The Australian Women's Weekly

DAME JULIE WALTERS Smelling the roses

Since bestselling British author Frances Hodgson Burnett first wrote The Secret Garden in 1911, it has been adapted into four TV series, four films, a bunch of plays and a Broadway musical, so it’s fair to say this is a story with a universal message.

For Dame Julie Walters, co-star of the latest version – a mesmerising adaptation combining eye-candy effects conjuring a magical realism of blooming flowers and verdant butterfly-filled woodlands with filming in some of Britain’s most beguiling gardens – the film couldn’t have come at a more appropriate time.

“I read the book as a child, so knew it well and loved it. The themes of loss and friendship, and then regeneration and light at the end of the tunnel, I think will always resonate. It’s pertinent now because in the film they’re coming out of a particularly dark period, showing that there’s hope and light, and I think hopefully we will be [coming out of a dark period] too,” says Julie, who during filming went through some challenging times of her own – more on that later.

The original setting of the book has shifted forward in this film, from Edwardian times to just after World War II in 1947, with

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