A new TV show awash with champagne, "gigantic" hair and "rumpy pumpy" is heading your way, and it's all thanks to Jilly Cooper. Disney+ has adapted the novelist's 1988 "bonkbuster" book "Rivals" to create an eight-part series that is already grabbing critics' attention.
'Vamped up' The second book in Cooper's "Rutshire Chronicles" series, "Rivals" is "set in the not-so-glamorous halls" of television production, said Yahoo! Entertainment, and "follows the rivalry between two high-flying people in power", politician Rupert Campbell-Black (played by Alex Hassell) and TV exec Declan O'Hara (Aidan Turner).
The "first rumpy pumpy" begins just nine seconds into the first episode, said Carol Midgley in The Times. "It is one of the most kitsch, vivacious, knowingly corny openings that I have seen in quite some time", but the show is a "riot".
It is "all so vivid" that "you can almost smell the fag smoke and hairspray, wet dogs and sex", said Jane Fryer in the Daily Mail. Everything "Jilly" feels "vamped up", including the "huge, sprawling honey-stoned Cotswolds mansion with croquet lawns" and "herbaceous borders to die for", not to mention the "endless boozing on champagne" and "gigantic" hair.
'More than just a romp' This "tumescent adaptation" is stuffed with "pneumatic talent", said London's The Standard. The cast ranges from David Tennant and Emily Atack to Rufus Jones and Danny Dyer, while the "human heart" is Katherine Parkinson playing a popular novelist.
In the 1980s, Cooper's books were "considered raunchy" but the sex was "primarily silly, absurd", as the show's lead writer Dominic Treadwell-Collins and director Elliott Hegarty clearly understand.
Perhaps, suggested Cooper in a BBC interview, part of the appeal is the decade itself. "The Eighties really were the most fun time," she said, with "masses of sex, masses of drinking, masses of parties", so "the younger generation all wish they had been born then".
The show certainly is "more than just a romp", said Anita Singh for The Telegraph, giving it a five-star review. Yes, "everyone commits adultery and smokes like a chimney". They also "hunt and shoot" and "tell off-colour jokes" but, just "like the author herself, it has bags of heart". |