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Two giants of literature — and one big question

Zoë Heller and Patrick Marber, who have mixed backgrounds, discuss what it means to be Jewish.

June 10, 2009 19:26
Collaborators: Patrick Marber adapted Zoë Heller’s novel Notes on a Scandal for the screen, and won an Oscar nomination for his work

By

John Nathan,

John Nathan

4 min read

In Zoë Heller’s rather brilliant third novel, The Believers, faith is the theme. Each member of the New York-Jewish, atheistic Litvinoff family is finding that long held beliefs are being severely tested. For the reluctant matriarch Audrey, it is her faith in the marriage to her philandering lawyer Joel that is being shaken; for her long-suffering, meek daughter Karla, it is the belief that happiness is a condition for other people; and for Audrey’s youngest daughter Rosa it is the notion that the fiercely anti-religious brand of atheism in which her parents brought her up may be a less fulfilling credo than Orthodox Judaism.

After the dramatist Patrick Marber finishes writing the screenplay of the book, top actors will vie for the roles. For his Oscar-nominated adaptation of Heller’s Notes on a Scandal three years ago, Judi Dench played malignantly motivated spinster Barbara, while Cate Blanchett played her victim. For the movie version of The Believers the big question will be: who will land what could well be one of the great female cinema roles of recent times? In the book, Audrey’s withering one-liners leave a trail of damaged family and friends. Rosa is the target for more than her fair share for becoming interested in Judaism, a decision attacked by her Jewish parents with particular venom.

“Joel and Audrey had a keen contempt for all religion,” writes Heller, “but Judaism, being the variety of mumbo jumbo in which they were themselves ancestrally implicated, had always inspired their most vehement scorn.”

To coincide with the paperback launch of The Believers, Heller travelled to London last week. Two days before she and Marber took part in a Jewish Book Week discussion at the British Library, they met at a London hotel at the invitation of the JC to discuss some of the themes in the novel, a large part of which describes Orthodox Judaism from the perspective of the sceptical but enquiring Rosa. What followed was a surprisingly frank exchange about being Jewish.