Is Bridgerton Hiding Behind Regency Romance? Examining Diversity Issues

When Bridgerton exploded on to TV screens around the world in Christmas 2020, it was largely applauded as a fantastical re-imaging of Regency-era Britain. It was the frothy medicine we needed – a period drama for the 21st-century viewer. Ballrooms full of black and brown faces enjoying Ariana Grande and Beyoncé songs in multicoloured ballgowns! Anachronisms galore! Sexy encounters on verandas! It felt like the ultimate modern take on a low-stakes Jane Austen fantasy.

But there is a dark underside to the show. Since the launch of the Shondaland drama, some critics have been vocal about not appreciating its racial diversity, with the Telegraph accusing it of making the story less interesting by “pandering to woke casting”.

Others have attacked Nicola Coughlan, the current season’s lead – not over her performance (which is superb), but her body. She has been given backhanded compliments – being called “very brave” for doing nude scenes as a plus-size woman – or simply subjected to downright meanness from so-called fans and even critics. The Spectator’s Zoe Strimpel wrote: “A zest for equality and diversity just isn’t enough to make a fat girl who wins the prince remotely plausible.”

Nicola Coughlan as Penelope Featherington

The toxicity towards the actors doesn’t stop with Coughlan. When the series changed a character from the books – Michael Stirling became Michaela Stirling, meaning that a heterosexual love interest for Hannah Dodd’s shy Francesca Bridgerton became a lesbian one – a petition was started in protest. It has attracted nearly 40,000 signatures. Reddit and X are full of “This isn’t my Michael!” and claims that it is “woke trash”. Even the comments on the petition – which states that it stands against homophobia or hatred – feature plenty of, well, hatred and homophobia, including comments such as: “Sorry, we don’t want lesbians in Regency England!”

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