With the 250th anniversary of the legendaryJane Austen’s birth arriving this year, it’s only appropriate that we celebrate the literary heroine’s legacy in some way that isn’t just another adaptation ofPride and Prejudice. (Looking at you, Netflix.) Given that the author’s novels have been adapted numerous times on TV and film, Masterpiece on PBS is taking another approach to things with the new seriesMiss Austen, which focuses not on Jane herself, but on her sister, Cassandra.

Based on the novel of the same name byGill Hornby,Miss Austenfollows an aging Cassandra Austen, played by the superbKeeley Hawes, as she journeys back to the home of her childhood friend Eliza, where her youngest daughter, Isabella (Rose Leslie), is being forced out of her lodgings by the death of her father. As she endeavors to find Isabella new lodgings, Cassandra also has another purpose, one she hides from even those closest to her:searching the house for letters her sister Jane wrote to Eliza in life, in order to burn them and keep a promise to her late sister.

MISS AUSTEN ON MASTERPIECE Cassandra Austen

In reality, we have no idea why Cassandra burned a large portion of Jane’s letters. (Of an estimated three thousand, fewer than two hundred of them survive.) Some, she gifted to friends and family, but most were lost for some reason known only to the two sisters.The series attempts to rectify that hole in our historical knowledgeby recreating what creatorAndrea Gibbthinks may have been in them, represented in flashbacks withSynnøve KarlsenandPatsy Ferranas a younger Cassandra and Jane.

‘Miss Austen’ Writes Its Own Fantasy

This isn’t the first time artists have tried to fill in the gaps in Austen’s life with their version of events; the 2007 filmBecoming Janenotably fabricated just as much asMiss Austendoes, if not more, by implying that Jane had a mad affair with the so-called “love of her life,” a real man by the name of Tom Lefroy. The Masterpiece series attempts to strike the same chord, this time with Cassandra, by inserting a fictional man (played by noted nepo babyMax Irons) into her life after the death of her fiancé, Tom Fowle, when the family makes a trip to the seaside. Ina plot that very much reflects several of Austen’s novels, includingEmmaandPersuasion, the mysterious stranger is clearly taken with her, though it only ends up running in frustrating circles as it tries to pull off all the charm of an Austenite hero with none of the payoff.

It’s obvious thatMiss Austenis attempting to project some of Jane’s idyllic tropes from her novels onto the lives of the author and her sister, turning them from normal, everyday women (one of whom happened to be a literary genius) into archetypal heroines. The girls’ mother (Phyllis Logan) becomes a Mrs. Bennett stand-in, and ifJessica Hynes’ sister-in-law Mary Austen appears to be written as close as one can get to Catherine de Bourgh in real life. It feels a bit likeSanditon, the series that took Jane’s final, unfinished novel and completed the tale itself, constructing a narrative where there isn’t one.

jane-austen-movies

This is particularly obvious in the case of Irons’ Mr. Hobday, who is nothing if not a Darcy proxy. Irons is a fine actor, and certainly as charming as needs be for an Austen hero, but there’s a dissonance in his presence, and it’s difficult to tell if it comes from the character being hollow or the fact that Irons is teetering just on the edge of iPhone face. He does his best, certainly, and it’s disappointing to see him go as the series veers back into the strictly factual, but there’s little to be said abouthow much of the series is taken up by a plot that doesn’t quite mesh with its overarching themesof grief and familial love.

Jane Austen Movie Adaptations, Ranked from Worst to Best

Where does your favorite Jane Austen film land on the list?

Keeley Hawes Is the True Gem of ‘Miss Austen’

The series’ real juice comes when it focuses on Hawes as the elder Cassandra, wracked with grief not only at her sister’s private letters, but at the idea that Isabella’s own sisters want nothing to do with her.Hawes gives a subtly devastating performanceas a woman who never had a place to put her grief after illness stole her best friend from her, and it’s a shame that so much of the series is dedicated to flashbacks when there was more than enough to explore in how Cassandra aged without the companionship of her dearest companion.

Hawes’ performance is only enhanced by Hynes’ at points comical turn as the vain Mary Austen. Both slide into the Regency era almost without trying — which can’t really be said for their younger counterparts — and as much as I think of Hynes as one of those incredible character actors whose name I can never remember,Mary’s incredible selfishness makes Cassandra’s grief all the more profound.In a series whose only real antagonist is death itself, she provides the necessary friction when it comes to destroying Jane’s letters, which is exactly what viewers will show up for.

MISS AUSTEN ON MASTERPIECE Cassandra Austen-2

Using Jane’s letters as a frame story for the series’ flashbacks is a clever structure, but when the series really hinges on the question of why Cassandra chose to burn them, it’s difficult to say if its final act really works. Whether a filled-in answer adds anything meaningful to the story it’s telling is a subject for debate, and the same is true of the mystery of Austen’s burnt letters. Without delving into spoilers,the not knowing is arguably more interesting than the answerMiss Austentries to give us— the mystery of Jane’s life makes the characters she created all the more interesting, and it seems foolish to reveal the (wo)man behind the curtain, to quote another literary classic, if Cassandra’s intention trulywasto keep her sister’s reputation intact.

It’s a toss-up whetherMiss Austen’s speculation will land with audiences when the series arrives in the U.S. Fans of historical dramas who want to be swept away bya story of love and lossmay enjoy it, with all its colorful imaginings that reflect their favorite novels. For diehard Austenites, however, the question remains. But then again, if viewers can accept an unfinished novel as part of the canon of one of the greatest authors ever, maybe they can enjoy this too.

03212904_poster_w780.jpg

Miss Austenpremieres May 4 on Masterpiece on PBS.

Miss Austen

Miss Austen is a delicate but ultimately underwhelming exploration of Jane Austen and her sister Cassandra’s relationship.

instar53603807.jpg