How do you solve a problem like Rupert Campbell-Black? Since 1986, Jilly Cooper’s fictional show jumper has been mounting his way across the wives and daughters of her invented (but awfully familiar) county of Rutshire. Through 11 novels, the most recent of them published in 2023, nothing has stood between the man and his relentless conquests. Not the AIDS crisis (the first in the Rutshire Chronicles series, Riders, appeared the same year as the UK’s “Don’t Die of Ignorance” public health campaign), and not feminism: Rutshire is the land where #MeToo never happened.
But out in the real world, time moves on, and even the sacred world of Jilly was not entirely immune. In August, the writer Flora Watkins shared the sad story of how she was defenestrated from the Jilly Cooper Book Club, originally formed by two friends who wanted somewhere to “drink champagne and shriek about Jilly”. Eventually, though, the culture wars crept into the JCBC, and Watkins clashed with fellow members over — inevitably — the trans issue. After tweeting “It’s women who go through the menopause”, Watkins found herself booted from the WhatsApp chat. The last message she saw was someone saying that it would give them “great pleasure” to tell Watkins “to fuck off from us for good. Bye!”
All this implies that now may not be the wisest of times to bring Cooper to TV. But that is what Disney+ has decided to do, with an adaptation of Rivals, the second Rutshire novel. You can imagine huddles of executives holding crisis meetings, frantically trying to reshape Rupert into something contemporary sensibilities can accept. Not only is he irredeemably posh, he also loves blood sports; worse than that, he’s a Tory MP. In Rivals, the main object of his affections is Taggie O’Hara, who can be no older than 19, while Rupert is in his mid-thirties. He announces his interest in her by sticking his hand up her skirt while she’s waitressing.
These were marks of Rupert’s caddishness in the Eighties, when both novel and series are set. Now, they’re near-insuperable taboos — the assault, obviously, but also the age gap.
By contemporary mores, Rupert Campbell-Black could be seen as not just a cad, but as a predator. As an article in Reason explained last year, a term that originally described the sexual exploitation of children by adults, “grooming”, had been stretched to apply to situations where all parties were adults. But even without his morality-offending excesses, you might wonder if there’s any room today for the kind of character he is: the charming libertine, the compulsive seducer, the overgrown manchild whose own gratification defeats all else. If Rupert fits any modern archetype, it’s the “fuckboy”, defined by journalist Nancy Jo Sales as “a young man who sleeps with women without any intention of having a relationship with them or perhaps even walking them to the door post-sex. He’s a womanizer, an especially callous one, as well as kind of a loser.” A “fuckboy” is not someone to be desired.
The new romantic hero can be found in the pages of Sally Rooney — Cooper’s successor, in that she’s the contemporary queen of the dirty book, but a very different kind of novelist. In a Rooney story, you’re only supposed to be turned on by what’s good for you. “The reader is never quite able to shake the suspicion that Rooney’s characters have all been made to sign contracts holding them to high standards of personal conduct before they are permitted to appear on the page,” noted the critic James Marriott. In the words of Ann Manov, Rooney’s new novel, Intermezzo, offers “two supposedly problematic males who make love tenderly and give love fiercely”. In other words, not that problematic at all.
Interesting article. I must admit I’m very surprised the uber-woke Disney is producing a TV series based on Cooper’s books and is apparently remaining faithful to the spirit of those books. I’ve recently read that woke might be in decline. Perhaps this is further evidence of that decline, or perhaps it merely illustrates the old saying about a single swallow doesn’t a summer make.
Truth is, Disney was in decline, so they have gritted their teeth and tried making shows people want to watch!
I’m guessing a single swallow doesn’t make a Jilly Cooper novel either!
Ha ha. Very droll. 🙂
Disney is run almost entirely by homosexuals, not a group opposed to sexual promiscuity.
First, let’s see if anybody actually watches it.
Hurray !
Jilly Cooper’s world is one in which it is never a problem paying the private school fees for the unplanned pregnancy of an adulterous affair. It is not the world that many of us inhabit and the material wealth of her characters are probably as big an attraction for female readers and watchers as the sex. Rupert Campbell-Black is not poor, I’m guessing.
I think that’s an important point. We’re all aware of the way those who regard thenselves as being among the ‘elite’ seek to distance themselves from the real world with their wealth, patronage and – as per 2T Keir – acceptance of gifts which confer further advantage in return. This is the world of which Cooper writes.
That’s not an admonishment of Cooper, since there’s nothing wrong with aspiration, but there is a tendency to “pull up the drawbridge” and our political failures are rife with the results of this process.
Female oriented porn tends to be aspirational – with obviously the occasional piece in which the woman is “dirtied” by someone of lower social class or another race (which, rather tellingly, is pretty much the same thing).
But we probably shouldn’t take it too seriously.
I think for most of its readers it’s pure escapism, and harmless enough. They are the modern Emma Bovarys, trying to escape their humdrum lives in a world of fantasy. A bit naff, and perhaps they would be better off trying to improve their own lives, but that takes effort and time. A hundred lonely housewives clutch Jilly Cooper to their heart – to paraphrase the Jam.
Even though I am not really the intended audience, this is great to hear. Perhaps the dreary wokeness of the past decade is finally over. And for the coup de grace to be delivered by Jilly Cooper and her Tory lothario is perfect. Hallelujah!
The dreary wokeness is not over, and won’t go quietly when its time finally comes either.
He would now be Reform! Aside from my comment above, her portrayal is unerringly accurate and brilliant for those of us who have lived, or live in that part of England.
still do and it is . sex is between girls and boys and we love it
You can be reported for this kind of comment.
“and the female gaze (it’s fair to say) is tired of being hectored.” Really? The female gaze is tired of being hectored?
Perhaps they’re gazing at an achilles heel?
Very good, lad!
I think “it’s fair to say” that men and women perceive the world very differently.
Must admit I’ve never read a Jilly Cooper. I should finally give them a go.
Probably won’t watch “Rivals”, but it has reminded me of the word “bonkbuster” which is about as wonderful a British word-concoction as you’re likely to find. Bursting with the all kinds of nudge-nudge-wink-wink-I-really-shouldn’t-but-go-on-then naughtiness.
“In Cooper’s saucily pragmatic universe, the happiest union might well be the one with a little room for indiscretion on both sides; the most convincing forms of monogamy often occur between people who are married to other people.”
It is my firm opinion that a healthy long-term relationship does allow for at least an outside crush or flirtation every so often. I think a sensible rule is the one my father-in-law espouses: “It’s fine to work your appetite up elsewhere, as long as you eat your dinner at home.”
Amen to that.
Reminds me of Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward. He said “why fool around with hamburger when you have steak at home”.
That will wind up the vegans, double marks to him.
As someone who spent their late teens and early twenties in the 80s, I will admit to (a) adoring the decade; I feel genuinely sorry for the miserable Millennials who missed out, and (b) reading a fair few Jilly Cooper novels. Usually on holidays when there was little else on the hotel bookshelf, but I enjoyed them anyway.
If there’s a revival in 80s un-PC, sexy female-authored fiction I’d heartily endorse ‘Ambition’ by Julie Burchill. It will probably give Gen Z PTSD, but I loved every page.
This is all from a man who grew up reading Jack Higgins, Sven Hassel and Wilbur Smith.
Too many people pay attention to the travails of Gen Z. Forget about them for ten years and you will see how little they differ from others.
I think the last Jilly Cooper novel I read was when I was about 18 or 19, I was given a box set for Christmas and they were great fun, by the time the raunchy riding ones came out in the 1980s my tastes had changed, but I greatly appreciate her other writing including her memoir which I read a couple of years ago, her sense of humour and humanity appeals to me.
It’s encouraging that this drama has been made, not surprising at all when you consider how much money has been lost producing poltically correct films which have flopped.
Well, we’ll see what happens. I wish the whole production team and Jilly Cooper the best of luck.
One error I noticed.. Campbell- Black was Welsh Guards in the first book, and then mysteriously ex Household Cavalry in later books….hmmmmm
So long as he didn’t go to a comprehensive school I think we can all rest easy.
What’s a “comprehensive school,” old chap?
Us Household Division boys used to refer to Sandhurt as ” Camberley Comprehensive and Etonians nickname the school ” Slough Grammar” as do, of course, Harrovians!
It can’t be said often enough (but almost never is by female writers) that men like ‘Rupert’s’ “own gratification defeats all else” because there are plenty of women for whom such cadishness is just what turns them on. This inconvenient fact-of-life must endlessly be rubbed out of the endless #MeToo narrative.
Though real life and fantasy are not the same thing! On top of which real rich men (not the, ones in ads and films) seem to be unusually ugly. Or perhaps that’s the predatory ones. Or perhaps if you’re rich and powerful, looking good just doesn’t really matter too much.
In any case, the fantasy appeal of a fat, bald, rich man with infantile sexual tastes must be pretty niche.
Perhaps the #MeToo women AREN’T turned on by caddishness (as would be their right)?
But for Cooper’s characters, erotic possibility is everywhere, and pleasure doesn’t come with a morality test.
Life frequently talks a good game about imitating art, but the mainstream view today smacks of an environment where erotic possibilities are non-existent and if not a morality test, all transactions are weighed through a political calculus.
Swipe right has certainly revealed our evolutionary biology in all its unrelieved glory.
The male gaze (it’s fair to say) is tired of being hectored too, but no respite yet.
The male gaze too! Any chance?
This is one of those odd articles which portrays women’s sexuality as repressed and denigrated (which it clearly hasn’t been for decades) precisely when something arrives, without uproar, entirely within the mainstream, which is proof of exactly the opposite. That the female gaze is free to look where it likes, at what it likes, in whatever way it likes – without any of the criticism this would receive if the sex roles were reversed.
Just finished re-reading Harriot, Emily, Imogen, Prudence and Octavia – her early work, last indulged in under the bedcovers with a torch aged 14. Jilly Cooper comes under the heading of guilty pleasures. Re-reading Juliette Benezoni now – ageing seems to be a simultaneous process of moving forwards and backwards at the same time. History rhymes, old friends of all types become more important
Harriet, Emily etc they were the books in the box set I mentioned in my comment, you’ve a better memory than mine. Juliette Benzoni too, the Catherine books, quite a bit of interesting historical background in those, thank you for reminding me.
Did you read Serge and Anne Golon’s Angelique series ? That was another good involving read.
Yes, the Angelique series also a favorite (and the film series boxed set)! Joffrey one hell of a character. I also followed the Marianne series (napoleonic period) by Benezoni alongside the Catherine series. Happy to also confess to healthy doses of Georgette Heyer, Victoria Holt, and Jean Plaidy. Happy reading.
hooray for normal
Hurrah for Jilly! I hope none of the Millennial/GenZ lot get a glimpse of this – they’d have the most awful conniptions! This wonderfully silly subversive fun is for grown ups only..
Now, will The Algorithm start to be able to divide womankind into two groups? Or maybe into several more groups…
I really think we live in interesting times, and this could provide undeniable evidence for a genuine debate. I had not thought about this possibility, maybe an unintended consequence of AI and Big Data…
“The female gaze is ready to have fun again.” Yeah women hate monogamy, security, long term commitment.
Methinks we are encountering yet another ‘luxury belief’ of the upper middle class female literati set — in its way no different from the ‘woke’ nonsense it purports to overthrow.
She is following a long tradition that started in the late sixties with the Amber books. Teenage girls love bad men with a dangerous streak.
Jilly Cooper was not writing about a non-existent imagined world. She as writing about what was going on in 70s and eighties when a hand up or down the skirt wasn’t a rarity except, perhaps, in the public setting of a restaurant. Alan Clark did not suddenly appear out of nowhere.
I have observed over the years that women are far more vulgar and licentious than men. Listen to them unobserved if you want proof.
Fuckgirls are celebrated as high achievers, so there goes equality again.