BBC News reports that wool artist Nicola Turner, whose work was seen in Wuthering Heights 2026, is going to have her installations on display at Yorkshire Sculpture Park. . A woollen sculpture created by an artist whose installations feature in the ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. Exhibitions and reviews
  2. Jane Eyre in Arlington
  3. The stormy passions of Cathy Earnshaw
  4. Brontë Lounge with Eliza Goodpasture
  5. Wuthering Heights to be released on Blu-ray/DVD on May 5
  6. More Recent Articles

Exhibitions and reviews

BBC News reports that wool artist Nicola Turner, whose work was seen in Wuthering Heights 2026, is going to have her installations on display at Yorkshire Sculpture Park..
A woollen sculpture created by an artist whose installations feature in the latest Wuthering Heights film is to go on display at Yorkshire Sculpture Park.
Time's Scythe, a "site-responsive installation" by artist Nicola Turner, uses wool from the British Wool Board in Bradford and will be on display from Saturday.
Turner is putting the finishing touches to the work, which will see an 18th-Century chapel at the Wakefield park covered in wool and horsehair.
She said she was inspired by the landscape and "energy" of the chapel and its rural surroundings.
"My material, which includes locally sourced wool, will pull, weave and grasp through the space with the final form emerging as I work in situ with the YSP team," she said. [...]
Turner's works appear in the Emerald Fennell version of Wuthering Heights, which stars Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi and was released in February.
Her large woollen sculptures hang from the walls and roofs of Wuthering Heights, the moorland house in which Cathy and Heathcliffe [sic] are raised. (Grace Wood)
More local exhibitions as The Telegraph and Argus features a series of Brontë portraits by John Ellis.
A series of portraits of the Brontës and people connected to them have gone on display in Thornton, to raise funds for the chapel where Patrick Brontë was a young curate.
The paintings, by John Ellis, were initially displayed in the Brontë Birthplace, which opened last year as a visitor centre and education hub. The Market Street property, where the Brontë siblings were born, was opened by Queen Camilla last May.
Says John: “In 2024 I and my late partner, Susan, and I were given a task to paint and draw a total of 34 pictures for the Brontë house in Thornton.
During the period of 12 months it took to produce the pictures, I lost Susan to a heart attack two thirds of the way through the year. After the funeral I carried on and finished all the pictures for the opening day and the visit of the Queen.”
Now John is exhibiting the portraits at St James’ Church in Thornton. The launch event included a raffle and sales of The Birthplace of Dreams, a book about the Brontë Birthplace by photographer and historian Mark Davis, to raise funds for the church and Thornton’s Bell Chapel. The exhibition is on for two weeks and has already raised more than £100.
“I have always loved drawing and painting, and clay modelling. I love to create things,” says John. “Art was my best subject at school. At 15 I left school to work at English Electric as an apprentice toolmaker then I was in the RAF for five years, during which my artist talents were used quite a lot. When I came out I went back into toolmaking.
“I met Susan in 2005 when I moved to Thornton; it was then that I started to take to my brushes again, doing commissions for family and friends. When we both retired we took it up much more - Susan with her drawings, she was really talented.
“At the beginning of 2024 I was painting the Brontë pillar painting when we saw an advert on Facebook about open day at the Brontë house in Thornton, so decided to go and see what it was all about.
“On arriving we were given a lecture about the house, then Christa Ackroyd (the broadcaster campaigned for crowdfunding for the Brontë Birthplace renovation) asked if we had anything to donate for furnishing the house. That’s when Sue nudged me in the ribs and said ‘Donate the painting you’re doing’.
So we showed Christa a photo of what I was doing and she asked me to do some more, to tell the story of how the Brontë family ended up on Market Street.
“Between us both, Sue and I did 34 paintings and drawings. I made the decision to keep the style of Bramwell Brontë, from the pillar painting, to give an air of the period we were talking about, plus the old fashioned style blended in with the house itself.
“I have painted all the family, but only Elizabeth and little Maria, the two older Brontë siblings, are on the painting of the house.
I have also put my little quirk on the paintings - a ladybird somewhere in the paintings and one on the back of the canvas.” [...]
As well as painting the family, John has created a portrait of Nancy De Garrs, who was 13 when the Brontës employed her as the children’s nanny in Thornton. Nancy outlived the Brontës and died, age 82, in Bradford Workhouse. (Emma Clayton)
Keighley News reports that the Old School Room has been granted a licence for the venue to serve alcohol between 9am and 11pm and host live music.

And more reviews of Wuthering Heights 2026:

I left Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” feeling nothing. It was a visually pretty movie with unconventional costumes and two attractive leads, but it did not address race, class and gender roles the way the novel masterfully does.
Fennell stripped away what made the book so compelling and instead created pallid fanfiction. The fact that many others feel the same goes to show that we want stories to meaningfully engage with us.
Despite my negative feelings toward Fennell’s adaptation, the movie left me with hope. This decade has brought notable movie adaptations of classic novels — Emma, the Dune series, and Guillermo del Toro’s “Frankenstein”, to name a few.
“Wuthering Heights” reminds audiences what made those previous adaptations successful. The directors kept the essence of the novel while adding a few authentic touches. Fennell’s failure to do this sets a higher standard for adaptations of classics that online discourse has made loud and clear: Get the themes right. (Paula Milian)
Emerald Fennell’s unhinged version of “Wuthering Heights” is surely to be divisive. There’s a reason why the film’s poster displays the title in quotation marks. Those who are loyal to the novel might be jarred by the composition of this rendition, while casual movie watchers might be enthralled by the overall spectacle. What’s certain is that this is a dark, tragic and overwhelming experience. Amidst the highly stylized presentation is a story of dangerous and toxic love that envelops everything around it. I found it haunting me for days after I saw it. (Zach Murphy)
Perhaps, to avoid losing the meaning in adaptations, we might expand our definition from one of fidelity to one that includes artistic license. Those who are inspired by a work of art and set out to adapt it to a different medium or reimagine it in a new context have the discretion and freedom over what they produce. That’s the beauty of inspiration. However, I do also argue that it is necessary for creatives to be intentional about why portions of this story are appealing to them and what they are adapting. Purposefully cutting around central themes to the original almost defeats the purpose of adapting it (unless perhaps the changes help subvert and critically comment on the source material).
The original and adaptation can then be viewed as companion pieces, but that doesn’t mean that critical thinking stops outside the metaphorical door of the source material. Some people will definitely be watching this movie without the lens of the original. Saying the adaptation was bad doesn’t get to the deeper parts of the movie where the choices of creative liberty become under scrutiny as well.
The new work can be judged both alongside and outside the original work. This form of the adaptation, created with intentionality, becomes a way to let the story resonate with another person or different audience. It’s just important to realize which parts are resonating.
“Wuthering Heights” (2026) takes advantage of the aesthetics and narrative of the Gothic novel to market a highly romanticized and unconvincing tragic romance between two characters who are shadows of their literary counterparts. Irrelevant to the novel, this movie still leaves much to be desired emotionally and narratively. Much like its dreamy finish, the movie glosses over the themes of obsession, possession, and even the humiliation, pleasure, and pain found in sadomasochism and erratically jumps to a sudden erotic tone. At the end of it all you’re left with an empty and unsettled feeling, which is surprisingly close to how the book leaves you.
This film will no doubt be the introduction of many to Brontë’s story, maybe even inspiring some to pick up the physical book since they loved this movie so much. That isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Reading is good! But, after you see this movie or any of the many adaptations in theaters this year, expand your analysis to criticize both the adaptation and whether the resulting work is compelling in its own right. (Hadley Blodgett)
Razón + Fe (Colombia) considers the film is an 'absolute treason' to the original novel and that the 'deep Christian theme' of the novel is missing from the adaptation. A contributor to Her Campus also thinks that '“Wuthering Heights” is not actually Wuthering Heights'.

The Yorkshire Post features Haworth-based maker Rosalia Ferrara who creates Brontë-inspired products and gave Emerald Fennell one of her tote bags. Historic UK looks at the possible inspiration behind Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights. The Meaford Independent features the novel. Far Out Magazine has an article on the filming location of Kate Bush's Wuthering Heights music video:
If you want to recreate the video accurately, you’ve got to get down to Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire, which is where you can also find Stonehenge; that’s two bits of history for the price of one. Specifically, an area called Baden’s Clump near the Sidbury Hill area of the chalk plateau was the very spot that Bush floated about like a possessed Cathy, pretending to be up in the wily, windy moors. (Aimee Ferrier)
   

Jane Eyre in Arlington

Another student production of Jane Eyre. The Musical opens today, March 27, in Arlington, TX:
Arlington High School Gilbert & Sullivan Club  presents
Music and Lyrics by Paul Gordon
Book and Additional Lyrics by John Caird
March 27,28 7:30pm
March 29, 2:00pm
Arlington High School Auditorium, 869 Massachusetts Ave, Arlington, MA 02476, United States
Complete cast here.


   

The stormy passions of Cathy Earnshaw

According to Elle, 'Fashion Is in its Historical Romance Era'.
Over in Milan, even Max Mara, a brand firmly rooted in the here and now (it’s what you wear for tomorrow’s board presentation or a transatlantic flight), was caught up in a flight of fancy, with two classic Brontë heroines for muses. “The demure self-expression of Jane Eyre in balance with the wild passion of Cathy Earnshaw” was creative director Ian Griffiths’ backstory for his collection of sturdy, moor-sweeping skirts and dramatic cashmere capes. [...]
Step back and take a look at the lineup and you’ll see that what fashion’s current historical muses share is not a silhouette but an intrepid spirit: the brat-coded audacity of Marie Antoinette, the forward-thinking independence of rococo-art patron Madame de Pompadour, the stormy passions of Cathy Earnshaw. (Jess Cartner-Morley)
The Times interviews actress Charlotte Riley, who mentions meeting her husband, Tom Hardy, on the set of Wuthering Heights 2009. Southern Living shares a list of '60 Classic Books Everyone Should Read At Least Once' which includes Jane Eyre and Wuthering Heights.
   

Brontë Lounge with Eliza Goodpasture

A Zoom alert for today, March 26:
Thu 26 Mar, 7:30pm (Online via zoom)

Becoming Cathy and Heathcliff: Edna Clarke Hall’s Wuthering Heights drawings 
Dive into the strange, magnetic drawings of Edna Clarke Hall (1879-1979), whose drawings inspired by Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights offer a glimpse into the way one woman found solace in the story of Cathy and Heathcliff. Clarke Hall, a friend of Gwen John’s, drew hundreds of drawings, and eventually made dozens of etchings, inspired by Wuthering Heights. 
For the first time in 2026, a selection of these works will be published in a new edition of Brontë’s novel by Eiderdown Books, with a new introduction by art historian Eliza Goodpasture. In this talk, Goodpasture will introduce Clarke Hall’s story of early success, her subsequent unhappy marriage, and her Brontëmania. 
   

Wuthering Heights to be released on Blu-ray/DVD on May 5

Yesterday, the digital release of Wuthering Heights 2026 was announced for March 31st, and now the Blu-ray/DVD release and content have been announced too for May 5th. Many sites are reporting it, but this is from Variety:
Emerald Fennell’s adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic novel will be available to buy or rent digitally for the first time on March 31, following a theatrical run that grossed more than $230 million worldwide. A physical release on 4K UHD, Blu-ray and DVD will follow on May 5. [...]
The digital release will be available across major platforms including Amazon Prime Video, Apple TV and Fandango at Home, with the title continuing to be offered in both high-definition and standard-definition formats.
Home editions will include a slate of bonus features, including “Threads of Desire,” a behind-the-scenes look at costume designer Jacqueline Durran’s work on the film’s Gothic aesthetic, and “The Legacy of Love and Madness,” in which Fennell discusses her approach to reimagining Brontë’s story. Another featurette, “Building a Fever Dream,” explores the film’s production design and overall visual language, while a full-length commentary from Fennell is also included. (Anna Tingley)
Along with the news of the forthcoming digital release, People can exclusively share the first of the behind-the-scenes special features.
One feature gives fans a glimpse into director Fennell's "lifelong bond with 'Wuthering Heights' and the hidden depravity of the Victorian era, reimagining Emily Brontë’s tale through emotion, memory, and desire to create an epic love story for a new generation," per a press release from Warner Bros.
"Emerald's version of 'Wuthering Heights' is really focusing on the Kathy-Heathcliff relationship," Robbie explains in the clip. "Whether they can or cannot be together."
"It's tragic and gut-wrenching," the Barbie alum continues. "You see them hurt each other and be hurt by each other constantly. But it's all coming from a place of being madly in love."
"Catherine to Heathcliff is best friend, sister, mother, lover — all at the same time," Elordi adds. "She's the first person that holds him. She's the first person that looks him in the eye and engages with him and makes him a person."
Robbie also explains that Fennell's approach to the story is particularly character-oriented, as they dictate where the story goes, rather than their circumstances.
"The world didn't happen to Kathy," she continues. "Kathy [sic] happened to the world."
"I think it's just so beautiful to have something like 'Wuthering Heights' from a very unique perspective. Emerald, she's just a person of her own," Nelly actress Hong Chau adds in a behind-the-scenes interview.
"The movie is epic," Elordi adds of the film's scale. "And you don't see so many epic romances anymore."
"My hope is that it reminds us all how deeply we feel. Hopefully it reignites a passion in people," he says. (Charlotte Phillipp)
According to Arab Times, the film has failed to impress in China.
The drama mustered just around 17.19 million yuan (about 2.49 million US dollars) as of Thursday, with 2.03 million yuan raked in on its opening day last Friday, according to Maoyan, one of China’s major online ticketing platforms. Although the first week’s ticket sales do not necessarily determine the overall box office revenue of a movie, such disparity is striking, especially given that the source novel, a reading material for many schools in China, enjoys a devoted following among Chinese readers. So what accounts for the film’s tepid performance during its debut week in the world’s secondlargest movie market? Part of the explanation lies in timing. Unlike many international markets, where the film opened around Valentine’s Day, its release in China came during a box-office lull, just after the lucrative Spring Festival holiday had ended.
We are still getting some reviews. From The Montclarion:
Lavish corsets, beautifully striking color palettes and a mix of Victorian-era costuming with current-day trends create a timeless and innovative wardrobe for the characters. The makeup and hairstyles evoke a sense of evolutionary fashion, conjuring the emotions felt by the characters in each scene.
The pair have a chemistry that can hold its own, but at times can be overshadowed by the sheer force of production and set design. Nevertheless, the two encapsulate the heated and steamy romance that their characters find themselves in.
Overall, “Wuthering Heights” stands out as its own mischievous, almost erotic take on the original novel, combining a modern soundtrack and costume design with an accurate setting and dialogue to feel like a very real world. Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi bring an intense and passionate romance that might scare some, but also remind others of love’s true meaning, no matter how dangerous it may be. (Diego Baez)
A contributor to The Nation discusses 'The Trouble With Adapting Wuthering Heights'.
“I could have told Heathcliff’s history, all that you need hear, in half a dozen words.” We are only a few chapters into Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights when Nelly Dean, the servant, foster-sister, and—crucially—narrator apologizes for how longwinded her tale has become. At this point, in fact, she’s barely begun. And just as Nelly is merely one of several narrators in Brontë’s novel, her version of “Heathcliff’s history” is far from the only one. The proliferating narrators set a model for readers’ attempts to adapt and transform Wuthering Heights—attempts that are nearly as old as the novel itself. 
These include, for instance, Charlotte Brontë’s 1850 preface to a new edition of her sister’s novel, in which she sought to explain (or excuse) the “coarseness” that had so shocked its first readers (other critics had deemed it “puzzling,” “baffling,” a work of “naked imaginative power”). At the time, Charlotte was still mourning her sister, who had died, at 30, in December 1848. Her preface can be understood as an early adaptation of the novel—an effort to translate it into a more legible idiom. This version of Emily Brontë, however, is nothing if not contradictory: a “homebred country girl” who was also “hewn in a wild workshop.” A savant that could not be held responsible for her creations: “Having formed these beings she did not know what she had done.”
“A publicist’s masterpiece” is how Anne Carson described the preface, in her 1995 poem “The Glass Essay”: “Like someone carefully not looking at a scorpion / crouched on the arm of the sofa.” To be fair, Charlotte had instantly recognized Emily’s gifts when she’d stumbled across her poems several years earlier. It was Charlotte who hatched the idea of publishing the three sisters’ “Poems By Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell,” despite Emily’s initial anger and reluctance. (It was also Charlotte who planned a trip to their London editors to finally expose their true identities; while her sister Anne accompanied her, Emily, typically, refused to go along.) In “The Glass Essay,” Carson’s homage to Wuthering Heights, the speaker is in the throes of a breakup and reads Emily Brontë during a visit to her mother; the poem muses over how many readers have projected onto Emily their own anxieties and desires. 
Carson’s speaker realizes she may be one of them: “I feel I am turning into Emily Brontë, / my lonely life around me like a moor.” Such lines ironically allude to what critic Lucasta Miller has called The Brontë Myth, but also, inevitably, end up trafficking in the same romanticized idea of a solitary female writer on the lonely moor.  By now it’s well established that the Brontës didn’t grow up in a remote, abandoned setting but rather nearby a bustling industrial town; that their father, Patrick, was hardly the belligerent, cold patriarch he was made out to be in Elizabeth Gaskell’s 1857 The Life of Charlotte Brontë. We know that Emily Brontë’s rich intellectual and literary inheritance included the works of Sir Walter Scott, the stories of James Hogg, and the poetry of Byron and Shelley; in other words, that Wuthering Heights is hardly a work of spontaneous creative genius. Already in 1905, Henry James was ruing what had become the “romantic tradition of the Brontës,” with “their dreary, their tragic history, their loneliness and poverty of life” a myth that “elbowed out” a true appreciation of their work. 
Still, there’s a reason the most powerful myths survive long past the moment of their origin. Many have decried Emerald Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” as an unworthy adaptation, the scare quotes of the title indicating Fennell’s casual disregard of her source material. The problem, however, is not infidelity. Across over a century of Wuthering Heights adaptations, the best of them have ambitiously transposed the original’s language and setting, as well as its details of plot. In doing so, they’ve rebutted Charlotte Brontë’s fear that the novel must prove “alien and unfamiliar,” its meaning “unintelligible, and—where intelligible—repulsive” to anyone outside Yorkshire. That isn’t because Wuthering Heights is a timeless love story, whatever that would mean, but rather because it is a haunting, though utterly recognizable, portrayal of the modern world’s cruelty, exploitation, and violence. This kind of violence, as Brontë teaches us, obeys no borders; it lies not behind or beyond but well within our pious scripts of love, property, and law. Any poet, screenwriter, or novelist wishing to pay tribute to Brontë’s novel would do well to grapple with this bleaker vision. [...]
Despite Nelly’s best intentions, however, Wuthering Heights rejects the Victorian ideal of domestic bliss implied in the marriage plot. Nelly may choose to believe that the law will win out, and that it is essentially good: “There’s law in the land, thank God! there is,” she warns Heathcliff at one point. In doing so she ignores the fact that Heathcliff’s manipulations, coercions, and acquisitions are perfectly legal.
In that sense, Nelly’s narration uncannily rehearses and anticipates a long history of adaptations of Wuthering Heights—beginning with Charlotte Brontë’s own attempt to translate, and to domesticate, her sister’s novel—that try to manage the intensity of a story more frightening and radical than many would like it to be. To see Heathcliff as a romantic hero, as so many have done, is a novice’s mistake. But to see him as a victim or revolutionary is an equally strong misreading. As the Marxist critic Terry Eagleton once wrote, Heathcliff’s rise symbolizes “at once the triumph of the oppressed over capitalism and the triumph of capitalism over the oppressed.” Or, to put it in Heathcliff’s own words, “The tyrant grinds down his slaves and they don’t turn against him; they crush those beneath them.”
This, unsurprisingly, is an idea that most adaptations of Wuthering Heights have resisted. Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” is no exception. The few lines in her film that are culled directly from Brontë—“I am Heathcliff”; “I cannot life without my life! I cannot live without my soul!”; “Why did you betray your own heart?” —sound tinny and flat, even half-hearted, in the mouths of Elordi and Margot Robbie. In the novel, Heathcliff utters the last of these lines in his final scene of reunion with Catherine, hours before her death. In Fennell’s version, he pronounces them just before the infidelity begins. As with the other details meant to shock—the close-ups of viscous fluids; a BDSM-coded dog collar Isabella Linton is made to wear—this latest adaptation translates the novel’s real transgressiveness into the commonplace trespass of adultery.
Still, as a story about how stories are translated and adapted, seized, and reworked, Wuthering Heights set the stage for even these flattening readings. What can we bear to see, and what do we choose not to look at? Why is it so much easier to consent to culturally available scripts? Even Brontë’s novel ends with the promise of a happy marriage between Cathy Linton and Hareton. That ending nevertheless lies beyond the book’s narrative, just out of view. By now, Catherine Earnshaw is dead, and so is Heathcliff— “but the country folks, if you ask them, would swear on the Bible that he walks,” just as we too will continue to be haunted by Wuthering Heights. (Victoria Baena)
The York Press features the York tour company All Tours Great and Small.
Greg reports the trips were a success but even before the new Wuthering Heights film came out, customers started asking about options to visit the Bronte sites, leading him to research the subject over the winter.
The Brontë tour starts in York, with the first stop being Thorp Green Hall, where Anne Brontë where Anne Brontë and her brother 'Branwell' [sic] were employed.
Then, after refreshments, the tour heads to Saltaire and the salt mills to show the backdrop to the life of the Brontës before heading to Thornton and visiting The Brontë Birthplace Museum.
Here, Greg gives a private tour of their birthplace, before moving on to Howarth [sic] to visit the Brontë Parsonage Museum. Then, they explore the town before heading up Penistone Hill, and up towards the beak moors of Top Witherns, the inspiration for Wuthering Heights.
Greg explained: “All through the morning I will tell my guests stories of the lives of the Brontës form their early start right through to their tragic deaths.” (Darren Greenwood)
   

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