Strolling throughout the doorways of London’s Charles Dickens Museum is at all times a different second. This good-looking, tall London townhouse – center magnificence by way of Victorian requirements however nearly palatial to guests as of late – used to be the crucible through which a tender, ascending Charles Dickens wrote himself into global superstardom.
It’s right here that The Pickwick Papers, Oliver Twist and Nicholas Nickleby spilled from his pen. And it’s right here, as the brand new exhibition Further/Odd Girls compellingly demonstrates, that Dickens lived in consistent proximity to the clever and proficient ladies who formed his creativeness, his home lifestyles and his enduring theatricality.
The Further/Odd Girls exhibition gives insights to many of those ladies. His spouse, Catherine Dickens, who additionally wrote inside those partitions. His sister, Mary Hogarth, whose surprising dying right here devastated him. His sister-in-law, housekeeper and adviser Georgina Hogarth, who remained his rock for the remainder of his lifestyles.
Victorian tradition, which used to be suspicious of girls who moved in theatrical, creative or public spheres, left deep strains on Dickens’s portrayals of girls. In his writing, Dickens both sanitised his feminine characters, just like the “saintly” Little Nell in The Outdated Interest Store (1841) or the “innocent” Rose Maylie in Oliver Twist (1838); or he reformed them, just like the “fallen” ladies, Martha Endell and Little Em’ly in David Copperfield (1850). He gave those characters emotional readability and symbolic weight that belies the extra complicated real-world inspirations.
{Photograph} of Charles Dickens, family and friends, by way of Adolphe Naudin.
Charles Dickens Museum
The exhibition displays that Mary Hogarth, as an example, is scattered thru Dickens’s fiction within the type of saintly younger ladies whose deaths confer ethical which means. Dickens’s shut buddy Angela Burdett‑Coutts – a philanthropist and strong modern – used to be softened into Agnes Wickfield, a gradual ethical affect in David Copperfield.
Dickens the performer
Having a look across the exhibition, I discovered myself fascinated about efficiency. Now not simply the performances of the ladies round him, however Dickens’s personal lifelong, determined theatricality.
It has at all times gave the impression evident to me, as a performer of Dickens’s paintings, that he wrote with an actor’s thoughts. My very own carried out studying of A Christmas Carol taught me that his prose calls for embodiment: the regretful cadences of Scrooge’s former fiancée Belle, the anguish of Bob Cratchit, the vocal adjustments that illustrate the transformative adventure of Scrooge himself. Those characters weren’t simply written to be learn, they have been written to be heard.

Dicken’s daughter Katey Perugin used to be an artist of genuine ability.
Charles Dickens Museum
The deputy director of the museum, Emma Harper, knowledgeable me that whilst writing, Dickens would damage from his table to accomplish the characters he used to be growing within the replicate. He additionally carried out home dramas for his youngsters, based newbie dramatic troupes and he threw himself into public readings so intensely that medical doctors monitored his pulse prior to and after every efficiency. He made himself bodily in poor health with the sheer drive of his appearing. This isn’t a author who took place additionally to accomplish. This can be a performer who took place additionally to write down.
And the ladies round him have been, in some ways, a part of that theatrical and inventive international. His daughters are excellent examples. Mamie Dickens cherished acting, and Katey Perugini, an artist of genuine ability, seems within the exhibition thru in a newly displayed portray that mimics her personal portray taste. The exhibition additionally reminds us that Ellen Ternan – Dickens’s longtime mistress – got here from a theatrical circle of relatives.
All of this turns into shockingly brilliant with the exhibition’s centrepiece: the newly published, prior to now unpublished letter to the French opera singer Pauline Viardot. It’s, in some ways, a really perfect artefact, as it displays Dickens in complete, contradictory color.

Pauline Viardot in 1860.
Musée Carnavalet
This is the nice novelist, in Paris for his triumphant theatrical readings, writing with unabashed admiration to a girl whose artistry moved him to tears. However right here may be Dickens the flirt – providing her a call for participation to dine and promising tickets to his subsequent studying.
Dickens wrote the letter whilst en direction to look his mistress, Ternan, in Geneva. “I am going to Geneva tomorrow night, but will be back in seven days,” he says breezily, making an attempt to time table dinner with Viardot for the next week.
The exhibition additionally features a letter from Viardot to Dickens’s biographer, the place she remembers Dickens “raining tears” all through her efficiency of Orphée. And it unearths one thing about Dickens that the exhibition regularly circles again to: he existed in a self-made international of efficiency, admiration, emotional extra and inventive intoxication. He used to be drawn to girls who have been good, expressive and inventive, as a result of they belonged to that very same international of heightened feeling and dramatic risk.
That is what makes Further/Odd Girls so compelling: it reframes Dickens now not handiest throughout the ladies he knew, however throughout the theatrical tradition they jointly inhabited. Stepping outdoor, I felt his acquainted voice linger, now joined by way of the sense that the ladies at the back of the scenes have been in the end moving into the sunshine – one thing the dramatist in Dickens would possibly have preferred.
Further/Odd Girls is on the Charles Dickens Museum in London till September 6

On the lookout for one thing excellent? Reduce throughout the noise with a in moderation curated collection of the newest releases, are living occasions and exhibitions, instantly in your inbox each fortnight, on Fridays. Join right here.
This text options references to books which have been integrated for editorial causes, and might comprise hyperlinks to book place.org. For those who click on on one of the crucial hyperlinks and cross on to shop for one thing from book place.org The Dialog UK might earn a fee.