âThereâs nothing wrong with having a hobby, or even what you might call in this case a hyperfocus,â psychiatrist Dr Godrick tells Eleanor Glanville in a claustrophobic therapy room.
Outside the Phoenix theatre in Hampshire, a summer heatwave is delivering perfect conditions for butterflies. Inside, a rather darker story is being rehearsed in air-conditioned gloom. Butterfly, a new play, shines a light on one womanâs passion for butterflies and how it is turned against her when she became trapped in an abusive relationship.
The play is based on the life of Eleanor Glanville, one of Britainâs pioneering female naturalists and the only real person whose surname endures as the common name of a British butterfly, the Glanville fritillary, a rare species she discovered at the end of the 17th century. Tragically, Eleanor endured a violent, money-grabbing second husband, who snatched her estate and fortune after her will was overturned in court because a judge concluded she was âdeprived of her sensesâ for roaming the countryside in pursuit of rare butterflies.
We may hope such cruel patriarchy belongs to less enlightened times but writer, artist and butterfly obsessive Claire Jackson has smartly shifted Eleanorâs story to the present day, translating 17th-century male abuse to the 21st-century manosphere with troubling ease.
In a witty, tense two-hander, Eleanorâs love of finding rare butterflies â âsomething that makes my pulse quickenâ â is an escape from her unpleasant spouse Richard. Eleanor sees the (equally troubled) psychiatrist reluctantly, only because her lawyer suggests a clean bill of mental health will assist her approaching, acrimonious divorce.
After a deft portrayal of the pleasures and perils of hunting for rare butterflies, which captures its charm and eccentricity, we see how Eleanorâs passion is manipulated as she is gaslit, belittled and shamed on social media by Richard, who is all the more ominous for never appearing on stage.
Jackson was developing the play â commissioned by Phoenixâs new writing programme, which spotlights overlooked voices â when she saw an opera, The Women of Whitechapel, which is about Jack the Ripper and yet Jack never appears. âI thought that was very clever â it made the story far more impactful so I took inspiration from it,â she says, also citing Alan Bennett as her âGodâ for his sparky dialogue.
Like many people, Jackson fell in love with butterflies when she was a child. She reconnected with them when she moved to the countryside and took up walking after struggling with depression and being diagnosed with bipolar disorder. âEach walk was elevated by a butterfly sighting â eventually, the walks revolved around the butterflies,â she says.
Although Butterfly Conservation can point to 49% female membership, Jackson has experienced some sexist or patronising attitudes from male obsessives when sheâs âbutterflyingâ and thinks âthere is still work to be doneâ to tackle sexism in some butterfly communities. Sheâs never felt unsafe in the woods but recognises that rational fear remains a barrier to some women enjoying solo butterfly-seeking. âItâs unusual to see women wandering around the woods on their own, and thatâs because there are, unfortunately, still issues of safety. Thereâs some lovely memes of men who are out on hikes who let women know theyâre no threat by saying things such as: âOh, hi, Iâve got a lovely husband!ââ
In four acts that correspond to a butterflyâs life-cycle â egg, caterpillar, chrysalis and butterfly â we see the tragic unfolding of Eleanorâs life.
Sally McIlhone, who plays Eleanor, is full of praise for Jacksonâs monologues, which vividly convey the uncertainty of being gaslit. âSomeoneâs telling you: âYou are this thing.â And youâre like: âBut no, Iâm not that, because Iâm this.â And theyâre like: âNo, no, no, this is who you are.â And youâre like: âAm I?ââ she says. âAnd if youâre a conscientious person who is empathetic, that can be manipulated.â
Jackson hopes her portrayal of Eleanorâs possible neurodiversity and questioned sanity holds nuance and ambiguity â but everyone in the audience will surely be cheering Eleanorâs clear grasp of both reality and the innate joyfulness of her chosen passion, just as the troubled psychiatrist (played by Elizabeth Blake) belatedly recognises it too.
What would the real Eleanor make of her stage debut? âI hope she would be pleased, of course,â says Jackson. âSheâs a good example to us of perseverance and not listening to what other people are saying about you.â
âIt would be lovely if she was watching from up there and cheering us on,â adds McIlhone. âOK, she may have lost the battle, but she won the war. I almost think material things such as her estate donât necessarily matter to her. Itâs her butterfly legacy that was most important. So if that endures, then Eleanor endures.â