
Vanity Fair
1967 • Drama
In early 19th century England, ambitious and ruthless orphan Rebecca Sharp advances from the position of governess to the heights of British society.
Why you should read the novel
Discover the power of William Makepeace Thackeray's Vanity Fair, the original 19th-century social satire that inspired the 1967 TV series. Reading the novel reveals layers of wit, irony, and moral complexity no screen can fully capture.
The book's famous narrator guides you through Regency society with razor-sharp commentary, exposing ambition, hypocrisy, romance, and ruin. From Becky Sharp's calculated rise to Amelia Sedley's quiet resilience, the prose delivers depth and nuance page after page.
Choose the definitive experience: read Vanity Fair in full. You get the complete story arc, rich historical context, unforgettable side characters, and Thackeray's voice, the beating heart of this classic of English literature.
Adaptation differences
The biggest difference between the 1967 Vanity Fair adaptation and the book is the loss of Thackeray's sly, intrusive narrator. On the page, a mock showman frames events, comments on motives, and targets society's pretenses. The series relies on dialogue and performance, trimming meta satire and puppet-show imagery that define the novel's tone.
To fit television runtime, the 1967 serial condenses timelines, merges incidents, and prunes subplots. Episodes around Miss Crawley's shifting favor, Becky's Continental sojourns, and the breadth of London seasons are streamlined. Waterloo and overseas postings are compressed, while the long India interlude is reduced to brief mentions, narrowing the epic scale found in the book.
Broadcast standards of the era lead to a softer portrayal of scandal and vice. Becky's ruthlessness, her neglect of her son, and the Lord Steyne catastrophe are toned down. The result tilts viewers toward sympathy and romance, whereas the novel sustains a harsher satire in which few characters escape moral scrutiny.
The serial favors clearer emotional closure, accelerating Amelia and Dobbin's resolution and muting darker ambiguities. The novel hints at troubling possibilities around Jos Sedley and leaves Becky Sharp's survival more chillingly unresolved. Thackeray's ending feels deliberately ironic; the adaptation reads as tidier and less unsettling.
Vanity Fair inspired from
Vanity Fair: A Novel without a Hero
by William Makepeace Thackeray










