I’m something of a visual writer–I like to know what my characters look like when I start work on a story! Sometimes they’re just an image in my mind. Sometimes, like what we chatted about last week with Rufus Sewell as ‘my’ hero Marc in A Notorious Woman, they look like an actor or celebrity, in which case I cut out pics of them and post them around my computer (these are some of the photos I had while I was writing ANW, hence the atrocious scanning quality!).
(My heroine, Julietta, BTW, looks like Isabelle Adjani in the movie Queen Margot, though not as fancily dressed as in this pic! )
I feel the same about setting. It’s especially fun when a book has a dramatic setting to reflect its action, like Venice, or, in my current WIP, 1818 Sicily. The island’s rugged beauty and complex mythos are a significant part of the story. But even with less “flashy” settings, such as an English country house, an art museum, or Henry VIII’s palace at Greenwich (which now exists only in sketches), I want to know what it feels like to be there. So, I also put pics of landscapes and buildings up around the computer. My desk gets pretty cluttered, what with all the photos and good-luck charms.
Right now, I’m trying to get a vision for that Sicilian book (the second of the “Muses of Mayfair” series–Clio’s story!). I’m not too sure yet about the hero. I think he looks a bit like the actor from that uber-cheesy Barbara Cartland TV movie Duel of Hearts. The one where that blond Nazi woman from the Indiana Jones movie plays a duchess or something who pretends to be a lady’s companion (while still wearing her jewels and silk gowns) to get close to the hero and warn him his eeeeevil cousin is trying to kill him, which he is too stupid to see for himself even though the villain practically twirls his mustache in every scene. There’s a circus, a crazy woman in the attic, phaeton races, and a big costume ball, plus a sweet secondary romance. If you haven’t seen it, it’s fabulous in a totally cornball way. Anyway, the point is my new hero, the Duke of Averton, looks sort of like him, but is a much better actor, and would have dispatched that cousin immediately because he is not a complete numbskull like the Cartland hero.
My heroine stubbornly wants to look like Keira Knightley. Tall, lanky, beautiful but sort of tomboyish (she goes off alone a lot, digging for antiquities). Since Clio is rather willful (but not, I hasten to add, the dreaded feisty), I let her have her way. “Fine,” I say. “Be Keira Knightley. But no pigs in the house.”
And speaking of Keira Knightley, I read this week that she is set to star in a movie called The Duchess, where she’ll play Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire. I can’t find any info about who might play the other parts, or if they will actually film at Chatsworth or anything. I always get very excited about big costume films, and certainly Georgiana’s turbulent life has “Exciting Movie” written all over it. I’m just not sure Knightley is exactly what I picture Georgiana looking like (not that they asked me). Not sure what I would picture, though. But I guess really there is no getting away from Keira Knightley. She seems to pop up in so many projects I find interesting (the remake of Dr. Zhivago, where I thought that actress who played Tonya totally overshadowed her; the film of Ian McEwan’s excellent Atonement; Pride and Prejudice, of course). Can’t wait to see what happens in The Duchess.
Do you “picture” your characters, or the characters of books you read, as real people? Are there any favorites who crop up a lot (Diane+Gerard, for example. Or Amanda+Orlando, and Megan+Clive!)? And if you were to make a movie of a favorite historical figure, who would you cast? (I find this especially fascinating right now, as I’m hoping to see Becoming Jane this afternoon!)
p.s. Since I wrote this, I found out Becoming Jane is not yet playing anywhere near me! So that will have to wait. I might go see No Reservations instead…
Amanda, 1818 Sicily sounds like a fabulous setting! And I’m very excited they’re making a movie about Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire.
I love having pictures around me when I write. I always mentally “cast” my books with actors (and sometimes I can’t get the character right until I setle on the right actor). I keep a pretty glass box with photos of settings in my current book my desk and I have several albums of pictures I’ve taken of book locations (a number of which are on my website in the Gallery section). I’ll often pick a photograph from a research book of a particular interior. I once walked into a room in a country house in Scotland and felt as though I was stepping into my current book, because I had used that room as a setting for a scene, right down to knowing who sat on the sofa, who stood beneath the landscape on the wall, etc…
Rufus Sewell and Isabelle Adjani? Yummy casting, chemistry-wise!
My current pair are Aiden Gillen and Rosamund Pike. There are pics of them and their houses all over my cork board. I’m putting finishing touches on this project, and am kinda getting over them. But even though I use pics, the characters and places become different, more themselves, in my mind as I work.
I’m casting my next couple of projects now. A young Richard E. Grant for the next historical guy, still looking for the gal.I’d like a haunting quality like Meryl Streep in The French Lieutenant’s Woman.
And for a contemporary mainstream I’m starting, the protagonist’s inspiration vacillates between Kevin Spacey and Edward Norton. Although when I originally dreamed the story, my subconscious cast Anthony Hopkins. I could get pictures of a younger Hopkins, I suppose. (My character is forty-ish.)
Amanda, enjoy your mental sojourn in 1818 Sicily!
Do you “picture” your characters, or the characters of books you read, as real people? Are there any favorites who crop up a lot (Diane+Gerard, for example. Or Amanda+Orlando, and Megan+Clive!)?
Oh, I do almost exactly what you do, except I make a computer file of the images and my character sketches of my characters.
For example, Tanner, who appeared in Innocence and Impropriety and whose story is coming in January, was always Gerard Butler. The funny thing is, I found his image and made him Tanner before I ever knew of Gerard Butler!
Contrary to what you might believe, my heroes since then have NOT also been Gerry. His friend Pomroy, who is hero in my late (was due July 31), hopefully great, book, is Josh Duhamel.
I’m more of a verbal than a visual person, so I don’t particularly visualize the characters when I read a book. I guess I do have some vague thoughts about how they look, though, because every once in a while I see a film version of a book and think “That’s not so-and-so!”
Back in the days of Usenet (before the Web, and Blogging, and other modern conveniences we now take for granted), a common thread on some of the newsgroups was to try to cast imaginary film versions of favorite books. Some people found this endlessly fascinating, but I generally skipped over those threads.
Todd-who-visualizes-himself-very-differently-from-what-the-mirror-shows
“I once walked into a room in a country house in Scotland and felt as though I was stepping into my current book, because I had used that room as a setting for a scene, right down to knowing who sat on the sofa, who stood beneath the landscape on the wall, etc…”
Tracy, this is one of my very favorite parts of writing historical books! That magical “transportation” into a different place and time. I always feel like I can’t really get into my stories until I can visualize all these things (and I would love to get a look at your albums!)
Janegeorge, strangely enough my next “Muse” heroine (Thalia) also looks like Rosamund Pike! Her hero looks like this actor I saw once on a weird Dracula movie I caught halfway through on the SciFi channel. Don’t know his name or the name of the movie, though. 🙂
“who is hero in my late (was due July 31), hopefully great, book, is Josh Duhamel.”
Yay, Leo from All My Children! That show seriously went downhill after he fell over that cliff into the raging river… 🙂
Okay, don’t know why I didn’t do this before, but I zipped over to the handy IMDB and found out the cheesy Dracula movie was “Prince of Darkness,” and the actor is Rudolf Martin (who also, it seems, was once on All My Children!)
Do you “picture” your characters, or the characters of books you read, as real people? Are there any favorites who crop up a lot (Diane+Gerard, for example. Or Amanda+Orlando, and Megan+Clive!)?
I don’t usually cast actors as characters in the books I read, not unless I get into a “What if X gets made into a movie?” discussion. I often cast my own books, though the actors never perfectly match the images in my head. My WIP has a tough soldier played by a young Nathan Fillion, who falls in love with a beautiful and brave lady who’s like a slightly older version of the girl who played Susan in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, but with just a leetle touch of Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O’Hara. I’ve also got a wise, cynical leader played by Christopher Eccleston, though I’m still looking for the right woman to play his love interest.
Suddenly I’m tempted to spend the evening watching my Firefly and Doctor Who DVDs and calling it “research.”
“Suddenly I’m tempted to spend the evening watching my Firefly and Doctor Who DVDs and calling it “research.” “
Mind if I join you, Susan??
Amanda, we think alike! Keira Knightley was definitely the “muse” for my Merlin characters. I also rather like an early Catherine Zeta-Jones (Zorro) and the blond cellist/assassin in the James Bond flick “The Living Daylights.”
Which brings me to my favorite hero . . .Timothy Dalton. If anyone hasn’t seen him in the BBC production of Jane Eyre, run, don’t walk, and rent the video. To me, he is the perfect dark, brooding hero.
Getting back to Keira, I think she’ll be a great Georgiana. Shr has the spunk and dangerous edge to her, which heaven knows, G had. Should be a fun film!
My mom and I have been doing some research on 18th century clothes lately, and she says she fears Keira might crumple like a pile of toothpicks under the weight of those hats :))
Andrea Pickens wrote:
the blond cellist/assassin in the James Bond flick “The Living Daylights.”
Love that movie! One of my favorite James Bond flicks. (I am apparently greatly in the minority in liking Timothy Dalton as 007, but I do.) I also liked Dalton in Jane Eyre, so I second the recommendation–though I must say, there is a bit of unintended comedy when he asks Jane “Do you think me handsome?”
Todd-who-recently-got-to-visit-the-Casino-in-Monte-Carlo-for-a-bit-of-Bond-bonding
Todd, that was my slight problem with Timothy Dalton in JANE EYRE. Too handsome. Toby Stephens is handsome too but somehow between costuming, hair and acting he became more like my mental image of Rochester.
I’m a visual writer too so I collect pictures of actors and actresses to help me picture my heroes and heroines. Jeremy in LADY DEARING’S MASQUERADE was Colin Firth. Right now I’m “using” John Corbett (as he was in Northern Exposure) and Laura Linney for my characters.
I am considering Orlando for a future story. Amanda, I hope you’re willing to share. 🙂
My Lord Stoke was Russell Crowe in Gladiator. (Yes, Todd, it was RESEARCH for me to have those pics all over.)
Cara