![]() Obviously, you anticipate as much as you can, but there’s a lot of fixing in the room. These sudden callouts are, says Mantel, “the exhilaration of the process. ![]() Our scheduled interview was politely delayed because the director, Jeremy Herrin, needed Mantel in rehearsals (she attends most days) to answer questions from the cast about historical context and supervise the insertion of rewrites, an example of the emergency plumbing aspect of being a dramatist that distinguishes it from the slow isolation of book-writing, where novelists make changes, for themselves or editors, over years or months. But I don’t see the plays as deriving from the novels but as things in themselves.” But theatre is where I should have been, I think.” She doesn’t regret the novels? “No. ![]() The novel is a good form for someone who only has pencil and paper. And when I started I had no literary resources and no contacts. But if you’ve got poor health, as I’ve had, it’s hard to work in a team. ![]() On reflection, I’ve always known it: I’m devoted to the theatre. “That awful self-consciousness that beset me all my life just left me. “It surprised me, when we did the first plays, how comfortable I was in a rehearsal room,” she says. ![]()
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