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Ophelia's Fan: A Novel [Hardcover]

Christine Balint (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

August 2004
CHRISTINE BALINT reimagines the bittersweet life of Harriet Smithson, the tragedienne who brought Shakespeare to the French. Born in County Clare, Ireland, in 1800, Harriet is left in the care of the elderly priest Father Barrett, and is brought up on Lamb's Shakespeare, lime-sherbet sweets, and prayer. A child of traveling players, her ultimate inheritance is Covent Garden, London, the green room, and the theater's rough magic. With the arrival of Charles Kemble's English Theatre troupe in Paris in 1827, the Odeon Theatre is awash with the drama and music of Shakespeare. Harriet is Ophelia. The French Romantics swoon, traffic stops, and the high-society women plait straw in their hair in honor of her mad Ophelia. The fiery composer Hector Berlioz falls in love. In "Ophelia's fan, Balint re-creates the texture and breadth of the nineteenth century and brings alive Harrier Smithson--the actress and the woman, her roles and her loves.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In her atmospheric second novel, Balint (The Salt Letters) fictionalizes the meteoric rise of Harriet Smithson, a real 19th-century actress who, like her parents, was "called" to the stage from an early age. As a child, acting comes naturally to lonely Harriet, whose parents—traveling Shakespearean dramatists—leave their daughter in the care of a priest in County Clare, Ireland. By the time she's 18, she's on the stage in London, serving her apprenticeship in the theaters of Drury Lane. She goes on to wider fame when she moves her entourage to Paris, where composer Hector Berlioz is her most ardent fan, Harriet's stage presence inspiring him to write his most famous work, the Symphonie Fantastique. The two are eventually married, but trouble lies ahead for them, revealed in fictional letters written by Harriet to her son. Balint's research is painstaking, and she delicately recreates the theater world of London and Paris in the early 19th century. In a lesser novelist's hands, the fragmented narrative and frequent time shifts might have felt choppy, but instead they add delicious tension to this portrait of the difficult relationship between Berlioz and his erstwhile muse.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From School Library Journal

Adult/High School–Harriet Smithson was a great Shakespearean actress of the early 19th century and the muse for many of the French Romantics. She was the child of traveling players in Ireland and at an early age showed a talent for the stage, even though she received a conventional young lady's upbringing and education. She eventually married her most devoted admirer, Hector Berlioz, who was inspired to write "Symphonie Fantastique" by her performance as Ophelia. In this novel, the thespian's life is told like a play itself, moving from scene to scene. Like Ophelia, Harriet seeks love, acceptance, and stability. Her story is a fascinating glimpse into the uncertain life of the early-19th-century theater. Compelling reading for aspiring actors, Shakespeare enthusiasts, and fans of Jane Austen.–Sallie Barringer, Walnut Hills High School, Cincinnati, OH
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company; 1ST edition (August 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393059251
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393059250
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 6.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 13.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,834,661 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Average Customer Review
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars (3.5)Ophelia as muse for genius, July 28, 2004
This review is from: Ophelia's Fan: A Novel (Hardcover)
Ophelia's Fan is quality historical fiction, written by a talented author, who skillfully brings the past to life in vivid detail; the contrast between poverty and wealth, the importance of education and humanity's impotence against the vagaries of an indifferent fate.

Beautifully rendered, the novel traces the historical journey of Harriet Smithson, an eminent Shakespearean star, on the stages of London and Paris. Born in Ennis, County Clare, Ireland in 1800, Smithson is raised, at the request of her actor father, by an Episcopalian priest, given all the advantages of education so that she might better herself and the fortunes of her family. Thanks to the efforts of the Reverend, Harriet is saved from a life of poverty, but at a certain cost: she never really knows her parents or siblings intimately, having only the occasional visit until she begins her stage career ion London, just after her father's death. At that time, the support of the family falls to the young woman.

With her family in dire straights, Harriet decides to take them with her to London, lest they parish in squalor and poverty. The time has arrived for Harriet to repay the family for her years of good fortune. Hardly glamorous, work in the theater demands long days of rehearsal and memorization, bleak and tedious endeavors. Young Harriet plays a series of numbingly similar female roles, constantly preparing for the few opportunities to play Shakespeare that come her way. Studying diligently, the beautiful actress is almost unaware when gentlemen flock to her side, but soon she is dreaming familiar scenarios of love and marriage.

After some success in London, Smithson removes herself to Paris, where she expends her energies, much applauded for her depiction of Shakespearian heroines. It is in Paris that she comes face to face with her future, in the person of the composer, Hector Berloiz, who is obsessed with the actress as Ophelia, desperate to have her as his wife. The unworldly Harriet is carried away by the composer's unbridled passion, tricked by the dramatic emotional roller coaster of the courtship into believing such extreme feelings can sustain a marriage.

The bulk of the novel concerns Harriet's life, pre-Berloiz, tracking her early years in Ennis, where she was saved from poverty, to the uncertain years in London, where she had difficulty attaining the start status that fills her dreams. Later, in Pairs, Smithson knows a few brief years of success. Through a series of letters to her son, an older, wiser Harriet tries to explain the circumstances of her marriage to Berloiz and their intense attraction to one another. At the same time, she must confront the reality of their lives together. During her decline, acting and youth relegated to the past, Smithson has ample time to consider the harsh life she has led, with little enough choice, after all.

Drawing from the few sources available, the author fills in the details of life in the theater, both the demands and the rewards. Smithson's blooming years are all too brief, but she does enjoy the accolades of her peers and the citizens of Paris for some seasons. Although the actress avoids poverty during her childhood, the family is dogged by a lack of adequate funds until her Parisian success. While the author portrays Harriet Smithson as Berloiz's muse, little is known of their lives together and whether she continued to inspire his music after their explosive and brief courtship. The letters to her son indicate the opposite. Still, this is a fascinating romp through the backstage door of theater life and the endless struggle for recognition. Perhaps as Ophelia, Smithson knows her finest hour. Luan Gaines/2004.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A wonderful book, November 18, 2004
This review is from: Ophelia's Fan: A Novel (Hardcover)
Millions of people, at some time or another, have read at least a little bit of Shakespeare. He is the most popular English playwright in the world. The time in which William Shakespeare lived and worked is infinitely appealing to most people. Christine Balint has successfully brought Shakespeare's time to life in her latest novel. In Ophelia's Fan, Balint does a brilliant job of portraying the life and times of Irish actress Harriet Smithson, who is credited with bringing Shakespeare to France.

The setting was spectacular. It was very interesting and well written. Balint made the small town of Ennis, Ireland come to life. Not only Ireland, but England's Drury Lane, and Paris, France were exceptionally developed. "This city opens my ears. Everything happens in waves of sound. Even voices, as I walk down the street listening to their strange music, crescendo and decrescendo as evenly as they would under the hands of a conductor," says Balint of Paris, an excellent example of her sensory images.

The hardships, the plot and the setting are all realistic. Perhaps this is because although the story is fictional, the character is real. Everything in this story is historically correct and very believable. Harriet goes through many of the same problems that a struggling actress would go through now.

The plot is very smooth and usually easy to follow. It was amazing to see how Balint imagined this woman's life may have been like. The basis of the plot was very real and easy to relate to. Balint did an excellent job in creating Harriet Smithson's life, and molding it to fit the story and still made it very appealing to readers.

Balint gave Harriet a real strength and plenty of energy. She was always encountering problems and pulling through. Not only did Harriet have to make a life for herself in the theatre, but support her mother and handicapped sister as well. She also had to deal with a bad reputation for being an actress and trying to make a decent marriage. Harriet was overworked and all odds were against her, but she persevered and it paid off for her in the end.

On the darker side of things, the book can be considered slightly boring by some. There were points in the story when nothing was going on and nothing was changing, and it was difficult to get through. For example, Harriet stayed in Drury Lane, not getting any more or less popular, for a very long time, hoping to get a break, but still in the shadow of other actresses. "I have spent three years hanging about backstage, waiting for some new opportunity. I wonder whether Fanny Kelly may marry and retire from the stage, allowing me my own attempt at fame. If they would only let me have a season at her roles, I know I would have as much success as she. But how am I to be noticed when I am on the periphery of the company?" says Harriet.

Balint did not describe the information of some aspects of Harriet's life that I'd hoped she would. She did not tell what happened to her marriage, or even tell of her son for that matter. This part of the book was very disappointing. It was also hard to read and slightly confusing at this point. Trying to get as much information as you can out of her letters to her son is very hard to do. She says only that she is having problems with her husband and leaves the rest up to the reader's speculation.

There was also some skipping around with the time and setting of things. It would go back to Harriet's childhood in Ennis randomly, and confuse you for a while. It was also hard to remember where she was, why she was there, who was with her and why. It wasn't always easy to remember the people and their relationship to her either.

This book was a wonderful was to learn more about the 19th century theatre and still enjoy a fictional story. I appreciated how Balint weaved historical events into the plot and everything was so detailed and accurate. It was beautifully written and the characters were very developed and well rounded. The little inserts of Harriet's characters' stories was a genius idea and I loved knowing more about the people she played on stage. When Harriet got to Paris, Balint used many French words or phrases. I thought this was a wonderful touch and made the story that much more authentic. It was not at all hard to follow. All in all I thought Ophelia's Fan was a wonderful book that I would recommend to anyone.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars a fascinating life, September 4, 2005
This review is from: Ophelia's Fan: A Novel (Hardcover)
but the boucing back in forth in time during the book made it choppy reading. Still, a good story!
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE WINTER BEFORE Henrietta Smithson's confinement was the worst in living memory. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
backstage door
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Father Barrett, Miss Smithson, Ophelia's Fan, Drury Lane, Madame Vestris, Queen Katharine, Fanny Kelly, Lord Becher, Eliza O'Neill, Lady Castle Coote, Charles Kemble, King Henry, Queen Gertrude, Covent Garden, Madame Tournier, Mademoiselle Mars, Anne Boleyn, John Howard Payne, Cardinal Wolsey, Chapel Lane, Hector Berlioz, Aunt Ruth, Harriet Smithson, Lady Anne, Sir Arthur
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