Andrew Pulver 

Gothic expectations: look at Helena Bonham Carter as Miss Havisham

Andrew Pulver: The first pictures have emerged of the Corpse Bride actor as Dickens' celebrated jiltee in Great Expectations. Is she too young for the role? Or has she goth what it takes?
  
  

Helena Bonham in Great Expectations
Helena Bonham Carter in costume as Miss Havisham. Photograph: Lionsgate. Click on the magnifying glass to see the whole picture Photograph: Lionsgate

Is this the most glamorous ever Miss Havisham? The first pictures have emerged of Helena Bonham Carter in the role of the celebrated jiltee in the upcoming Great Expectations adaptation, directed by Mike Newell. At 45, Bonham Carter is by some distance the youngest actor to play Havisham in recent times – you have to go back to David Lean's 1946 adaptation to find a comparable figure, in the shape of then 46-year-old Martita Hunt.

Even though Havisham's age is not explicitly stated in Dickens' novel, did he have Bonham Carter's cobweb-laden crypto-goth look in mind for the mansion-dwelling recluse, as she holes up with only her rotting wedding cake and pliable niece Estella for company? Whatever else, Bonham Carter is not afraid to take on eccentric, maturer roles, what with Enid Blyton and Nigel Slater's stepmother for TV, voicing Tim Burton's Corpse Bride and Aardman's Lady Tottington, Bellatrix Lestrange, the Red Queen and Sweeney Todd's Mrs Lovett in the cinema. But is Miss Havisham as the Corpse Bride a step too far? What do you think?

 

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