Miss Havisham’s Dress:

Materialising Dickens in Film Adaptations of Great Expectations

Authors

  • Amber K. Regis University of Sheffield
  • Deborah Wynne University of Chester

Keywords:

ageing, costume, Charles Dickens, fashions, film adaptation, gender, Great Expectations, Miss Havisham, Sunset Boulevard, textiles

Abstract

This essay focuses on the neo-Victorian materialisation of Dickens’s vision through the costuming of the Miss Havisham figure in three film adaptations of Great Expectations: David Lean’s Great Expectations (1946), Billy Wilder’s Sunset Boulevard (1950), and Alfonso Cuarón’s Great Expectations (1998), a modern updating. The distinct film language which emerges from the costume designs in each of these films enables cinema audiences to re-read and re-imagine the novel’s portrayal of perverse and uncanny femininity. As a result, the disturbing and enduring ambiguity of Havisham’s clothing establishes her as a figure of resistance to modernity, and as an embodiment of decline, signalling youth and age by means of a robe which is at once wedding gown, unfashionable garment and shroud.

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Published

2023-02-20