Georgette Heyer Fans discussion
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Best Supporting Characters and Favourite Scenes

"You see, I am not pretty, not in the least, never was, and so I have to be odd. Nothing for it! It answers delightfully."



The Marquesa was so beautifully indolent and kind - I loved her, too!


I just got to the Christmas party, so I'll second your nomination, Carol!

I just got to the Christmas party, so I'll second your nomination, Carol!"
& GH doesn't overplay it - keeps her as a minor character!

I love when Sophy "spikes Charles' guns" for the first time after Eugenia scolds Addy over Cecelia's behavior in the park. The line about daughters resembling their mothers was perfect.

Isn't that scene wonderful? She tells him all about the Dishonourable Alfred and his squeezing and stroking habits, suggesting that it will do Cecy's reputation no good to be seen with him in the park and turning the tables on Eugenia perfectly. Especially when she says: "For you to be telling tales to Miss Wraxton about her brother would be the shabbiest thing!". And later, when she says: "Now, do not say that Miss Wraxton told you it was so, because I am sure she would never have told you such fibs about Cecelia!".
And then to hit him with the suggestion that Eugenia will end up like her mother...

She is certainly one of the most confident. She never doubts that her schemes will work!





What fun to get to see Heyer performed on stage! I'm more than a little envious.

He's a favourite secondary character of mine too!
GH had a lot of fun with her supporting males, didn't she?



True! The Talisman Ring would be easier than most Heyer stories to adapt to the stage!

Now I don't know why he slipped my mind until I was posting in the sequels thread, but he has got to be one of my favorite supporting characters. So unaware of all of his faux pas, bumbling but so capable in his own fields, just endearing.
Did anyone find him too annoying?


Now I don't know why he slipped my mind until I was posting in the sequels thread, but he has got to be one of my favorite supporting characters. So unaware of all of his faux pas,..."
No, I love Papa Chawleigh, too, because his heart is in the right place. And he gives Adam such scope for growing up that I think he's a very important character!


How fun to see a stage adaptation of them! I'm bright fluorescent green!

The scripts were written in Chicago by a nationally known playwright, Christina Calvit. "Pistols for Two" (a weaving of many stories)is truly brilliant, but my heart will always belong to "Talisman Ring." Now that I love "Cotillion" so much, I'd love to see that one again. I keep asking/hoping she'll do "The Corinthian" someday. Other theater companies have performed her scripts in other states. Her Jane Austen play, "Pride and Prejudice," was performed at the Stratford, Ontario, Shakespeare Festival and other places as well.

Lifeline Theatre has a small stage, but they are very inventive. At different times, they had the main house, Sylvester's bedroom, Eustacie getting accosted by "the headless horseman" in the theater's main aisle, the Red Lion's taproom, even the dower house where Miss Thane could tap on panels to her heart's content and Ludovic could slip inside the secret passageway. The library fight (with books madly flying) was magnificent. Lifeline has performed this play on two separate occasions. I saw it multiple times during both runs. Also at a staged reading. Sigh! Christina Calvit is a genius at condensing so seemlessly that you hardly miss anything. And I've seen many of her plays where I knew the books extremely well.

I so understand, Karlyne. My favorite part of life in Chicagoland is our great theater opportunities, and Lifeline is my favorite theater of all. Lifeline contributed to my intense love of Georgette Heyer.

I have good friends in Chicago and, if I ever get out to visit them again, I'll time it so that I get to see something at Lifeline- something Heyer, of course!

True! The Talisman Ring would be easier than most Heyer stories to adapt to t..."
I think "The Corinthian" would be excellent, too. It has the girl masquerading as a boy, the stolen necklace plot, Sir Richard's ongoing amusement at Penn, Penn's narrow escape from the Bow Street Runner. Ceddie. And a rope ladder, to boot!

That would be great. I would meet you at the theater! I hope they do a GH again. They did reader's theaters of all their GH shows last year. One night only. They even had Jennifer Kloester to speak at one of them. I could only go to one of them because I lead a girls club on Wednesday nights and the rest were during the school year. At least I got to see "The Talisman Ring."

I had no idea that anyone was staging any Heyer. It's so encouraging- and let's hope they do it again. Keep me posted. And, yes, we could meet at the theater! How fun would that be?!

Indeed!


I agree! He and Eustacie both make me laugh every time I read that one.


sarah and Eustacie are great together. unlike many Heyer stories where, if there is a secondary young female character, she often seems to be rather insipid, or too silly, or dull. Eustacie is romantic and fanciful, but brave and adventurous and resourceful as well. I love the bit where she is scolding her 'maid' for breaking the perfume bottle.




I came on here to rave about Gideon. He deserves his own book! Though (and this took me by surprise because I'm not a fanatic slasher) I would totally love it if he and another officer had a long-standing, committed relationship. Maybe his complete disinterest in Belinda nudged my sentiments in that direction?
Books mentioned in this topic
Courtship and Curses (other topics)The Toll-Gate (other topics)
Footsteps in the Dark (other topics)
And reading all of the previous posts reminds me of how much I have enjoyed the many and varied secondary characters.