| Enigmatic, witty novelist Iris Murdoch lived a life of the mind until her death from
Alzheimer's disease in 1999. She also lived a life of bisexuality, carrying on numerous affairs with
women both before and, allegedly, during her involvement of more than 40
years with husband John Bayley.
Iris, the new Miramax film chronicling the couple's early years and her
later deterioration, downplays Murdoch's lesbian side - yet offers a big
plus in the person of Dame Judi Dench, a favorite actress of both gay men and lesbians who actually plays
lesbian in Miramax's other big holiday release, The Shipping News.
So what degayed Iris? At a New York soiree in honor of the film, The
Advocate caught up with director-cowriter Richard Eyre, costar Jim
Broadbent, and Dame Judi herself to ask "It was never a question of
'Should we get into that? Let's not,' because it's not that sort of film," insists Eyre,
who notes that Murdoch's bisexuality was even mentioned in the film's press
notes. "I wasn't avoiding it. It's there. It's not disguised. I just didn't want to
go into it any further. I wanted it to be ambiguous, to be unresolved in the
audience's mind as it is in her mind."
What we do get is enough for Bayley - and the audience - to get the drift, Eyre contends.
"It was sort of like a tributary that seemed kind of unimportant, the
gender of her other lovers," he argues. "Just the fact there had been quite a
few [lovers] upset Bayley, so whatever gender simply didn't matter. If
the film was a half hour longer, I would have expanded it in a number of different
directions, but to some extent the length of the film is determined by the
money we had to make it, and it was a very small-budget film.
"Broadbent points out that, judging from the memoir Elegy for Iris,
on which the film is based, Bayley was in some denial about Iris's bisexual
adventures. "He just never really admitted or acknowledged that being a problem for him," notes Broadbent. "He's also
said, 'I have no great respect for the truth - I don't mind lying.' "
Dench agrees, quoting a radio interview with Bayley (on BBC's In the Psychiatrist's Chair, in which guests are
interviewed by an actual psychiatrist). "Bayley understood that Iris was gay
and promiscuous," Dench says. "He didn't actually say 'bisexual,' but he
said 'promiscuous.' And Bayley said, 'But not after we got married, no, no.
"But I doubt that," Dench continues. "It did go on. She was a very private
person with a very private life, and he never did understand her. Nobody
understood her completely."
The cast and crew of Iris did at least understand Murdoch's plight.
Both Eyre's and Broadbent's mothers died of Alzheimer's. "I suppose that was the
main thing that drew me to the script," Broadbent admits. "I knew the world, I
knew the condition and situation, and I realized how honest and perceptive the
script was. It wasn't sentimental or skirting around the edges and making
something better than it was."
Dench, on the other hand, calls herself "a huge fan" of Murdoch's since the
'60s, when she saw a production of the play Murdoch adapted from one of her
own novels, A Severed Head. "Friends
of mine were in it," says Dench. "And I read a lot of her books. So I knew
about her, but I must be the only person who never knew her. I must have
been in a party or something when she was there, but I wasn't aware of it."
The two creative women share connections that include devoted marriages that spanned decades.
(Dench's husband of almost 30 years, actor Michael Williams, died of lung cancer
six months before filming.) "Iris Murdoch was a Communist but very interested in Quakerism, and I'm a Quaker,"
Dench notes. "But she was a brilliantly clever woman, and I am not a brilliantly
clever woman. You just find the things that are level ground to you."
Would that include any parallels with Murdoch's bisexual nature? "No," says
Dench. "Not at all; I'm so sorry to spoil it." In fact, she seems quite
startled to hear of her exalted status with her gay fans. "An icon?" she exclaims.
"No, no, no, certainly not!"
Told she's not just a lesbian icon but a sexy lesbian icon at that, Dench
bursts into warm laughter. "Oh, I like the sexy bit!" she says. "Thanks for
passing it on! I'm very interested! But don't make too much of that. I'm
67 - can't be that innocent!"
Ferber contributes to Time Out New York and other publications
Find more information on Iris and links to related Internet sites at www.advocate.com
Thanks to Michael for bringing this Article to our attention.
November 25, 2006
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