A new production of Jen Silverman's The Moors opens tomorrow, March 24, in Ennis, Ireland:
Ennis Players presents A play by Jen Silverman Directed by Sandra Cox March 24th – 28th 2026 Glór, Causeway Link, Ennis, Co. Clare, V95 VHP0, Ireland
A deliciously dark comedy set in the Yorkshire Moors in the mid-19th Century. The Moors by Jen Silverman is partly inspired by The Brontè sisters Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre. Set on the bleak Yorkshire moors in the 1840s, this atmospheric dark comedy centres on two lonely sisters, their maid, and a talking dog—all seeking love, power, and fame. Their dreary lives are upended by the arrival of a hapless governess and a moor hen, leading to choices both desperate and destructive.
The Telegraph and Argus reports that Haworth has just been named among the UK’s most charming for a spring staycation. Haworth near Keighley in the Bradford district has been praised by Sophie-May Williams on The Metro’s travel team for being an “idyllic” spot, with the likes of the Brontë Parsonage Museum and Top Withens being highlighted for lovely things to do. It comes as the area home to the newly released Wuthering Heights film was recently dubbed one of the seven wonders of the UK to visit for 2026 by Conde Nast Traveller. (Molly Court)
Aptly enough, Stylist comments on 'screen tourism'. Screen tourism is nothing new. Ever since the Lord Of The Rings trilogy let us all know that New Zealand is an actual real-world paradise, people have been seeking out the destinations featured in their favourite films and TV shows. However, in 2026, the trend is arguably more influential than ever. You only need to take a stroll across Richmond Green to spot the hordes of American Ted Lasso fans haunting the Cricketers pub, while Saint Tropez is already bracing for a surge in luxury travel following the announcement that the next season of The White Lotus will shoot there later this year. No surprise then that Yorkshire has seen a huge spike in tourist interest since Emerald Fennell’s headline-grabbing take on Wuthering Heights hit cinemas back in February. With Fennell putting significant focus on the dramatic vistas of the Swaledale valleys (yes, we’re talking about that rock), a whole new audience seems to have woken up to just how beautiful the Yorkshire Dales truly are. And given 2026’s other big travel trend for wholesome, outdoorsy escapes, it’s not hard to see why visitor numbers are going through the roof. Rambling and hiking through stunning scenery by day, holing up in a cosy country pub by night… what’s not to love? (George Wales)
The Gloss discusses 'Our Love/Hate Obsession With Romance'. You could say that each generation gets the version of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights it deserves. 1970 got Timothy Dalton’s impassioned glam rock Heathcliff, while 2011’s moody evocation of mizzly moorlands captured the austerity era. What does Emerald Fennell’s whip-cracking adaptation tell us about 2026? Uncompromising in its theatricality and emotional intensity, it heralds the return of full-fat romance. This is not romance of the polite dinner date kind, but a hearty, high-octane dark gothic fantasy, crawling across brambly knolls on hands and knees. “Kiss me,” Jacob Elordi’s Heathcliff utters to Margot Robbie’s Cathy in a deep Yorkshire brogue, “and let us both be damned.” [...] Then, of course, there’s Romanticism with a capital R, referring to the late 18th-century movement in the arts, literature and philosophy. Rebelling against the rationalism of the Enlightenment and the technological advances of the Industrial Revolution, Romanticists sought a return to primitive wisdom and unsullied nature. Though published in 1847, Wuthering Heights is set in the late 1700s, with Emily Brontë deliberately putting her earthy and sensuous characters in a pre-industrialised landscape. Though popularly thought of as a love story, it’s essentially a cautionary tale in which emotions, intuition, and social codes come into conflict. Fennell’s adaptation seeks to tap into the characters’ primal emotions and instinctive desires. Much like the 18th-century Romanticists, we seek an escape from collective anxiety around rapidly developing technologies and the fraught nature of global politics. [...] Romance in 2026 might entail spending time away from the screen and indulging our senses: soaking in the bath, exploring the natural world, setting the table rather than scoffing dinner in front of the television. It might manifest as seizing the moment and making spontaneous plans; or asking someone on a date for their infectious laugh, not because they know their best camera angle. Ultimately, it’s about cultivating and paying attention: choosing to do less, but to fully immerse ourselves in what we do. Granted, this isn’t quite the S&M-style cavorting of Fennell’s Wuthering Heights, but in seeking out small moments of joy, wonder and heightened sensorial experience we can all cultivate a sense of much-needed romance – red latex corset optional. (Rosa Abbott)
Three years ago, we dressed in pink to go to the cinema to watch Barbie; in 2026, the mind-bendingly structured, early-Victorian masterpiece Wuthering Heights is the talk of Hollywood, and Netflix is betting big on Emma Corrin as Elizabeth Bennet in Dolly Alderton’s forthcoming adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. Intellect and glamour – which have always sat at separate tables in the high-school canteen of pop culture (you can’t sit with the cool kids if you are a teacher’s pet, everyone knows that) – are flirting hard. (Jess Cartner-Morley) Both Wuthering Heights and Jane Eyre are among the AI-made selection of '8 Books That Every Hopeless Romantic Will Love' on Book Club.
A new edition of Wuthering Heights, including some never-before-published illustrations of Edna Clarke Hall (so they claim):
by Emily Brontë
Illustrated by Edna Clarke Hall (30 illustrations) Introduction by Dr Eliza Goodpasture Eiderdown Books ISBN: 978-1-916515-05-5 March 2026
Emily Brontë’s dark gothic tale of passion, desperation and a fierce obsession which haunts two generations across the desolate Yorkshire Moors, is reimagined through the never-before-published illustrations of Edna Clarke Hall. In her day, Edna Clarke Hall (1879-1979) was described as "the most imaginative artist in England". A series and talented draughtswoman in the circle of Augustus and Gwen John, her creative ambitions were dampened by an unhappy marriage. Wuthering Heights allowed her to imagine a world beyond her own trappings and she obsessively drew scenes from this enduring tale for more than thirty years. For the first time, a selection of these drawings and etchings, drawn from private collections and the archives of national museums (Tate, the Ashmolean, Nottingham Museums, Manchester Art Gallery, National Museum Wales) are published alongside the novel for the first time. Art critic and writer Dr Eliza Goodpasture (the Guardian, Art in America, Artnews) introduces this all-but-forgotten woman artist and the power of one of the most enduring texts in English literature.
A contributor to Literary Hub recommends Karen Powell's Fifteen Wild Decembers 'If You Want to Understand the Enduring Appeal of Wuthering Heights'. There is a meme circling online asking whether you’re an Emily Brontë or a Charlotte Brontë person. Every thirteen-year-old girl must decide, according to the post, with the implication that the way you answer that question at thirteen will determine the rest of your life. I was a Charlotte person, unambiguously. Charlotte’s world made sense to me in the way I needed the world to make sense at that age, offering self-respect, moral clarity, and—most importantly for my teenage self—a love story that felt earned. Jane Eyre taught me that suffering could be metabolized into dignity, that integrity was its own reward. I found Emily’s novel disturbing in a way I couldn’t quite name and kept my distance from it for years. Decades, really. Emerald Fennell’s new film adaptation has brought Wuthering Heights back into the conversation, and I suspect a lot of people are returning to Emily Brontë right now, or encountering her for the first time. Before you see it—or alongside it, or instead of it, depending on your disposition—I’d recommend picking up Karen Powell’s 2023 novel Fifteen Wild Decembers. It is the best preparation I know for that encounter, because far from softening Emily’s brutal vision or making Wuthering Heights more palatable, it offers something I didn’t have as a young reader: the context of what Emily Brontë was actually writing about, and why. Powell’s novel is narrated in Emily’s voice, and centers her role as primary caretaker for her brother Branwell during the years she was writing Wuthering Heights. Branwell Brontë—once the family’s great hope, the son on whom all expectations rested—spent those years in a spiral of alcohol and laudanum addiction, humiliated by a failed love affair with a married employer, cycling through rages and remorse, through binges and vows of sobriety that lasted until they didn’t. He died in September 1848, just months after Emily’s novel was published. She followed him that December. What Powell renders so precisely is the dailiness of that care. Emily hauling Branwell home from drinking, supporting what she drily describes as “two grown men up the stairs, one half-blind, the other incapable”—her father, whose eyesight was failing, and her brother, who could barely stand. Emily scrubbing a soiled rug in the back kitchen the morning after, while Charlotte’s voice comes at her “sour as an underripe plum,” asking why she can’t make Branwell clean up after himself. The landlord at the inn, looking doubtfully at Emily as Branwell is shouldered to the door, shirt half-untucked, one sleeve of his coat hanging empty: You’ll manage? And Emily managing, as she always does, turning him in the right direction and tacking their way home. These scenes are not dramatic in any conventional sense. They are repetitive by design, because that is what this kind of caregiving actually is—the same crisis with minor variations, the same hope extinguished in roughly the same way, the same morning after. Powell understands that the accumulation of these moments is itself a form of knowledge, and that Emily was accumulating it in real time while writing one of the strangest novels in the English language. (Ellen O'Connell Whittet)
The Guardian asks bookish questions to writer Florence Knapp. The writer who changed my mind During the long summer between GCSEs and A-levels, reading felt, for the first time, like work. I trudged through Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre, resenting the densely worded pages and Jane’s interminable stay at Lowood. But in class, when we began to analyse it chapter by chapter, it came alive for me. I think that was the year I started to notice the craftsmanship in how something was written.
The Bark takes readers behind the scenes of the forthcoming Bearden Theatre production of Jane Eyre, which opens on April 23rd. This year’s spring play is doing more than just retelling a story. In Bearden’s production of Jane Eyre, Jane is followed from early childhood to late adolescence. Bearden theatre will portray this development through the use of two actors. This play showcases a unique collaboration between Jane as a child and Jane as she ages into adulthood to seamlessly portray one character across different points in time. Junior McKenna Webb (young Jane) and senior Caroline Alley (young adult Jane) have taken on the roles of the same character at different times in life, mainly focusing on matching each other’s mannerisms and personalities to create a smooth transition after the shift in age. “I just kind of watch what Caroline does and see how she moves in her facial expressions and what I can do to enhance that even more because young Jane is just a more vibrant version of older Jane,” Webb said. Webb describes young Jane as relentless, shaped by the hardships during her childhood and school highlighting the character’s emotional intensity and raw honesty. Alley uses this to build on to the foundation of young Jane with a more controlled and reflective version of the character. “She still speaks her mind, but more respectfully,” Alley said. This shift in mannerisms reflects Jane’s growth and maturation, especially after learning about forgiveness and restraint from formative role models in her life. Despite the differences between the two versions of this character, both Webb and Alley worked to maintain a clear connection between the portrayals of Jane. This was accomplished by studying shared traits such as intelligence, isolation, and emotional depth that remains consistent between them throughout the play. Director Ms. Katie Alley underscores the importance of their connection and partnership to the storytelling of the production. “They will want to have some similar mannerisms and make sure their dialect is similar,” she said. Through the careful work and observation of Jane and her journey, Webb and Alley are able to create a unified character and performance throughout the play. This collaboration between the two actresses highlights both their individual talents while also using their strong teamwork skills in bringing this complex character to life. (Kaelyn Martinez)
A musical adaptation of Frances Hodgson Burnett's The Secret Garden is about to open at York Theatre Royal and BBC features it. But the Yorkshire described in The Secret Garden, [biographer Ann Thwaite] says, is "the Yorkshire of her imagination and the Yorkshire inspired by the Brontës". "Frances Hodgson Burnett had certainly read both Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights and indeed probably all the Brontë novels," she says. (Seb Cheer)
Spanish TV presenter Marina Comes travelled to Haworth for her TV programme Zapeando.
This is a total abomination and a terrible, terrible idea: someone has published a 3,000-word abridged version of Wuthering Heights.
Equipo Leamos Infobae Ediciones ISBN: 0042026BL
It is not a long book. It is a book that requires you to sit with discomfort, which is rather the whole point. And now there is a 3,000-word version of it. Three. Thousand. Words. Published by Infobae's own books platform, Leamos (Cumbres borrascosas en tres mil palabras, available for free on their Bajalibros app) — and then covered by Infobae Cultura as though it were good news, which is a remarkable thing to do to yourself. The argument being made, apparently with a straight face, is that abridgements serve as a "gateway" to the original — that readers who consume the condensed version might one day pick up the real thing. This is the literary equivalent of saying a postcard (in very low resolution) of the Yorkshire moors is a gateway to actually going outside.
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