Laura turns from muse to lover with the blessing of Graves’ wife, Nancy Nicholson, but the situation is further complicated by the arrival of Irish poet Geoffrey Phibbs.. The fantastic cast includes Tom Hughes (best known for playing Prince Albert in the ITV drama ‘Victoria’) as Robert, and Dianna Agron (Quinn Fabray in ‘Glee’) as Laura. Laura Haddock, who recently starred in the hit Ibiza-set Netflix series 'White Lines', portrays Nancy. Meanwhile Fra Fee (who played Courfeyrac in the Film of ‘Les Misérables’) plays Geoffrey, and celebrated actress Patricia Hodge plays Robert’s mother Amy.
Director and writer William Nunez hopes that the film, full of love, passion and drama, will appeal to period-drama lovers and younger audiences alike. He said that young female viewers will “know the struggles of relationships… and the road you take in life and the consequences that follow”.
Story
This sumptuous period film follows a time in Graves’ life when he transitions from war poet to love poet, as he forms a partnership with writer Laura Riding. Robert is having difficulty writing due to his PTSD after the war, his financial situation, and the slow breakdown of his marriage. When he reads an essay by Laura Riding, his wife invites Laura to live with them in the hope of helping Robert regain his creative spark.
Laura soon takes over the household and they begin to form a ménage à trois. But then, with the arrival of Irish poet Geoffrey Phibbs, it develops into a ménage à quatre. Rivalries and tensions become rife and the drama comes to a head.
About the cast
Nunez is proud of the top-notch cast. He says, “Tom Hughes plays Robert Graves and, besides the similarity in appearance to Robert, he had the inner strength to portray someone whose suffering was internal, and fully embrace the concept of worshipping Laura Riding and respecting the modern views that his wife Nancy had.
Tom came to me a few years ago when he auditioned for Geoffrey, and when it came time to cast Robert, Tom was really the only one who fit the bill.” Likewise, when Nunez first met Dianna Agron, he said “our talks were so intuitive that I knew I’d found my Laura Riding”.
Story of PTSD
‘The Laureate’ tells an important story on many levels, Nunez says.
“It tells the story of PTSD and the suffering the soldiers have upon their return to family life, as well as the toll it takes on the family. It’s a story of women trying to make their way through male-dominated fields – Nancy and Laura take different approaches to their feminism – and it deals with how they are perceived in society.” He added that writing about Graves’ PTSD was partly inspired by friends who had served in Iraq.
But Nunez also wants the film to be “a good, old-fashioned love story that is needed in these times. While ‘The Laureate’ deals with these big themes, I do want audiences to be entertained and get lost for 100 minutes in a world that is different than the one we are all living right now.”
Filming
‘The Laureate’ was filmed in January and February 2020.
As an independent film with a modest budget, they only had 22 days to shoot, and the locations were based around Harefield, Oxfordshire and London. Editing began as lockdown started, but Nunez says, “When there is great determination to tell a story that is worth telling, perseverance will out.”
This is a film that is best seen in the cinema, Nunez says, but COVID restrictions mean there is a question mark over this for now. It is hoped that the film will premiere at the 2021 Berlin International Film Festival.