Misbehaviour takes us back to the 1970 Miss World contest in
a time when the contest was a very big thing. It was a British success story that
was covered by the BBC and beamed around the world. Although the contest
continues to this day, it is much more under the radar and this film probably
marks the point at which opinion started to turn against it.
The competition was founded and run by London businessman Eric Morley (Rhys Ifans) and his wife Julia (Keeley Hawes). In 1970 they persuaded Bob Hope (Greg Kinnear) to return to compare the show again even though his wife Dolores (Lesley Manville) has still not forgiven him for having an affair with Miss UK who won the competition in 1961, the last time Hope hosted. You do have to feel sorry for Michael Aspel (Charlie Anson) who was the main host of the 1970s show but was shunted aside so that Hope could compare the finale.
The competition was founded and run by London businessman Eric Morley (Rhys Ifans) and his wife Julia (Keeley Hawes). In 1970 they persuaded Bob Hope (Greg Kinnear) to return to compare the show again even though his wife Dolores (Lesley Manville) has still not forgiven him for having an affair with Miss UK who won the competition in 1961, the last time Hope hosted. You do have to feel sorry for Michael Aspel (Charlie Anson) who was the main host of the 1970s show but was shunted aside so that Hope could compare the finale.
As the film shows, the 1970 contest was disrupted by protests
from the fledgling Women's Liberation Movement. One of the ringleaders was Sally
Alexander (Keira Knightley), a mature history student from a decidedly a
middle-class background whose mother Evelyn (Phyllis Logan) was a big Miss
World fan and who just wished her daughter would stay at home to be a good parent
to her daughter.
Frustrated by the amount of sexism at university, Alexander eventually
teams up with Jo Robinson (Jessie Buckley), the leader of a feminist group who all hang out together in a commune making protest signs, writing
graffiti and grumbling a lot but not much else. Alexander attempts to lick
them into shape.
Together they plan an invasion of the Miss World ‘cattle market’
which is to be held at the Royal Albert Hall, where they find another more sinister
protest threatening to upstage them. Earlier the same day, a bomb exploded under
a BBC broadcast truck parked outside the venue. This was planted by an anarchist
extremist group known as The Angry Brigade who had already been responsible for
several small scale bomb attacks in the UK.
Bob Hope was mid-way through his repertoire of sexist jokes
when the women started hurling flour bombs and fruit at the stage ensuring the Women's
Liberation Movement claimed most of the evening's headlines.
However, a lot of the contestants didn’t agree with the sentiments
of the protesters. To many the show allowed underprivileged women to realise
their dreams and it also gave ‘woman of colour’ a chance to shine. Even if
South Africa had to quickly come up with a second contestant to ward off
anti-apartheid campaigners such as Peter Hain. Alongside their white
contestant Jillian Jessup (Emma Corrin) came Pearl Janssen (Loreece Harrison,
competing as ‘Miss Africa South’.
Significantly, the winner was to be Grenada’s Jennifer
Hosten (Gugu Mbatha-Raw), who became the first black winner, with Miss Africa
South taking second place. The hot favourite Miss Sweden Maj Christel Johansson
(Clara Rosager) came only 4th. This wasn't without its own
controversy with the president of Grenada Eric Gairy on the judging panel.
Misbehaviour turns out to be quite an engaging drama which is
quite educational and scores highly on the post-film Googling scale.
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