I completely agree about Brenda Blethyn. I easily imagine her as a young girl, which we were supposed to because Mr. Bennett had married someone very young. Rather than being sort of manipulative and harsh, she was rather excitable and fluttery, running around the room when the gentlemen arrived urging, "Just act natural, just act natural!" And earlier on when she talked very overtly about her daughters' eligibility and prospects, vis-a-vis money in front of Mr. Darcy, you could see how natural, practical and important this subject was for her, and the same time how Mr. Darcy would see the discussion as completely lacking in subtlety and propriety, especially given their relative status.
One thing I never really understood from the novel was whether Mr. Bennet was supposed to be a powerful character who damaged his family, or someone who just kind of ran under the radar, making his remarks for his own sake, and being disregarded by the rest of the family as kind of odd and strange (except for by Lizzie and Jane). I had leaned toward the running under the radar, because that was how I first experienced him when I read the novel. I didn't see him as doing damage, except in his rather inept failure to keep Lydia from traveling to Bath because he wanted peace and quiet. I saw him as pretty passive and uninfluential.
But some of the comments make me a bit more unsure. And given a father then was supposed to be master of the household, I guess the fact that he was passive could be equally damaging as would have been an overly controlling man. Anyway, a good excuse to re-read the novel with this question in mind!
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