One of these is the title of the TV show. The Queen’s Gambit is a real chess move that is one of the many openings possible in a game. In an early passage of the novel by Walter Tevis the Netflix series is based on, the author describes the move as it taught to Beth by Mr. Shaibel (played in the Netflix series by Bill Camp):
Notably, her reaction to this move seems to set up the chaos of her later life as she succumbs to an addiction to pills and alcohol: “She decided not to take the offered pawn, to leave the tension on the board. She liked it like that,” Tevis writes.
Though the Queen’s Gambit move does allow black to take one of the white’s pawns, it is a so-called “pawn sacrifice” move which aims to gain control of the center of the board.
Though the move is widely used in chess, in the novel and the book it becomes a metaphor for Beth’s own life and the sacrifices she makes for chess. In the show, after all, she is both a queen of chess, but also, like the queen chess piece, often much more powerful than the “kings” of chess around her.
Apart from this first use of the Queen’s Gambit, the move is mentioned four more times in the book.
The first time Beth uses it, for example, she, “felt with dismay that it had been a mistake. the Queen’s Gambit could lead to complicated positions, and this one was Byzantine.”
This seems to represent the complicated positions she finds herself in at the time, as she rises up the chess ranks while grappling with her addictions, her burgeoning womanhood and her status as an adopted child.
Later in the book, however, she starts to avoid the Queen’s Gambit as she develops both as a player and as a woman who, to follow the metaphor, becomes tired of the sacrifices she has to make.
About two thirds of the way into the book, for example, we learn how, “she decided to avoid the Queen’s Gambit and try to lead him into unfamiliar territory with the Dutch Defense.”
Though the series uses chess as a metaphor for Beth’s life in subtler way than the book, the Queen’s Gambit is still an opening she uses multiple times, providing a chess fans an Easter egg that opens up the character’s state of mind across the series.
The Queen’s Gambit is streaming now on Netflix.