I watched
this movie again and was again bowled over by how much I adore this incredible
character. Dido is a young woman forged
in a nearly impossible crucible, trying to determine who she is and what she’s
worth in a world where she’s met with constant caveats on her value.
As a
child, Dido’s life is set on a new course when she meets her father, a white
aristocrat who sired her out of wedlock but who loves her and the resemblance
he sees in her of her mother. Although
the great aunt and uncle who raise her in her father’s absence come to love her
as one of the family, their love for her is never as uncomplicated as her
father’s, who instantly acknowledges her, makes her his heir, and insists that
she be given every opportunity afforded to the daughter of any aristocrat. Her great aunt and uncle’s love, meanwhile,
is filtered through an ever-increasing number of rules that govern Dido’s place
in the world. She’s still a child when
they placidly decide that she’ll never marry, since anyone for whom her mother’s
blood wouldn’t be a dealbreaker would
be too lowly to be worthy of her father’s.
These are
the types of catch-22’s that surround Dido.
Whenever there are dinner guests, she finds herself too objectionable to
eat with the family but too elevated to eat with the servants, and so she slips
through these cracks of in-between space where no one exists except her, caught
between the two halves of her world – neither of which, it seems, can ever
fully have her. For many young ladies
her age, having their portrait painted is a prospect of great delight and
anticipation, but the mere thought of it devastates Dido, having spent her
youth walking the halls adorned with family portraits in which Black bodies are
painted only in the background, looking up at their white masters with servile
admiration. She can’t bear the idea, and
yet she can’t begin to articulate to her great uncle why she’s so “ungraciously” opposed to his gift of having her sit
for a portrait with her white cousin.
With all
these often contradictory, always dehumanizing rules pulling at her, making her
feel as though her mother’s blood is a shame she is forced to carry – “her
[mother’s] apparent crime to be born negro, and [Dido’s] to be the evidence” –
Dido retreats into pride. This is what I
think interests me the most about her character. In the face of being made to feel less-than,
she holds fiercely, haughtily to her father’s name and her rightful
position. When she first meets Mr.
Davinier, she chastises him for not showing her the due deference that he, as a
vicar’s son, ought to. As she herself justifies
it, she puts others in their place in order to state what hers is meant to
be. While she doesn’t initially make
very heated protestations against following her great aunt and uncle’s rules,
she’s not shy about making it known just why she feels they’re so absurd and
unjust.
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