3 minute read

Lifetime movie casts spell with biopic about J.K. Rowling

Next Article
IN FOCUS

IN FOCUS

By Jacqueline Cutler © Zap2it

J.K. Rowling is magical. How many other writers inspire frenzies? Children and adults around the world queued up when a new volume of Harry Potter was released.

Whatever riches and accolades she earns pale when considering that the wand she waved makes people want to read. Just how she came to do so is gently examined in Lifetime’s “Magic Beyond Words: The J.K. Rowling Story” Monday, July 18.

The biopic is unauthorized, which isn’t surprising given Rowling is famously private.Yet it would be difficult to find argument with the movie’s intent.

Poppy Montgomery (“Without a Trace”) plays Rowling. As a die-hard Harry Potter fan, she would not have done this were it a hit piece.

“When I read the script, it was such a love letter, not tabloidish,” Montgomery says.“Before reading the script, unless it has her blessing I don’t feel it is fair. It is beautiful and an inspiring story, and you can actually come from really hard times and make your dreams come true, and triumphing through sheer will and determination.”

The film shows Rowling as a girl in Tutshill, England, dressing up like a witch and playing in a forest. It shows her as a smart girl in school, daydreaming about becoming a writer.

Her father, worried that she would starve, wanted her to become a secretary, saying she could write as a hobby. Her mother, though, told her to follow her dream.

Her mom had multiple sclerosis and died relatively young. Though Rowling was grown when her mom died, she imbued Harry with the ache of an orphan.

The film shows Rowling as a young woman, armed with her degree.Talented and determined to write but needing to support herself, she taught English in Portugal.There she roomed with a couple of other teachers and married a handsome Portuguese man.

Rowling confronted him when he came home drunk and wasn’t working. He hit her — while she was holding the baby — and she grabbed the only two things that mattered and fled.

She held her daughter and a box. In this box, Rowling had stored outlines of seven books, all handwritten on pads. She turned these pages into the world of Hogwarts.

Hunched over cafe tables, baby at her feet, she scribbled the intricate stories eager fans would reread multiple times.

Sure, Voldemort is the villain everyone knows, but consider how deeply frightening Dementors are as they suck the joyful memories from your soul. Rowling gave us the most horrid villains and a magnificent hero in Harry, a boy wizard who becomes a young man over the seven years spread over seven books. Harry is flawed, of course, rendering him that much more lovable, and a truly honorable person.

One can tell a lot about people when they reveal their favorite Harry Potter characters. Montgomery first cites Dumbledore, the grand wizard who ran Hogwarts and was Harry’s mentor.

“Dumbledore is the person you want in your life to advise you,” Montgomery says.“I love Hermione because she’s smart and sassy and bright.They all represent different aspects of everybody I know.They are very identifiable, and I like that the underdog always wins in the end; good trumps evil.That’s the universal.”

“I remember seeing the first edition in hardback,” she says.

“I remember thinking the cover was so pretty. I read all of them obsessively and saw all of the movies about 200 times. My 3year-old is obsessed.”

The film begins and ends with brief clips of Rowling, showing

Expressions

how fans wait in the rain just for a glimpse of their favorite writer. To gauge how popular Rowling is, consider the recent cyberfrenzy she began with her upcoming website, Pottermore.com, an interactive e-book series.

“She accomplished something almost no children’s book writers have done — she made books for children and adults at the same time,” Montgomery says.

In the movie, Rowling finally shows the drafts and outlines of her books to her sister, who recognizes their magnificence. Still, it took some rejections before an agent would sign her.

During that time, Rowling was poor and on welfare in Scotland. She had an incredibly hard time finding a place to live with her daughter. She finally bought a secondhand typewriter and eventually went on to become the most successful writer ever.

“I hope it gives some insight into an extraordinary woman who everyone is curious about,” Montgomery says.“As long as you get that, you can bounce back and achieve your dreams with hard work and determination and pushing through a lot of hard work and pulling herself up by bootstraps, and will not fail,"

16.Baton Rouge univ.

17.Mine discoveries

18.Hatch or Boxer: abbr.

19.“Sesame Street” fellow

20.Grew gray

24.Tanner family’s visitor

27.“Eat __ Love”; 2010 Julia Roberts movie

28.Diamond lady

29.“__ Hard With a Vengeance”; highest-grossing film of 1995

32.Cover with asphalt

33.“The __ __”; reality series for the daring

36.“__ __ dead people”; line from “The Sixth Sense”

37.Wallach and Marienthal

38.Patricia Heaton series (2)

Down

1.Gary or Jackie

2.“__ Perfect” (199596)

3.Shirt, for short

4.“How to Save a Marriage and

__ Your Life”; 1968 Dean Martin movie

5.Suffix for real or cartoon

6.Diamond and Flynn

7.Jagged;uneven

8.“__ Will Be Blood”; 2007 Daniel DayLewis film

11.Ralph Kramden’s neighbor

12.1988 Martin Sheen film

13.“The Flying __” (1967-70)

14.Schneider or Lowe

20.Horrify

21.“Say good night, __”; George Burns’ line

22.Wasp’s nest locations

23.Actor on “Touched by an Angel”

24.Emmylou Harris’ state of birth: abbr.

25.“To the __”; Anna Nicole Smith movie

26.Sudden burst of light

29.Per __; salary frequency, for some

30.“Hot __ Cleveland”

31.Actor Marshall

34.Alphabet closer

35.Muppet Elmo’s color

This article is from: