Let's start with a review of something that is now Wuthering Heights 2026. LincsOnline reviews Shoestring Theatre’s Jane Eyre at Stamford Arts Centre. Taking his seat to watch the opening night of Jane Eyre at Stamford Arts Centre, the chap next to me ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. It should sell heaps of tickets
  2. This is My Theatre's Jane Eyre UK Tour
  3. Already an increase in visitor numbers
  4. Northern Ballet's Wuthering Heights Ballet Returns to Leeds
  5. Brontës and Violence
  6. More Recent Articles

It should sell heaps of tickets

Let's start with a review of something that is now Wuthering Heights 2026. LincsOnline  reviews Shoestring Theatre’s Jane Eyre at Stamford Arts Centre.
Taking his seat to watch the opening night of Jane Eyre at Stamford Arts Centre, the chap next to me glanced at the stage and commented to his companion: “I didn’t know it was set on a building site.”
While I’ve no doubt he was being waggish, he had a point.
The stage for this classic gothic romance was decorated with nothing more than scaffolding forming a platform at the back, and an attic room to the side - this requiring plenty of imagination, since mad Mrs Rochester could have strolled through any of the four open sides.
Another slight bugbear, before we begin, was the treatment of the audience regarding the issue of ‘madness’. While in real life I’m all for a modern approach to mental health issues, I’m willing to give Charlotte Brontë a break, not least since she was writing fiction, and in the 1840s.
You’d have to be a particularly uptight and unworldly sort to tut at her characterisation of Mr and Mrs Rochester, and yet there’s pretty much a full-page apology for it in the programme.
Fortunately, Stamford Shoestring Theatre can be relied upon for solid acting, and Chloe Taylor gave the title character a powerful mixture of reserve and passion, prim principles and a desire to tear down social constraints.
Ellie Corrigan, who proved her comedy timing in last year’s production of The 39 Steps, played four parts rather brilliantly, having great fun with lively, insouciant Adele, Mr Rochester’s French ward - although I’m surprised there wasn’t any hand-wringing in the programme about Gallic stereotypes.
Hats off too, to Stephanie Thompson-Collins, on stage throughout the two-hour production as Mrs Rochester, writhing and gurning in her scaffold attic while the plot unfolds front and centre.
She could have looked hammy and conspicuous, but instead keeps this strange element of the production simmering in the background - so strange it also requires a page in the programme explaining what the blazes it means.
The cast of nine play more than 20 roles between them, without noticeable mishaps or missing lines. Impressively - and this applies to Corrigan and Michael Hughes in particular - several switch from playing children to adults, and paupers to posh folk, changing outfits, accents and demeanours seamlessly over the course of the play.
Mr Rochester’s dog is perhaps a human role too far on stage, and although Hughes makes it comic and well-observed, the playwright Polly Teale, who created the stage adaptation in 1998, should have found an attic for the hound and thrown away the key.
Shoestring’s Jane Eyre is full of fine acting and tells Brontë’s story well enough, but the scaffolding and the avant-garde ‘embodiments of inner feelings’ is theatre trying too hard to be ‘theatrical’ and forgetting what entertains us ordinary sorts. (Suzanne Moon)
And now for some more reviews of Wuthering Heights 2026:

Did I love it? No. Did I enjoy being transported to a world where I could forget about impending midterms and get lost in the messy ride? Absolutely. This film may not be a cinematic masterpiece but for two hours and 16 minutes, “Wuthering Heights” had an entire room of people — Stanford students, middle-aged couples and teenage girls alike — hysterically laughing, gasping and sobbing together. (Chloe Loquet)
A contributor to Airmail:
The wonder of it is that Wuthering Heights, which was declared to be “unquestionably and irredeemably monstrous” upon publication, exists at all, its creative origins forever obscured by the brief and enigmatic life of its author. The novel, published in 1847 under a male pen name (Ellis Bell), was written by Emily Brontë, a 27-year-old virgin so reclusive she makes Emily Dickinson seem positively sociable. Brontë, who died a year after her book came out, somehow managed to call forth from her vivid, anarchic imagination one of the darkest love stories in Victorian (or any other) literature, creating an unprecedented Demon Lover in the portrait of Heathcliff and an obsessed madwoman in that of Catherine Earnshaw. The erotic undertones are unmistakable and all the more powerful for being suppressed. For all its heaving drama, the plot of Wuthering Heights is remarkably simple, even primitive. It is the age-old one of a soured romance, of childhood sweethearts who are foiled by the adult reality they grow into. Filmmakers and television producers have continually returned to this elusive work ever since it was made into a movie in 1939, starring Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon. This adaptation, written and directed by the controversial Emerald Fennell (Promising Young Woman, Saltburn), is characterized as “loosely inspired” by the novel—ergo, at liberty to take liberties. The adult Cathy is played by the blonde, blue-eyed Margot Robbie, whose acting chops are in full view once again. Heathcliff is played by Jacob Elordi. Influenced by the aesthetics of soft porn and high fashion, this is a movie with its sights firmly fixed on Gen Z. It works, in its edgy stylistic way, and it should sell heaps of tickets. (Daphne Merkin)
“Wuthering Heights” is not a love story. All-consuming love leads Catherine and Heathcliff to be selfish and cruel to those around them. The film was unfiltered, twisted, dimensional, passionate and beautiful. Through the fog and through the hills, travel to your local AMC or Regal movie theater to see “Wuthering Heights” today. (Talia Scarpa)
A 7/10 from Richer Sounds:
Will Wuthering Heights ever be made true to the literary version – of which I have actually read – and at the same time be worthy of the largest screen with the best sound and indeed soundtrack? One may never know. Is this perfect? No. Is this the best adaptation? For me, yes. Despite the hate online, Wuthering Heights remains a gorgeous hit grossing at the time of publication, approaching $160million and counting. (Piers)
When details are altered to the point where the messaging of the book and core ideas are lost, these movie remakes aren’t just misinterpreting the value of the original text for a modern audience. Oftentimes, they are also forgetting things like the commentary embedded into a story that made these books so controversial or beloved, and ignoring the reason why these classics have been adored across generations. (Alyssa Mathews and Reese Neiger)
The Week gives 3 stars to Charli XCX's Wuthering Heights album:
As in the movie that inspired it, “there’s messiness here, and messiness feels like the point.”
A contributor to InStyle has written an article on how Wuthering Heights 2026 is influencing her spring wardrobe. 'An English Major’s Take on the Wuthering Heights Film' on Her Campus. Another contributor to Her Campus discusses 'The Transcendent Yet Forgotten Aspects Of Wuthering Heights'. For The Commonwealth Times, 'Yes, the whitewashing in ‘Wuthering Heights’ is a big deal'. Concerned Women for America wonders 'How should we, as Christians, view this latest adaptation?' KCRG reports that 'Everyday Iowa Reads Wuthering Heights'. Gold Radio features Kate Bush's Wuthering Heights.

Salve Regina University shines the spotlight on a group of students who performed at the recent Jane Eyre concert in New York.
   

This is My Theatre's Jane Eyre UK Tour

 A new touring production of Jane Eyre by the Sussex-based company This is My Theatre:
Touring March 6-May 4th
Written by Charlotte Brontë
Directed by Sarah Slator
Adapted by Ethan Taylor
Music by Simon Stallard

With: Niall McDaid- St John Rivers // Mr Brocklehurst
Jack Prince - Rochester
Isobel Rathband- Jane Eyre
Lily Smith - Mrs Fairfax // Helen

Orphaned and alone, Jane Eyre grows up in a world that seeks to silence her spirit. Defiant in her search for freedom, belonging, and love, she finds herself at Thornfield Hall - where the enigmatic Mr. Rochester hides dark secrets behind its walls.
Passion, mystery, and resilience collide in this sweeping story of self-discovery and courage, brought to life in a bold new adaptation - with traditional folk music woven throughout - of Charlotte Brontë’s timeless classic!
TOUR: 
Friday 6th March, 5pm & 7.30pm  The Town Hall, Reigate, Surrey
Tuesday 10th March, 7pm St Andrew's Church Worthing West Sussex
Friday 13th March, 7pm Holy Trinity Church Bothenhampton Dorset
Wednesday 18th March,7pm St Mary's Church Burham Kent
Saturday 21st March, 7pm Matfield Village Hall Matfield Kent
Friday 27th March, 5pm & 7.30pm All Saints Church Little Somborne Hampshire
Tuesday 31st March, 7pm Stowe House Buckingham Buckinghamshire
Saturday 11th April,5pm & 7.30pm The Medieval Hall Salisbury Wiltshire
Saturday 18th April,5pm & 7.30pmHoghton Tower Preston Lancashire
Wednesday 22nd April, 7pm St Mary's Church Hartley Wintney Hampshire
Tuesday 28th April, 7pm St Rumbald Church Stoke Doyle Northamptonshire
   

Already an increase in visitor numbers

The Museums Associations Journal interviews Mia Ferrullo, digital engagement officer at the Brontë Parsonage Museum.
How did the Brontë Parsonage Museum get involved with the release of the new Wuthering Heights film?
Our museum director, Rebecca Yorke, first met with representatives of Warner Bros and Emerald Fennell’s team over a year ago, in early February 2025. 
We then invited Emerald to be a speaker at our Brontë Women’s Writing Festival in September and have a private tour of the museum. As the event was the first time she’d spoken publicly about the film, it was very exciting for us to hear about her creative process.
Initially, our involvement was through our social media channels. Warner Bros had asked if we’d be happy to share digital assets like trailers and posters on our socials in the lead up to the film’s release. We knew we wanted to be a part of the conversation, especially as anticipation was building.
One of our most successful posts was in collaboration with the Wuthering Heights movie Instagram page: we put together a post to celebrate the anniversary of the novel’s publication, which hit 703k views and we gained hundreds of new followers as a result.
What has the museum been up to as part of its engagement with the film? 
The museum has been able to engage with audiences in new and unique ways because of the adaptation. We were invited down to London for the press junket and premiere, and I personally had the exciting opportunity to interview Emerald Fennell and Margot Robbie, the lead actor playing Catherine Earnshaw.
It was fantastic to get bespoke content for the museum that was specifically tailored to our audiences. I wanted to bring the conversation back to Emily Brontë’s novel and our collections, and it really came through how much they both appreciate Brontë’s writing and the work we do as a museum.
The UK premiere in Leicester Square was a surreal experience, and never a place you’d expect to be when you sign up to work in a museum!
The museum had the rare chance to highlight one of our collection items on the red carpet. We worked with stylist Andrew Mukamal and designer Dilara Findikoglu to assist them in the creation of a look inspired by a hair bracelet that belonged to Charlotte Brontë.
Victorian hairwork features at different points throughout the film and the museum has multiple pieces of hair jewellery in its collection.
We were happy to introduce Andrew to Wyedean Weaving, a local manufacturer, to create a replica bracelet, and also facilitated visits to the museum by Dilara’s team so they could colour-match the hair for the dress to the original bracelet.
This fashion moment meant that millions of people have now seen an item in our collection that may not otherwise have done so. From a conservation perspective, it also provided us with the opportunity to do further research into the original bracelet and have it assessed and cleaned by a jewellery conservator.
How has the release of the film impacted the current resonance of the Brontë family and their work?
The main impact, which I think should be celebrated most, is that so many people are picking up Wuthering Heights for the first time. Sales of the book have increased by almost 500% in comparison to the previous year, and the museum sold 388 copies over February half-term alone. That’s remarkable for a novel that’s almost 180 years old, but as Margot Robbie said in our interview, “what an incredible thing to achieve something so enduring”.
There has been so much conversation around the novel, which has led to increasing intrigue from people who want to know what all the fuss is about. Classic literature isn’t always the most accessible and it shouldn’t be taken for granted that a new wave of readers are diving into Wuthering Heights.
In addition, the Brontë Parsonage Museum is the place where Emily Brontë lived and wrote her famous novel, and we’ve already seen an increase in visitor numbers. If the film acts as a gateway to discovering the Brontës, then that’s fantastic and we look forward to welcoming those new audiences who want to learn more.
Has the experience influenced the museum's future plans around exhibitions, public engagement and beyond?
We’ve been holding “Wuthering Heights readiness meetings” since the late autumn! With the buzz already surrounding the film online, we planned related exhibitions, events and new merchandise.
Our programme officer curated a photographic installation that presents a century of Wuthering Heights screen adaptations from across the globe, highlighting the various ways this story has been told on screen. There are also many events in our programme focused on Wuthering Heights, along with talks and workshops about hairwork and lace-making to tie in with the themes of the film.
We’ve also considered how we can link to the film through our museum displays in ways that new audiences will recognise. Our curators have put together a case of hairwork and mourning jewellery, including the bracelet that inspired Margot Robbie’s UK premiere look.
For fans of the film, the museum has also kindly been loaned a prop by LuckyChap Entertainment. A Book of Friendship is a scrapbook shown in the film that Isabella makes for Catherine as a Christmas present. It’s currently on display in the Exhibition Room.
Leading on the museum’s social media activity in the build-up to the film’s release, I wanted our content to link back to Emily Brontë’s life and work.
I made a video for TikTok and Instagram highlighting various objects in the museum’s collection that belonged to Emily Brontë, set to Charli XCX’s Chains of Love. This is our most viewed piece of content ever, currently sitting at over 830k views – likely because it appeals to both existing and new audiences.
Do you have any top tips for other museums looking to make the most of relevant cultural moments?
I would say that film adaptations do have a place in writer’s house museums. Screen tourism is a huge driving force for domestic and international visits to the UK, and the role heritage plays in that shouldn’t be underestimated.
The Brontë Parsonage Museum will always continue to attract literary tourists as the Brontës’ novels are significant to English literature, but we cannot rely solely on literary tourism as a motive for visits. We also live in a time where social media influences many of our choices: what books we read, what films we watch and where we visit.
It’s not about whether an adaptation is faithful to the book, it’s about taking this moment to showcase who we are and what we do to people who are discovering us for the first time.
While our engagement with the film has prompted criticism from some quarters, we believe that our content aligns with our brand values of excellence and creativity, fulfilling our mission to “bring the Brontës to the world, and the world to Yorkshire”. (Francesca Collins)
The New York Times thinks that things are getting generally 'steamy' on screen.
Emerald Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” plays like erotic Brontë fan fiction, with a latex dress for Cathy and some finger-sucking for Heathcliff. (Amanda Hess)
The Badger makes a similar point:
Before I enthusiastically leap onto the internet’s already overcrowded hate-wagon for this movie, let me give credit where it is due: the film is undeniably entertaining, visually luxurious, and powered by an addictive soundtrack. That being said, there are certainly a few rather large elephants roaming Fennell’s moors that need addressing. It appears Fennell has constructed a strangely contradictory version of Georgian England. One where racism has conveniently disappeared, and shameless debauchery and public displays of pleasure are normalised. Considering racial discrimination and oppression of women sit at the very heart of Brontë’s novel, it is a striking choice for Fennell to sidestep those tensions by depicting a world saturated with exaggerated perversity; as though oppression is too uncomfortable to depict, but eroticism is fair game. [...]
Fennell’s serial aestheticisation persists through Isabella, whose suffering is reframed through a BDSM-inflected lens. To be clear, there is nothing inherently wrong with depicting consensual kink in cinema. But Brontë’s Isabella is a domestic abuse victim, tortured by Heathcliff. Turning her trauma into stylised eroticism feels backward, even exploitative. In the film, her sadomasochism functions less as character development and more as an ornamental attempt to bring edginess to our white romanticised Heathcliff. Stripped of its narrative weight, Isabella’s degradation becomes spectacle. An invitation for the audience to voyeuristically delve into a kinky and forbidden world rather than reckon with the canonical brutality of her experience.
Ultimately, these choices are emblematic of a larger pattern. This adaptation reveals more about what it assumes of its audience than about the story itself. It presumes we crave flattened complexity as long as it comes wrapped in lush cinematography and salacious allusions. And, for once, Fennell is not wrong in this assumption. For centuries, society has romanticised the violent, brooding Wuthering Heights into a tale of tragic star-crossed lovers. So, is this Wuthering Heights a betrayal of Brontë? Perhaps. But it acts more as a reflection of our cultural appetites. As we may question why this version came to be? Afterall, adaptations like this do not materialise in a vacuum. They are facilitated by cultural trends and audience desires. Considering the cultural frenzy sparked by the provocative surplus in Saltburn (2023), it is hardly shocking that Fennell has catered this beloved classic to a modern audience, who are seemingly more interested in the scandalous spectacle Hollywood’s white heartthrob Jacob Elordi might offer us, than in any racial brutality that is at the heart of the original story. 
If this Wuthering Heights’ adaptation feels like a product of our obsession with aestheticised toxicity and hyper-sexuality, with constantly craving “the stiffy,” that is because we demanded it to be. And perhaps that is the most uncomfortable truth about this adaptation. (Freya McLaughlin)
Now for a couple of reviews:

3.5 stars out of 5 from the Missouri State University Standard:
Ultimately, the film functions as a visually captivating way to pass the time if one enjoys an inaccurate period piece combined with a toxic romance. Anyone who has read the book will likely not enjoy this loose interpretation, since almost everything is different and not as complex. It does not feel especially timely, and I wouldn't feel inclined to rewatch the entire film outside of the theater setting, though I did enjoy it at the moment. (Brooke Benne)
The HawkEye (whose writer clearly isn't familiar with the actual book):
Like Fennell’s previous film, “Saltburn,” “Wuthering Heights” is as grotesque as it is sensual. The up-tight setting of 18th century England is subverted as the characters express their sexuality loudly. At the beginning, a close-up shot of Heathcliff’s scarred back shows the mix of violence and attraction. Lust and violence are prominent in the character dynamics as well. Multiple characters engage in BDSM relationships. Comparing what seems like “Fifty Shades of Heathcliff” to the 1847 novel will shock viewers: fans of the movie are confused by the lack of romance and fans of the novel are clutching their petticoats. 
“Wuthering Heights” could have been a haunting, sexy historical drama, uncovering the darkest parts of upper-class society through a tragic romance. But by marketing the film as a “Wuthering Heights” adaptation and casting Elordi as a character written as a person of color, Fennell delivers a shallow misinterpretation. (Ad Arnold)
Collider ranks 'The 10 Best Adaptations of Great Classic Books' and an adaptation of Wuthering Heights makes it to #10.
'Wuthering Heights' (1988)
With the notoriety of Emerald Fennell's most recent work, the latest adaptation of Emily Brontë's timeless 1847 classic Wuthering Heights, it's worth taking a look back at the best-ever cinematic adaptation of the book. Peculiarly enough, that title falls on an adaptation that moves the story to feudal Japan. It may be an entirely different setting from what Brontë envisioned, yet it's somehow the most faithful to the source material's themes that any cinematic adaptation has ever been.
1988's Wuthering Heights is one of the best classic Japanese films for beginners, particularly for those who already love Brontë's seminal literary classic. Erotic, bleak, visually gorgeous, and enthralling even for those who have never read the book, it's one of the best Japanese films of the '80s. All those who have grown disappointed by the many subpar Western adaptations of the novel should consider looking eastward. (Diego Pineda Pacheco)
According to Mental Floss, Emily Brontë is one of '8 Female Gothic Writers Who Inspired Modern Horror'.
Emily Brontë
While Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights might typically be branded as a romance novel, the story is actually quite filled with elements of Gothic horror. From the windswept moors and dreary manor that gives the novel its name to the tortured, haunted character of Heathcliff, the novel is every bit as much of a horror story as it is a romance.
Brontë is believed to have drawn inspiration from the crumbling, ghost story-shrouded manor homes she explored while growing up on the English moors, and the atmosphere of dreariness and dread that pervades Wuthering Heights helped shape modern tales of disturbed romance and obsession. The novel also helped earn stories with elements of Gothic horror their place in the literary canon. (Eden Gordon)
Mental Floss also lists '5 Romantic Novels That Were Scandalous When They Were Published', including
JANE EYRE, CHARLOTTE BRONTË (1847) 
Charlotte Brontë’s gripping romantic Gothic drama Jane Eyre was first published under the pseudonym Currer Bell in 1847. Although immediately popular, the book’s content divided readers and critics alike, and sparked something of a scandal in mid-19th century England. “The heroine herself is a specimen of the bold daring young ladies who delight in overstepping conventional rules,” wrote one critic, while another put it plainly that “it would be no credit to anyone to be the author of Jane Eyre.” 
The reason for all this pearl-clutching was the novel’s daring content, which (no spoilers) brought several controversial themes and episodes into the homes and minds of Victorian-era readers—and, just as scandalously, put power, intelligence, passion, and determination in the hands of a female character created by a female writer.
This was seen by some as anti-Christian, anti-authority, and grossly immoral. “It is the boast of its writer,” wrote one critic, “to trample upon customs respected by our forefathers. […] People were once ashamed to stand forth as the advocates of vice…but such barriers are unhappily broken through, and not by men only, but by women, from whom we naturally look for all that is gentle and loveable.” (Paul Anthony Jones)
A contributor to Electric Lit argues why 'Wuthering Heights Was Never a Love Story'. A contributor to Her Campus reviews Wuthering Heights 2026. And another contributor to Her Campus reviews Charli XCX's Wuthering Heights album track by track. El País has an article on Alison Oliver and how she has 'won over Hollywood' after playing Isabella. BBC features the body doubles of the film.
   

Northern Ballet's Wuthering Heights Ballet Returns to Leeds

The Northern Ballet's Wuthering Heights ballet is returning to Leeds:
Claude-Michel Schönberg's
A Ballet by David Nixon OBE
5 Mar 2027 - 13 Mar 2027 14:30 & 19:30
Leeds Grand Theatre

On the wild Yorkshire moors, love isn't tender. It's ravenous. 
Passionate and obsessive, Cathy and Heathcliff's love is a force of nature — beautiful, brutal and impossible to escape. Told through breathtaking dance and heart-wrenching storytelling, this dramatic tale will sweep you into a haunting world of romance and revenge.
Choreographed by David Nixon CBE and set to original music by celebrated composer Claude-Michel Schönberg (West End and Broadway's Les Misérables and Miss Saigon), Emily Brontë’s gothic masterpiece tears itself from the pages and onto the stage in Northern Ballet's adaptation of Wuthering Heights
   

Brontës and Violence

An alert from the Brontë Parsonage Museum for tomorrow, March 5:
March 5, 2026
In-person 2pm , Brontë Space at the Old School Room
Online 7:30pm

When Anne, Charlotte, and Emily Brontë’s novels were first published in the 1840s, they caused quite a stir. Amidst the more positive reviews, critics singled out the apparent violence of the Brontës’ literary productions as coarse and unfeminine. Violence has since become a provocative, as well as an alluring, influence on perceptions of the Brontë sisters and their major works, one that continues to shape our view of them as writers today.
In this talk, we’ll explore the depiction of violence in a selection of Anne, Charlotte, and Emily Brontë’s fiction, alongside its ongoing impact on their cultural afterlives through recent adaptations and biopics such as Sally Wainwright’s To Walk Invisible, to reveal its shifting role in their legacies.
Dr Sophie Franklin is a researcher based in the School of English, Drama and Film at University College Dublin. Her work specialises in representations of violence in nineteenth-century literature and culture, with particular focus on the Brontë family. She has written widely on the Brontës, and is the author of Charlotte Brontë Revisited: A View from the Twenty-First Century (Saraband, 2016) and the recent Violence and the Brontës: Language, Reception, Afterlives (Edinburgh University Press, 2025). Sophie is also an Associate Editor of Brontë Studies.
   

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