoy history, gayness or optimistic messages of disability awareness with occasional

  • sass then please subscribe.

  • If you like supporting a channel that’s apparently now about history, gayness and

  • optimistic messages of disability awareness with occasional sass then please do hit

  • the button bellow to become a member of the Kellgren-Fozard Club.

  • The Favourite came out in December in the US but it’s only just come out in the UK

  • and it is up for a whole slew of awards so I would really recommend seeing it if you

  • haven’t already.

  • It’s. Really. Good.

  • The Favourite is not, however, a film that is super-concerned with historical accuracy

  • when it comes to the filming style itself- youll be shocked by how many times the

  • director whips out a GoPro

  • and the casual, snarky way people converse. It’s darned

  • hilarious, brisk fun however as director, Yorgos Lanthimos creates an 18th-century All

  • About Eve in which, Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough-

  • Played by Rachel Weisz

  • - the childhood companion to Queen Anne-

  • Played by Olivia Coleman

  • - vies for her affection with newcomer and recent servant Abigail Hill-

  • Played by Emma Stone

  • - who also happens to be Sarah’s cousin.

  • So it's a thing...

  • Sarah has known the Queen all of her life and acts like it: she’s older, she’s harsh

  • and she’s honest but they have a lot of inside jokes. Abigail on the other hand is

  • much younger than the queen and much softer than Sarah. She was born a lady but her family

  • have fallen on hard times-

  • Really hard times. Her father lost her in a bet when she was 15 and then he burnt the

  • whole house down with the rest of her family in it.

  • Along with some political jockying for power between the two main English political parties

  • at the time: the Whigs, who Sarah favours, and the Tories, who Anne is naturally inclined

  • to follow when she can pull two thoughts together-

  • She’s not the brightest spark

  • - the film is mainly about the relationships between these three women.

  • Will Queen Anne choose her whip-smart childhood friend and lover who helps her with all the

  • scary actually running a country stuff? Or the new girl, who is sweet, doesn’t care

  • about politics, and is technically actually just a servant?

  • Let’s discuss

  • But first!

  • A history primer: Who actually is Queen Anne?

  • Anne reigned from 1702 to 1714 and was also actually the last Queen of England. And the

  • last Monarch of England as the 1707 Acts of Union brought together the Kingdom of Scotland

  • and the Kingdom of England (which already included Wales and Ireland) to create the

  • Kingdom of Great Britain.

  • So she was also the first Queen of Great Britain!

  • Semantics.

  • Does anyone care? I care.

  • Anne was the final monarch from the royal House of Stuart,Formerly just the monarchy

  • of Scotland. I could go into details here but the brief version of that is:

  • we had a Queen, Elizabeth I, she had no children, she died, her first cousin twice removed, who just happened

  • to be King James 6th of Scotland, succeeded her. Great! Good! He was really Protestant

  • and he had lots of children so everyone was very happy! Particularly because they hated

  • Catholics and question-marks over the line of succession.

  • Done.

  • Okay that’s not the whole story: see the Mary Queen of Scots film for more information.

  • Want me to make a video about historical inaccuracies in that film because I already have A LOT

  • to say about the trailer?!

  • So, James became King James 1st of England.

  • [clap] lovely, lovely, lovely.

  • But James 1st, known for relatively peaceful times and low taxation was succeeded by his

  • son, Charles 1stwho was a stonking idiot, started our civil war and got his head chopped

  • off. Drama.

  • Charles did have a lot of children though: 9 of them. His wife was also Roman Catholic

  • which, if youre an English monarch, is just asking for trouble. Said children hightailed

  • it over to France, the Dutch Republic and the Spanish Netherlands.

  • And thus we come to the 11 years in which England had no monarchy. 1649 to 1660 was

  • pretty rocky.

  • It was okay for a while but then it all started to go downhill so Parliament

  • decided that actually they did quite like having a King after all and could they possibly

  • have one back?

  • They asked Charles 1st’s oldest son, Charles 2nd to come back from France and take over

  • once again. And it was all going to be great, and everyone was so happy, and he had loads

  • of kids-

  • Granted they were all illegitimateand he spent most of his money on parties and

  • women but

  • Yeah, I guess people weren’t that happy.

  • But at least he died and then his brother could be king!

  • Meet James the 2nd! Anne’s dad! Things are definitely going to go well now, right?

  • Oh. He got overthrown? After less than four years? Because he was a Catholic too?

  • No worries, at least his daughters were Protestant!

  • Like the ones from his first marriage that is. In 1677, James reluctantly consented to his

  • daughter Mary's marriage to the Protestant Prince William III of Orange (who was also

  • James's nephew, the son of his sister).

  • Royal inbreeding, what you gonna do?

  • Parliament weren’t too happy about James being a Catholic but they were relieved his

  • heir was Protestantuntil he had a new son with his equally Catholic wife and everyone

  • freaked out! They chucked James off the throne, asked his daughter Mary and her husband William

  • to be joint King and Queen and bared any Catholics from ruling England. Ever. Again.

  • Ever.

  • Still.

  • So there we go, nice new King and Queen, hopefully theyll have some childrenright? Or

  • at least be vaguely nice to Mary’s little sister Anne (star of our film) since she’s

  • the heirright?

  • No...

  • William and Mary thought Anne was so boring that they hardly spoke to her, and

  • she was excluded from court in the early years of their reign.

  • The film notes that Anne was bullied horribly as a child and the history books confirm it.

  • But then Mary died and William had to be nice to Anne since she was going to be Queen once

  • he died. Or at least vaguely nicer.

  • Maybe he just smiled at her once a year?

  • Anne had to fight for everything she got, despite being a Princess and the next Queen.

  • She wasn’t given a proper allowance nor rooms in the best palaces. So fight she-

  • Did not.

  • But thankfully she had her friend Sarah to do that for her!

  • Why am I telling you all this? Isn’t it just useless information? Well... no. I think

  • this background information gives you a greater insight into the power play within the film.

  • Since William and Mary had no children and none of Anne’s survived-

  • Side note, Anne did actually have a husband but he was written out of the film because

  • no one cares. Almost literally no one. Probably literally no one.

  • Fight me.

  • The next heir to Anne’s throne was a very distant elderly cousin, Sophia, who had loads

  • of sons who had their own sons so no worries, everyone, we can all calm down. It’s going

  • to be fine. And so people were largely just waiting for Anne to be done with this whole

  • being alivething and the new royal family could move in.

  • And it would be great yeah...

  • Anne was popular, unthreatening, very English and proudly Protestant. She’s not really

  • remembered for much other than possibly being into Sarah Churchill inmore than a straight

  • girlwaydespite the Act of Union thing which brought all of Britain together but,

  • sure, let’s go with the lesbian thing instead.

  • Historian Edward Potts Cheyney summed her up as “a good woman, but not very bright,

  • nor was she very strong-willed,” in 1904’s Short History of England. More modern writers

  • agree with Peter Ackroyd in Revolution describing her ascautious by temperament, never wholly

  • trusting her own judgement or those of others,”

  • That’s how history sums her up, but how is she portrayed in the film?

  • Well here we come to our spoiler-free film summary. Don’t worry if you haven’t seen

  • the film yet, I’m not giving away anything you won’t find out from the trailer...

  • Olivia Colman plays Anne as soft and kind but rather dim and helpless. She spends much

  • of the film in a wheelchair or using crutches as she was plagued by gout (which is what

  • eventually killed her). Mentally she isn’t the brightest crayon in the box and has to

  • rely on her lover Sarah for almost all political decisions and the day-to-day running of the

  • country.

  • Sarah, the Duchess of Marlborough, is... pretty swashbuckling: She wears men’s clothes unless

  • she absolutely has to wear a dress, she has a no-nonsense sense of things and she’s

  • alternately tender and harsh to Queen Anne. Plus she’s played by Rachel Weisz so

  • I’m already hot under the collar!

  • The film begins with Sarah seeming like a conniving and mean antagonist to our potential

  • lead Abigail, a young cousin of Sarah’s who arrives at the palace indiminished

  • circumstances”- ie. dirt poor and has to work in the kitchens.

  • Maybe it’s just because she’s played by the ever-wonderful Emma Stone but Abigail

  • seems sweet and guileless, with just a hint of cheeky fun. She’s funny and a wonderful

  • character to follow around on little adventures, whereas scenes with Sarah are generally about

  • politics or complex relationships.

  • Of course that all changes soon enough when Abigail is promoted to Lady in Waiting to

  • Queen Anne and realises that Sarah is more than just a friend to the Queen and that maybe

  • there’s an opportunity for her there too!

  • Along the way she also falls into politics as Parliament is split into two halves: The

  • Whigs, headed by Sarah’s friend Godolphin and The Tories, whose head Robert Harley realises

  • that getting the Queen a new favourite will help his party

  • And help them to end the costly war that mainly Tories are paying for but is headed by Sarah’s

  • husband, Lord Marlborough, who gets all the glory for the battles won.

  • More on that in a minute

  • Without going into spoilers, I would just like to say that these three actresses deserve

  • all of the awards for their performances. The three portrayals are all so wonderfully

  • different and nuanced even though it might be easy for them to slip into caricatures:

  • The harsh kind of butch woman, driven by power The young ingenue who slowly gets drunk on

  • power The dim royal who is fat and...

  • Fat

  • To be fair, most characters who are larger don’t tend to have many characteristics

  • Do they? Beyondeasy to laugh at’.

  • But this film really shows all facets of these women. Yes, Sarah and Abigail are highly intelligent

  • and go through big character arcs, from Sarah bottling up her feelings in icy malevolence

  • to pouring them all out and Abigail’s sweet openness to smug condescension, but Anne has

  • depth to her character too:

  • Maybe she comes off as a bit too much of a simpleton sometimes but it’s clear her childishness

  • is born from permanent discombobulation as she constantly struggles to locate her own

  • thoughts.

  • As someone who deals with a lot of health issues that give me near-perennial brain fog

  • I really relate to that. A few days ago I sat and cried because I couldn’t

  • work out how to turn the bathroom tap off but I’m now about to tell you everything

  • I know about the whigs and tories conflict at the start of the 17oos, which apparently...

  • is a lot.

  • One final thing before we end the film summary however: Olivia Coleman is amazing and I really

  • hate GoPro shots.

  • A large part of this film involves-

  • Lesbianism

  • But also politics-

  • Affected by lesbianism

  • You may be missing the point.

  • If youre not from the UK or know nothing about our politics in the 18th century (which:

  • fair) you probably don’t know about the Whigs and Tories and their fight over England

  • going to war with France at the time of the film.

  • Here is a handy little primer so you can better enjoy the film:

  • not that the film is technically correct. And their dates are a bit- never mind!

  • At that time the English parliament was split into two halves, and these were spiritual

  • descendants of the two sides in the English Civil War.

  • The Whigs, who are very puritanical, capitalistic, city-dwellers who believe the elected officials

  • in Parliament should run things.

  • And the Tories, who are showy, traditionalist, country land-owners who believe in the power

  • of the monarchy.

  • Sometimes they worked together, as they had in kicking Anne’s father off the throne,

  • because he was both a believer in the divine right of kings, which upset the pro-Parliament

  • Whigs, and a Catholic, which upset the very Protestant Tories.

  • and everyone else!

  • Once he was off the throne however they got right back to arguing and the political climate

  • became very similar to what we see in America today with two very separate parties and Members

  • voting along party lines rather than following their own beliefs.

  • The religious and political

  • differences were so extreme that they created two very separate cultures, which is something

  • the film shows wonderfully through costume design.

  • See here:

  • Whigs.

  • Tories.

  • Now, by nature, Anne is a Tory: she’s a jolly, traditional, religious land-owner too

  • after all. But the monarch’s own political beliefs are becoming less and less important

  • and she generally wants to go with whatever Sarah says anyway.

  • And Sarah is the Whig darling of the day. The Duke and Duchess of Marlborough were the

  • Whig power couple. (Sir Winston Churchill and Princess Diana are among their descendants.)

  • He was head of the army and so the war with France was seen as a generally Whig project.

  • As is mentioned numerous times in the film: Tory land-owners were paying a lot of money

  • at the demand of Whig politicians to pay Whig generals and said borrowing was making the

  • Whig bankers rich.

  • You can see why there was a drama and why who was the Queen’s favourite played into

  • this.

  • Will Queen Anne follow her own inclination and end the war whilst taking sweet Abigail

  • into her bed or will she agree with her lifelong friend and lover Sarah and continue the war…?

  • Time for spoilers!

  • So how historically accurate is this whole thing anyway?

  • Well, yes, although The Marlboroughs had originally been Tories, they were the Whig couple of

  • the age. Marlborough was actually a pretty great general and his many victories in the

  • War of Spanish Succession led to Anne giving the couple a gigantic house, Blenheim Palace,

  • as a gift, as we see at the start of the film.

  • That thing is huge!

  • The Favourite’s depiction of Anne’s relationship with Sarah are largely true to history: Sarah

  • filled Anne’s need for a close female confidante- a role Anne’s sister Mary had no interest in playing

  • She in fact kicked her a lot instead

  • They had met when Anne was a child and Sarah a teenager, and as Anne Somerset

  • writes in Queen Anne: The Politics of Passion, the future monarch found herselfirresistibly

  • drawn to this self-assured and dynamic woman.”

  • Sarah skillfully maneuvered herself into Anne’s favor but she was always the one in control.

  • It was even said at the time thatWhile Anne ruled England, it wasLady Marlborough

  • who ruled the queen.” Sarah was said to frequently criticized the queen so harshly

  • so as to reduce her to tears, and dictated just what she should say and do under certain

  • circumstances.

  • I mean it wasn't the healthiest of relationships

  • Is there any actual evidence that they were lovers…?

  • Well, is there any evidence that most couples who cannot conceive together were lovers?

  • Unless one of them wrote it down or someone saw them?

  • No!

  • But one of them did write it down! Ha!

  • Sarah at one point threatened to leak certain personal letters from the queen and is quoted

  • as warning her: “Such things are in my power that if knownmight lose a crown.”

  • (these are the letters that in the film’s universe were the cause of the rift between

  • the two women after Sara says she is going to tell everyone

  • That Anne wants to see her naked

  • In actuality they never admitted publicly why they had fallen out and the letters

  • threat came afterwards)

  • Also, historian Jonathan Swift’s observed of Queen Anne at the time thatthere was

  • not, perhaps in all England, a person who understood more artfully to disguise her passions.”

  • I’m just saying: that’s pretty gay to me!

  • The film is also correct that Abigail Hill was a cousin of Sarah Churchill, but completely

  • ignores that she was also related to the Tory leader Robert Harley- instead they make it

  • seem as if the two have no knowledge of each other.

  • Just kinda bumped into each other

  • Side note: Nicholas Hoult is amazing in this film, his eyes are so expressive that just

  • a tiny flick of his eyebrow conveys a huge amount.

  • But also Harley was in his 40s at this time and not a young, fancy 20-something.

  • It’s very possible that Harley pushed Abigail to join Sarah’s service but however it happened

  • Sarah certainly didn’t notice just how close she had become to the Queen until it was too

  • late.

  • And no, Abigail did not poison her cousin so she was kidnapped for a number of days.

  • But she did get married in secret whilst Sarah was away with only the Queen and Harley’s

  • knowledge. Sarah found out about Abigail's marriage several months after it had occurred,

  • and immediately went to the Queenwith the intention of informing her of the event.

  • It was then Anne accidentally slipped up and said she’d known all along, which clued

  • Sarah in to just how close Anne and Abigail had become.

  • Drama

  • Abigail was noted for her kind, flattering disposition and the change it made from Sarah’s

  • domineering and blunt nature. Sarah later claimed in her memoirs that she had raised

  • Abigail "in all regards as a sister", though there were implications that she only assisted

  • her cousin due to her embarrassment of her difficult circumstance and not because she

  • actually cared or anything

  • It’s true that Abigail never pressured the Queen openly about politics but she certainly

  • only let the people who shared her own viewpoint near to the Queen.

  • Kinda the same thing.

  • Again, it isn’t known for sure that Anne and Abigail were lovers but Sarah definitely

  • spread rumors that they were. She was a huge fan of a ribald ballad written about Abigail

  • by the Whig journalist Arthur Maynwaring, which sang of a “dirty chambermaidwho

  • entranced the queen throughdark deeds at night.”

  • Unfortunately this actually turned out to be Sarah’s undoing.

  • Sarah told Anne about the ballad and similar works, hoping it would spur the queen to cut

  • ties with her young favorite. Instead, it only made Anne turn further against her.

  • Is this proof?

  • Well, romantic friendships between women were common in this era but the consummation of

  • such isn’t exactly something one writes in a journal to be kept for all posterity.

  • Whilst Sarah spread rumours about Abigail she was careful to strike down the implication

  • that her own relationship with Anne had also been physical. To Sarah, “lesbianism was

  • apparently a disgusting vice, with which she had never been tainted,”

  • Uh huh

  • Sure hun

  • I’m also not going to count pregnancy as proof someone was not a lesbian as, funnily

  • enough, lesbians can also conceive. Also, absolutely no one had the choice to just not

  • get married at that time. See how well Elizabeth 1st turned out?

  • I suppose we could also note that most other kings in Anne’s family had been called gay

  • and calling someone gay was a fairly common way to slander your political opponents in

  • the early modern period. BUT the fact Sarah herself was spreading these rumours, precisely

  • because she had been passed over for another woman, well

  • Seems pretty gay to me.

  • One positive: as historian Laura Gowing has noted, “the eroticization of female friendship

  • shifted the way in which lesbianism was representedGossip about Queen Anne, Marie Antoinette

  • or society women made it publicly clear that lesbian acts did not necessarily involve of

  • the performance offemale masculinity.’”

  • For which this femme lesbian says:

  • Thanks rainbow monarchs!

  • Even if youre not actually gay and the film just kind of makes that up a bit

  • As I mentioned earlier: The Favourite is not a film that’s overly-concerned with historical

  • accuracybut then that’s part of the fun. The characters speak to each other in

  • an incredibly modern way, theyre sarcastic and often on the edge of that surly marker

  • of the post-creation of the teenager: the eyeroll.

  • It’s fabulous. I would like to own this film on DVD.

  • I would also like to own a DVD player. My Buffy DVDs are pretty sad about not being

  • played.

  • I hope youve enjoyed this look at historical accuracy in The Favourite! Let me know which

  • film you’d like me to review next.

  • [cute gasp]

  • Please one with lesbians. Or history. Or historic lesbians.

  • I… have a genre.

  • Also: Queen Anne did not keep 17 pet bunnies to represent her dead children! Rabbits were

  • food!

  • Goodbye friends, see you in my next video on Monday.

  • [kiss]

Hello lovely people!

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イギリスのレズビアン女王!?ザ・フェイバリットは歴史的にどのくらい正確なのか?笑] [CC (A Lesbian Queen of England!? How Historically Accurate is The Favourite? [CC])

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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