I’m
clearly coming late to the party, when everybody and their mum knows who
Florence Pugh is but me. I didn’t see
her in Little Women – which probably
got Greta Gerwig the greenlight for Barbie. I haven’t seen a single picture in the Marvel
superhero universe. I didn’t have a clue
that Cooking With Flo has 52K
subscribers on Instagram. And last but
not least, I haven’t brought myself to sit through Oppenheimer, in
spite of my admiration for Cillian Murphy in Peaky Blinders, and my fascination with the Manhattan Project. So, watching Florence in the six-episode BBC
adaption of The Little Drummer Girl
(released in 2018, six years ago,
already) was eye-popping. She may be the
hottest thing since sliced bread, as an influencer, but she took that part in her jaws, and shook it like a
big cat. It wasn’t one of those things where
the actor is chewing up the scenery, not
in service to the script, it was an actor completely inhabiting the character, no light between the cracks.
A word
about the story, and Charlie’s place in it.
The Little Drummer Girl is my
favorite le Carré, and I think
his most skillful book. It has that
extraordinary opening, the terror bombing in the
There was a lot of huffing and puffing, when the book was first published, because people took issue with le Carré’s sympathies. Or what they assumed were his sympathies. And that, of course, depended on what theirs were. The book describes an Israeli deception operation – but for our Charlie’s recruitment to work, it’s the Israeli spy-runner, Gadi, who voices Palestinian grievances. This doubling effect mirrors Charlie’s conflicted inner discipline. The end public result, though, was that reviewers got their panties in a bunch. If you had sympathy for the Palestinians, you thought the book was an apology for Israeli violence; if you sympathized with the Israelis, you thought the book was an apology for Palestinian terror. The idea that le Carré was trying to give voice to both, in an intractable, Biblical struggle, was lost.
I don’t think the struggle is any less
intractable; if anything, given Bibi Netanyahu’s worst instincts, it’s even
more so. (It has to be said that le
Carré’s political sympathies were very much not
in support of the Arik Sharon scorched-earth philosophy.) On the other hand, after the October 7th
attacks, and in the wake of the pretty much complete collapse of