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From Jermyn Street to Saint-Germain - An interview with Fidelis Morgan by Anne O'Brien





Fidelis Morgan, author of the historical gem, The Ambitious Stepmother, is no stranger to the rituals characteristic of so many writers. ‘Starting a book I have to clean my house from top to bottom,’ she says. ‘Then I clear my desk of everything. Towards the end of the book I become a recluse and rattle away at the computer day and night writing the denouement and chase sequences in a hot rush’. We can see where all the passion comes from then, in this fantastic tale of ‘poison, passion and perfidy’ in 17th Century France.

One critic has described the Countess and Alpiew as "Cagney and Lacey in corsets". They"re a far cry from the meek, downtrodden heroines often associated with historical fiction. Are you cheating by introducing modern-day attitudes?

 

I get very cross when people write books set in somewhere that is ‘Olde’ rather than giving a true and accurate taste of the time. Jacobean times (i.e. the early seventeenth century) were black, gruesome and violent in taste; but by the time I'm writing things have changed. There are strangely familiar parallels to our own time.

You have had the 1660s where men wore pink satin, purple velvet, lace cuffs and long hair and women started to talk back; then the 1670s which were the same, only more so; the 1680s saw the rise of the merchant classes and people who got into Society by making money; then in the 1690s disillusion set in, older people looked back fondly on the 1660s while the youth were more puritanical and looked for enlightenment in financial success rather than sheer fun.

People also started making huge gains and losses on the newly invented stock market. I've tried to capture the spirit of the age as well as I could. I always go to primary sources and the obvious place to look is the plays of the time and also crime reports and things like rates books. Crime is crime, and has been much the same since Cain slew Abel. From the plays and poetry you pick up an obsession with wit and sex and, a certain robust style. Even the tragedies are as camp as anything. (I don’t think they'd play too well today as people would laugh in all the wrong places).

The Restoration drama was so exuberant and lively, and female characters are really positive. You have wives cheating on husbands and brokering marriage deals before accepting men's hands. There are women who are social upstarts, gambling women, sarcastic female roués and pert maids who talk back to their masters and mistresses. There are women in all walks of life, businesswomen, landladies, writers, even female scientists.

I have done my best to capture the feel of this in the books and am delighted that I show that women had a bold spirit long before the dour and humourless Suffragettes. By the way, I love the descriptions I am getting for the Countess series: Tart Noir in petticoats, Columbo in a powdered wig, Cagney & Lacey in corsets…They manage to hit exactly the feel I am going for.


You obviously do a lot of research. Does this mean you spend all your time in libraries?

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I only ever go to the British Library and then because I need to consult a long-lost book about some subject I am a stranger to - like the alchemy in Unnatural Fire, and syphilis and The Passions in The Rival Queens. For The Ambitious Stepmother I consulted a particular French recipe book of the period, and read some very bizarre early French ‘fairy tales’.

I prefer to go to the places I am featuring in the book rather than read about them. I timed walks round the Covent Garden churchyard in Unnatural Fire. I walked around York Buildings, the Watergate and the Tower of London for The Rival Queens and for The Ambitious Stepmother of course I went to Paris.

When you are on site little things always pop up at you - even if it's just the weather and the feel of the place. Frequently you also come upon anecdotal stuff that no one thinks to write about in serious books but which serves as footnotes in guidebooks.

I was lucky because I've written quite a bit in the past about Marie Antoinette so I am already very familiar with the layout and spirit of Versailles, and as a child I spent a few years of school holidays living in Montmartre with my mother, who was a painter on The Butte, Montmartre, so I know Paris well.

For The Ambitious Stepmother I ventured to new (to me) corners of Versailles, specifically The Potager du Roi - the King's kitchen garden - where I was told about Louis XIV's obsession with green peas. I also went to Saint-Germain-en-Laye of course. What a gloomy palace that is, but what a splendid position it occupies. I was lucky. I went with two friends and had the nicest lunch in Saint-Germain, and the most glorious supper ever in the restaurant of the Potager at Versailles, which seemed very fitting to the subject of the book.


Does the research ever throw up surprising discoveries that force you to rethink the plot?

 

I think the Countess series has a guardian angel in charge of serendipity. In Unnatural Fire I decided, due to the usual distribution of free houses by Charles II to his ex-mistresses, to give the Countess a home in Jermyn Street (spelled German on a map of the time). I also decided to have a famous cameo role in the book. Of course the Man of the Millennium, Isaac Newton, was the obvious choice. It was only when shopping in Jermyn Street that I picked out which house the Countess must have had. I decided on a certain house, and the one next door had a Blue Plaque. I put on my glasses to read it - and wouldn't you know it said 'Isaac Newton lived here' on dates including 1699.

The same magical thing happened for The Rival Queens. I chose Pepys and decided to set the book around the York Buildings area, south of the Strand. I believed that Pepys lived in Clapham at this point, but it was only after reading a detailed biography I found he was staying in 1699 at the home of his friend in York Buildings. Sheer coincidence! It went further, in fact, as the friend was a Chairman of the East India Company, which has an important role in the story.

I thought the same thing could not happen a third time, but it did. I couldn't think of a suitable cameo. No one seemed to be famous enough. I toyed with D'Artagnan, but then discovered that Dumas had cheated a little and that he was actually dead by this time. And as the book The Man in The Iron Mask features D'Artagnan, I left the whole subject of the Masked Man alone. It was only when I was reading an account of life in the Bastille that I finally read the chapter - the Mysterious Masked Prisoner. I had been skipping it, thinking it irrelevant. But it turns out the Man In the Iron Mask was brought up from the South of France only a few months before I banged the Countess and Alpiew up inside its fatal walls. So my third guest-artist dropped into the book of his own accord.

In The Ambitious Stepmother there are also two minor guest appearances, The Marquis de Béchamel - the man who invented the sauce - and James Francis Edward Stuart. (At the time of my book he was eleven years old, but he grew up to be The Old Pretender.)


Does your background as an actress influence your writing? It must help with comic timing, but do you ever act out a scene to make sure it's working?

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Fidelis with fellow actor Pam St Clements

I can't stop myself. I think my neighbours must think I have a constant house full of people as I play all the parts aloud, and allow nothing to go down that I'd refuse to do as an actor playing the role. It also helps in motivating the characters. I never make someone in a book do anything with no apparent reason. I also make a point of never writing a boring character, even in small roles. I like to think that if it was a film or a play every character would be fun to play.


Do you have any rituals to get you in the right frame of mind for writing?

 

Starting a book I have to clean my house from top to bottom. Then I clear my desk of everything. After a while I start using the floor and have books and notes and pictures in stacks. I then get to the Post-It stage, where I write everything that must happen on notes and stick them onto a huge piece of drawing paper and keep moving them about to see how everything impacts everything else. Towards the end of the book I become a recluse and rattle away at the computer day and night writing the denouement and chase sequences in a hot rush. All along the way I have carrots dangling - I may buy a new CD (music is an obsession) or treat myself to a meal out when I reach so many words.


What are you working on at the moment?

 

Book Four in the Countess series - Fortune's Slave. The Countess is back in London and has money to invest. She invests in the Stock Market and newly founded Bank of England. She also encounters a young would-be novelist with a bad grudge against Stockbrokers. He goes by the name Daniel Foe - only later inserting the little De and turning to writing fiction. In the book I investigate money and all the attendant occupations, from banking and embezzlement to begging and burglary. I have just returned from a massive tour of the USA. And at the end of Fortune's Slave it seems highly probable that the Countess will be sailing for The New World...

© Harper Collins 2002, reprinted with their permission
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