Kind Hearts and Coronets is the
quintessential Ealing comedy: it satirizes the
British class system with a simple plot, wicked writing, and terrific comic
acting.
The plot is told in retrospect: the daughter of a British peer is shunned by her family, the D’Ascoynes, because she eloped with a certain Mazzini, an Italian opera singer. Mazzini died the day their son, Louis, was born. After his mother’s own untimely death in penury in Clapham, Louis D’Ascoyne Mazzini takes up his mother's unrequited ambition to be accepted by the D’Ascoyne family.
The plot is told in retrospect: the daughter of a British peer is shunned by her family, the D’Ascoynes, because she eloped with a certain Mazzini, an Italian opera singer. Mazzini died the day their son, Louis, was born. After his mother’s own untimely death in penury in Clapham, Louis D’Ascoyne Mazzini takes up his mother's unrequited ambition to be accepted by the D’Ascoyne family.
What makes this particular recipe for revenge so tasty is that it is a dish served sufficiently cold to the accompaniment of a continual patter of mannered snobbery.
Louis D'Ascoyne Mazzini (Dennis Price) pens his mémoires in prison. |
'It was no more than a piece of youthful bravado,’ Louis tells us, ‘but it was one of those acorns from which great oaks are destined to grow. Even then I went so far as to examine the family tree and prune it to just the living members. But what could I do to hurt them? What could I take from them, except, perhaps, their lives.’ And, of course, their title.
'I shot an arrow in the air; she fell to earth in Berkeley Square.' |
Alec Guinness as seven lordly (and one lady) D'Ascoynes |
A less pleasant D'Ascoyne (Alec Guinness) confronts Louis (Dennis Price) |
Of subsidiary concern to Louis is Lionel Holland (John Penrose), an only marginally 'social better' with whom Louis grew up, who had slighted him as ‘a penniless boy from Clapham’.
Dennis Price and Joan Greenwood in Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949) |
Dennis Price and Valerie Hobson in Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949) |
The film takes its unusual title from the poem Lady Clara Vere de Vere by Alfred, Lord Tennyson. In it, the poet, speaking of the proud aristocratic woman of the title, says: ‘Kind hearts are more than coronets, And simple faith than Norman blood.’ Edith quotes the line after Louis tells her his story when they first meet.
The Criterion Collection release of this film includes a 70-minute 1977 BBC television interview with Guinness by host Michael Parkinson.
Kind Hearts and Coronets 1949 U.K. (106 minutes) Ealing Studios. Directed by Robert Hamer; screenplay by Hamer and John Dighton, uncredited script revisions by Nancy Mitford, from Roy Horniman’s 1907 novel Israel Rank: The Autobiography of Criminal; cinematography by Douglas Slocombe; edited by Peter Tanner.
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