Director(s): Nathaniel Price
Country: United Kingdom
Actor(s): Lennie James, Sharon D, Ariyon Bakare
Written by Tom Augustine
Lennie James has one of the most disarming smiles in show-business, the kind of smile that invites you to lean in, focus, and forget your troubles. It’s a smile we didn’t see much of during his tenure on The Walking Dead and Fear the Walking Dead, where his sage and tortured warrior-monk Morgan grappled stoically with the end of the world, quickly establishing himself as a fan favourite. Mr Loverman, the BAFTA-winning miniseries which finally awarded the perennially underappreciated James with some much-deserved recognition, knows the power of that smile and wields it in enlightening, frequently heartbreaking ways. Loverman, adapted from a novel by Bernadine Evaristo, has a strong literary sheen — its large ensemble are gifted nuanced roles, with characters trading meaty exchanges of dialogue — blending well with the modern-feeling trappings of a show that shines a light on an underrepresented community. The locale, dialect and adornments of these characters feel refreshingly new, but the undercurrents of the miniseries’ central, autumn-years love triangle would feel as at home within the dramas of Edith Wharton and Thomas Hardy as on an assuming suburban street in 2026 London. James’ recognisable, warm face is vital to the marrying of these two elements, the old and the new, his Barry a stylish, decadent dandy whose problems are brought to the fore because of the advent of ‘modern times’, but whose very presence and identity feel built from older stock. Frequently, watching the first two episodes of Mr Loverman, I thought of The Age of Innocence’s Newland Archer, a man at once beguiled by the liberation offered by changing attitudes and profoundly terrified of taking that step toward freedom for himself.
Barry is a closeted, 75-year-old gay man, an Afro-Caribbean British hailing from Antigua with reasonable wealth and comfort, a sprawling circle of family and friends, a thrumming social life, and a tortured relationship with his wife. For fifty years, Barry has maintained a secret love affair with Morris (Ariyon Bakare) on the side, while his marriage to Carmel (Sharon D. Clarke) has sunk into misery, deception and bitterness as the years have slipped away. Carmel has long suspected Barry’s infidelity, but believes it to be with other women. With the later chapters of his life starting to unfold, Barry is beginning to look back on his life with regret — that he never had the courage to embrace who he was and who he loved. An early scene details why with appropriate severity: the deeply Christian Carmel returns from church with some of her friends, who sit down for lunch, only to launch into diatribes about the shamefulness and sacrilegiousness of queer people in the community (‘an anti-man’ is how one potentially gay man is described). James, whose life has been built around a semi-open secret, can only handle so many of these microaggressions, soon snapping and booting them from the house. The strain, fury and anguish on Carmel’s face is what sticks in mind — soon after, we see a flashback to many years previous, the last time Barry floated divorce. Carmel raises a kitchen knife to his face: ‘I’d rather kill us both’.
BAFTA-winning series Mr Loverman, playing exclusively on Rialto Channel this month, is an aching, bittersweet examination of the cost of undertaking your life’s second-act, and the regrets that come with following your heart too late. Superb performances from Lennie James and Sharon D. Clarke imbue the series with a rich, spiky authenticity, offsetting its handsome literary polish.