Palatinate reviews the stage production of Brontë at Durham University, giving it 4 stars out of 5. Third Space Theatre Company’s iteration of Polly Teal’s [sic] Brontë is an entirely charming production that marks the end of another successful term of student theatre under the lights of the Assembly Rooms Theatre. At its core, a number of excellent performances elevate the play into resounding success. [...] Immediately striking is the beautifully designed stage that is fully fleshed out to create the Brontë’s home. All the wooden furniture is perfectly fitting; the back wall is filled with books and hung with pictures all to build up this domestic affair. Brightening this set is some lovely lighting, designed by Cassia Thurston, that is varied in both scope and colour, rising to the challenge of spotlighting characters entering down past the audience a number of times. Similarly, I thought the sound design, designed by Oliver Fitzgerald, backed up the more emotional moments very well, although I thought there needed to be a more noticeable fade for the end of effects so that music didn’t end quite so abruptly. Additionally, I really liked the costume design by Ellie Kinch as the three sisters are decorated in period-accurate dresses and three different colours to give them visually distinct appearances. However, the key to this performance’s success is undoubtedly the strength of the acting, which is consistently good across a cast of just seven actors. The dynamic between all three Brontë sisters is brilliant, with the most time given to fleshing out the bubbling tensions between Charlotte (Peony Reece) and Emily (Martha Buttle). The two play off each other very well with their frequent clashes constantly raising tensions and building the drama. I also enjoyed Jake O’Donnell’s performance as the domineering, and quite frankly scary, father figure who tries to keep the three girls in line; he is totally in control of his dynamic range the whole way through to establish authority. Similarly, Matthew Lo delivers wonderfully in his trio of roles, delivering an unexpectedly hilarious turn in the play’s climax. Nevertheless, the most committed performance comes in the form of Branwell Brontë, played by Jack Guilfoyle, who embodies this utterly detestable character before his downfall in the second half. I also thought there were a number of great directorial choices, under the watchful eye of Grace Graham, that contributed to the creation of this spectacle. Throughout the play, different characters suddenly switch into fictional characters from within the Brontë’s books and deliver lines in perfect unison with the sisters. The use of the three sisters as narrators at varying moments also works well, seamlessly switching from sister to narrator and back again. However, even if you are familiar with the Brontës’ fiction, it’s sometimes a little confusing when a character switches from a historical figure into a fictional one from their writing – although I think this is more a pitfall of the original script. I’d have also liked to see a little more consistency over accents, as the cast doesn’t seem unified over one specific accent choice. Nevertheless, the play builds towards a dramatic ending that pulls on the audience’s heartstrings as characters die – as in real life – suddenly and unexpectedly. Branwell’s death scene in particular features a really touching choice that sees the sisters mourning at the front of the stage, as he acts out childhood fantasies on a chair in the middle of the stage, recalling the first half’s initial domestic bliss that has subsequently been shattered. Overall, the play is a resounding success through its balancing over excellent performances all-round with suitable directing choices that bring the Brontë sisters’ story entirely to life. The consistent standard set throughout all facets of the production really exemplifies what makes student theatre so brilliant in Durham. (Ralph Hargreaves)
Domus highlights '2026’s most anticipated TV series and films' including Wuthering Heights — directed by Emerald Fennell In theory, it is the classic, period costume version of Emily Brontë’s novel; in practice it is the first version of a great classic of female Romantic literature, directed and written by an openly feminist author (the one behind Promising Young Woman and Saltburn) in an era of role revision. You can already see this from the casting: the protagonist, Margot Robbie, is older (by seven years), more well-known, and more production-powerful than the male lead, Jacob Elordi. (Gabriele Niola)
While The Week recommends the '10 upcoming albums to stream during the winter chill', including Charli XCX, ‘Wuthering Heights’ Charli XCX helped everyone have a Brat summer with her 2024 album, and now the pop superstar is getting ready to hit the music world again with her LP “Wuthering Heights.” The album is the official soundtrack for the upcoming film of the same name starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi. The LP comes as Charli XCX has “been in a state of overwhelming creativity of late, so much so that I feel like I’m running on the spot in a dream,” the singer wrote on Substack. A single from the album, “Chains of Love,” is out now. (Justin Klawans)
In El Correo (Spain), Spanish writer Alicia Giménez Bartlett claims--in all seriousness--that out of all Victorian women writers, Jane Austen is her least favourite. Of course, because she wasn't Victorian now, was she? Puestos a escoger, me inclino por las hermanas Brontë, biográficamente más interesantes, más rebeldes, más desmesuradas. Anne fue la menos conocida porque, tonta de ella, se dedicó a la poesía [??? !!!]. Luego viene Charlotte en mis preferencias. Su 'Jane Eyre' logra una descripción ajustada y certera de la sociedad de la época, con toques de humor más marcados que su colega Austen. Por último, la «loca de la casa»: Emily. Con sus 'Cumbres borrascosas' se marca un desmadre romántico gótico de mucho cuidado. También esta novela sigue gozando del favor de los lectores y los adaptadores a lo audiovisual. Es tan excesiva que resulta cautivadora. Sin duda, la más imaginativa de las tres. (Translation)
An exhibition in Dallas with oil paintings inspired by Jane Eyre 2011:
Dec.06.2025 - Jan.03.2026 James Cope Gallery, 4885 Alpha Road, Suite 120, Farmers Branch, Dallas
For her current one-woman show at James Cope Gallery (Rawlings’ first since 2023), she turns her eye to a classic heroine of page and screen. The 2011 movie adaptation of Jane Eyre, starring Mia Wasikowska, intrigued the painter, even if the only subject that mattered to Rawlings was Jane herself. “I’ve never painted from a film before,” Rawlings explains. “I do a lot of research and gather images I’m interested in, and I was thinking about more somber interior spaces that you would see in 18th- or 19th-century paintings. The scenes were so beautiful, and they reminded me of the type of mood I was looking for.” Rawlings’ portraits show Jane sewing, reading or contemplating her uncertain fate. In each she occupies “an interiority and psychic space” belonging to her alone, Rawlings says. “One has to try to understand and reach through the image.” After one of the works from the series was auctioned off at a recent event benefiting the Dallas Museum of Art, the remaining 12 portraits on view convey what Rawlings calls a “feeling of aloneness and mystery” that she deems just right for the reflective season of winter. Dreamlike and calm, they enchant the viewer as much as the (Kendall Morgan)
Daily Mail looks ahead to 'The sexiest new TV and film adaptations to hit our screens this winter', including Wuthering Heights Emerald Fennell’s adaptation starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi may not be the wall-to-wall raunch-fest some expect – but it’s undeniably sensuous. The film leans into storm-soaked yearning and fierce magnetic intimacy rather than shock value. Expect a haunting, passionate love story where every touch feels momentous and every emotion burns just beneath the skin. (Charlotte Vossen)
The Herald Scotland wonders whether Gen Z romantics can 'save us from the dating hellscape of 2026'. The two most talked about Gen Z films are adaptations of quintessential Romantic novels: Frankenstein and Wuthering Heights. And both star Gen Z’s favourite leading man, Jacob Elordi. I really was ready to pack it in entirely and join a convent when I started to notice this return to romanticism. While the movement does not pertain solely to romance and dating, the overall mood shift opens up the possibility that love is important, not something to be ticked off a list. (Marissa MacWhirter)
Harper's Bazaar reports on Taylor Swift's recent interview on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert during which she made it clear that her fascination with all things Victorian is alive and well. Colbert asked Swift a particularly poignant question: “What’s the biggest difference between Taylor Swift just walking around and Taylor Swift who appears on stage?” Setting the scene for Swift, he added, “You’re home, you’ve got the athleisure on,” to which the star quickly corrected him, revealing that her at-home wardrobe leans less model-off-duty and more Victorian ghost. “I’ve got an old Victorian nightgown on,” she said with a laugh. “I prefer to look… if you were to see me in the window, I’d like for someone to think they saw a ghost, you know what I mean?” This came as no shock to fans who have listened to Swift’s music over the years, which has drawn from the antiquated language of Charlotte Bronte’s Jane Eyre and the imagery from period pieces alike. Particularly on folklore and evermore, Swift wrote songs she’d later categorize as “quill pen” tracks, named for the tool she imagined writing the lyrics in. “If my lyrics sound like a letter written by Emily Dickinson’s great grandmother while sewing a lace curtain, that’s me writing in the Quill genre,” Swift said in her acceptance speech at the 2022 Nashville Songwriter Awards. Elsewhere in the Colbert interview, the singer described the types of books one would find on her metaphorical nightstand, evoking similar visual worlds of ghosts, Victorian tropes, and ivy-covered castles. (Sophie Wang)
Another recently published article about Jane Eyre:
“Je Reviens”—Returning to Jane Eyre in Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca
Proud Sethabutr Faculty of Arts, Chulalongkorn UniversityVol. 45 No. 2 (2025): Thoughts 2025-2
This paper takes as its starting point the body of feminist criticism that treats Daphne du Maurier’s Rebecca as merely a recapitulation of Jane Eyre, often dismissively, as evidenced in du Maurier scholar Nina Auerbach’s uncharacteristically scathing indictment of the novel, and proposes instead to read it as a narratological continuation or expansion of Jane’s epilogue. Through a close reading of the way that the novel disrupts boundaries between self and other, human and nature, beauty and the sublime, feminine and monstrous, and the domestic order itself, the paper argues that Rebecca is a site in which a certain narrative excess in the earlier novel makes an uncanny reappearance. This approach yields an analysis that highlights how the novel exposes the violence inherent in Jane Eyre’s Gothic romance narrative, wherein a woman's security within the domestic order comes at the expense of another.
BBC Countryfile features '10 landscapes that inspired literary masterpieces by the UK’s most beloved authors' including Wuthering Heights, Emily Brontë When Emily Brontë wrote her bleak gothic novel Wuthering Heights in 1847, she drew inspiration from long walks on the lonely moors above the village of Haworth in West Yorkshire, where she lived with her sisters Anne and Charlotte from 1820 to 1861. Even the name of her tale references weather and landscape, and Brontë often conveys Heathcliff’s brooding mood via the cold, foggy moorland that surrounds him. “My love for Heathcliff resembles the eternal rocks beneath,” his soulmate Cathy declares, likening her love for him to the gritstone outcrops in areas such as Ponden Kirk (renamed Penistone Crag in the novel) where the fated lovers meet. Today, you can hike to Ponden Kirk from Haworth and visit the ruins of Top Withens, said to be the inspiration for the Wuthering Heights farmhouse. The Brontë Parsonage Museum is located at the former Brontë family home in Haworth, West Yorkshire. Margot Robbie plays Cathy to Jacob Elordi’s Heathcliff in a film adaptation of the novel, due for release in February 2026. (Ellie Tennant)
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