Today, February 13, a premiere in Lubbock, TX:. Underdog: The Other Other Brontëby Sara Gordon CATS Playhouse, (Children & Adults Theatrical Studio, Inc. ), 2257 34th St, Lubbock, TX 79411, USA. Feb 13-15 & Feb 20-22Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30pm and ...
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"BrontëBlog" - 5 new articles

  1. Underdog: The Other Other Brontë Sister in Lubbock, TX
  2. Wuthering Heights 2026 Reviews (IX)
  3. Poshification, Classic Fairytale set designs and The Dry Eyed Sailor
  4. Wuthering Heights 2026 Reviews (VIII)
  5. Jane Eyre Rehearsals, Toxic Heathcliff, Genius Costumes and Weird Emily
  6. More Recent Articles

Underdog: The Other Other Brontë Sister in Lubbock, TX

Today, February 13, a premiere in Lubbock, TX:
by Sara Gordon  
CATS Playhouse,  (Children & Adults Theatrical Studio, Inc.), 2257 34th St, Lubbock, TX 79411, USA

Feb 13-15 & Feb 20-22
Fridays and Saturdays at 7:30pm and Sundays at 3pm

Charlotte Brontë has a confession about how one sister became an idol, and the other became known as the third sister. You know the one. No, not that one. The other, other one… Anne.This is not a story about well-behaved women. This is a story about the power of words. It’s about sisters and sisterhood, love and jealousy, support and competition.Sarah Gordon’s new play is an irreverent retelling of the life and legend of the Brontë sisters, and the story of the sibling power dynamics that shaped their uneven rise to fame.​
​​​​​
“Underdog: The Other Other Brontë” is presented by arrangement with Concord Theatricals on behalf of Samuel French, Inc.
Further information on the KCBD News Channel.
   

Wuthering Heights 2026 Reviews (IX)

Good Ones
Echo: (4 of 5 stars)
I am a diehard fan of the book, but disagree wildly with those whose feathers are ruffled by the film. There are over 20 adaptations of the story; each has changed something in the journey from page to screen, but Fennell is the first to really lean into the twisted love Cathy and Heathcliff shared.
The screen sizzles every time Robbie and Elordi stand within a foot of each other. Their love, their anger, is alive in their every move.
The film is pulsating, slightly savage, wildly sexy, and full of torment - the torment that Brontë so perfectly wrote about. Fennell is the first to truly capture this. Some will complain. I say all hail this bold and delicious adaptation. (Cara O'Doherty)
Dark, Gorgeous, and Deeply Unwholesome (And I Loved It) (...)
The craft across the board is exceptional. Linus Sandgren shot this on 35mm, and it shows. Suzie Davies’s production design and Jacqueline Durran’s costumes are doing heavy lifting in every frame. BAFTA-nominated editor Victoria Boydell keeps the pacing tight even when the movie lingers, and the combination of Anthony Willis’s score with original songs by Charli XCX gives the whole thing a pulse that most period films just don’t have.
The characters are not meant to be likable, but the film itself is irresistibly watchable. It’s a dark, gorgeous, deeply unwholesome watch, and on the strength of that, Emerald Fennell still can’t do wrong in my book. (Emma Loggins)
The Hoya: (4 out of 5 stars)
Everything Is Romantic in ‘Wuthering Heights,’ Even the Grotesque, Animalistic. (...)
“Wuthering Heights,” quotation marks emphasized, will not please everyone. The Brontë purists, the casual watchers looking for an Austenian lightness and the easily disturbed will find this lewd movie off-putting. But for those of us who are ravenous, wildly bored with the mundane and thoroughly incensed by aesthetic grandeur, a transcendent world of pleasure, horror and tragedy awaits. (Ruth Abramovitz)
Koimoi: (3 out of 5 stars)
Margot Robbie & Jacob Elordi Shine In A Visually Bold But Loosely Faithful Adaptation. (...)
Emerald Fennell’s version of Wuthering Heights is shallow but fun, it is a visually striking film that really manages to impress in that front, and will please all the Twilight crowd, who has been missing something like this for the big screen in quite a while, and I’m sure Fennell could make an entire career out of doing films like that as there is certainly an audience for cotton candy out there. This version definitely lacks the nuance and depth that make the story a classic, but you can still have fun watching it. (Nelson Acosta)
Love, Sex, and Death: "Wuthering Heights" Is an Exultation of Cinema’s Singular Language.
Emerald Fennell’s fast and loose adaptation of Emily Brontë’s one novel is a masterful demonstration of film’s transformative nature. (...)
Perhaps love is a truly wretched endeavor if our most iconic stories just have lovers vacillating between cruelty and affection. “Wuthering Heights” will impact viewers in a similar way, as its departure from source material and focus on certain themes at the expense of others is certain to upset some. But the same divergence from the book, which includes Fennell’s masterful depiction of various manner of sensual things, will delight just as many. Love it or hate it, apropos for a story that amalgamates both love and hate into one grotesque, yet irresistible whole, “Wuthering Heights” stands as a triumph of cinematic storytelling. (Zach Yonzon)
Newsday: (3 out of 4 stars)
"Wuthering Heights" occasionally feels like a music video thanks to the anachronistic pop songs of charli xcx, the pastrylike costumes by Jacqueline Durran and the fanciful visual touches (like a fireplace made of dozens of porcelain hands). It all adds to the heightened effect, but it’s the two lovers’ raw emotions that stay with us. "Whatever our souls are made of," Cathy says in one of Brontë’s most famous lines, "his and mine are the same." (Rafer Guzmán)
The Upcoming: (3 out of 5 stars)
Ultimately, “Wuthering Heights” plays like a lush, sometimes very sexy showcase of Cathy and Heathcliff circling each other, then finally giving in. When they do, they seem to consummate their passion everywhere: in the grass, in the bedroom, in a carriage, against a garden wall. The montage goes on. And on. Robbie and Elordi have real chemistry, assisted by gauzy light, artificial sweat, and Charli XCX’s amazingly sultry, vaporous soundtrack. Yet no amount of face-licking, finger-sucking, or barn humping can quite summon the wild, punitive grandeur of Brontë’s imagination. In the novel, Cathy and Heathcliff’s bond feels metaphysical, destructive, almost demonic. Here, it is passionate, photogenic, and curiously safe. The movie insists on its own intensity. Brontë never had to. (Constance Ayrton)

Lukewarm

Wuthering Heights’ is a bold, filthy fantasy — but these moors need more erotic heat. (...)
Though “Wuthering Heights” is a phony tease, I’m grateful that Fennell wants to titillate audiences. If they show up, they’ll help her convince the industry to move past chasing superheroes in codpieces and make more movies about messy, marvelous human sweat. The box office isn’t my personal kink; movie reviews are where you and I meet to talk about what gets us hot and bothered. But I hope Fennell, and other hedonistic filmmakers like her, get to keep whipping blockbusters out of their doldrums. (Amy Nicholson)
Techradar: (2.5 of 5 stars)
Emerald Fennell’s weakest film yet isn’t as steamy as you think it will be — if it was a spice, it would be flour. (...)
As I said in the headline, if this film was a spice, it would be flour. You can't market something solely on the promise of hedonistic lusting and then deliver something you'd actually feel comfortable watching with your parents. I doubt it would even have made ripples 20 or 30 years ago. But sure, Elordi will get some cheers when he takes his top off.
Will I be watching "Wuthering Heights" again? No. Do I remain a Saltburn truther? Yes. Will Fennell's latest make a shed-ton of money at the box office despite being widely panned? Absolutely. I've got a sneaking suspicion that Fennell kicks into full gear with original stories, so don't count me out of her work completely. (Jasmine Valentine)
Business Post: (3 out of 5 stars)
A Wuthering Heights that repels as much as it entrances. (...)
There is more depth in the photography than in Robbie’s and Elordi’s much-hyped chemistry, which never quite sparks into life despite both delivering fine performances.
Fennell’s is the cinema of excess and sensation. In her rush to overwhelm, much of the nuance is lost, or to put it another way, she cuts out the boring bits. This is not a desecration by any measure, but the filmmaker’s determination to evoke a response might leave you wondering what all the noise is about. (John Maguire)
Brontë’s genius lies in complicating hate and love, in passing burdens across generations. Heathcliff curses Catherine and yet desires that, even in death, they remain together. The relentless weight of longing is largely absent from Fennell’s vision. It is less poetic, less devastating and ultimately less necessary than the book.
But it is also bold, sensuous and strange — a "Wuthering Heights" that belongs to no fixed moment, buoyed by Charli XCX’s pulse and Fennell’s glossy perversity. It may not haunt you. But it lingers as a kind of restless urge that suggests some stories, no matter how often retold, refuse containment. (Ana Gutierrez)
Bad ones

Whether this literal interpretation is meant as dark humour or simply more literary incompetence is unclear, but if you have not seen it yet, it’s a horror best avoided.
Overall, this Valentine’s Day, spare yourself the likely disappointment and the nightmare-inducing BDSM fantasies of Fennell’s Australian-infused reimagining and do something far less of a mood killer. The film has already been met with low ratings from critics, fulfilling the predictions of many classic purists, and perhaps the only saving grace is the vocals of Charli XCX who has created a new album to feature on the soundtrack.
If you cherish the original novel, it may be wiser to avert your eyes from cinemas altogether and instead settle in for Scotland vs. England at the Six Nations. (Angelina Nayar)
Bollywood Hungama: (2 out of 5 stars)
On the whole, despite the technical finesse and strong performances, Wuthering Heights disappoints, thanks to bizarre developments and uneven writing. It’s expected to open strongly in its home market, but in India, the buzz is limited. Moreover, with tough competition from Hindi releases, it’ll have an uphill task at the box office.
   

Poshification, Classic Fairytale set designs and The Dry Eyed Sailor

Vulture critics advise against reading Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights before watching Emerald Fennell's new film adaptation. They argue that adaptations like this one—described as extravagant, moist, and focused on adolescent turmoil, explicit romance, and a soundstage feel—stand on their own without needing prior knowledge of the novel's convoluted plot or second volume. We don't agree at all, but we are not exactly objective, didn't we?

Vogue discusses a recent Vogue Book Club event where Emerald Fennell discussed her adaptation, emphasizing the novel's transgressive, sadomasochistic undertones that she first discovered as a teenager, rejecting sanitized interpretations of its passionate dynamics between Heathcliff and Cathy. A "memorable" addition is the imagery of crushed eggs under bedsheets, an inside joke between Heathcliff and Cathy that Fennell personally filmed by sitting on them.

Richard Benson in The Independent has a point when it says critics have accused the film of stripping Wuthering Heights of its racial and class dimensions — central themes in Emily Brontë’s novel’s exploration of social hierarchy and conflict. It argues that this critique reflects a wider “poshification” of culture in which middle- and upper-class creatives and narratives are increasingly dominant, marginalising working-class voices that historically resonate with many of the novel’s core preoccupations. Against this backdrop, the article highlights Ireland’s pioneering Basic Income for the Arts scheme — a policy intended to support diverse artistic talent by reducing financial barriers to creative careers — suggesting that structural change is needed so that more artists can tell stories with depth on class and power, much like Wuthering Heights itself.

House and Garden interviews Suzie Davis, production designer of the film:
At the start of production, Suzie's initial design ideas were more traditional, but she soon realised that wasn't the way forward for this unique take on the story – this was not going to look like every other period drama. Emerald, as she explains, was clear about wanting the crew to ‘zoom through the lens of her reading that book when she was 14’, and this was the key to some of the main anachronistic elements. Pushing back against the idea of faithful representation, the team began to incorporate elements and references that a teenage girl might have been obsessed and inspired by in the 1990s and 2000s. In fact, the contrasting sets of Wuthering Heights and Cathy’s later home, Thrushcross Grange, feel influenced by the archetypal villain’s lair and princess’s castle of classic fairytales and Disney films. ‘It was more about accuracy of feeling’, rather than accuracy of period, she adds. (Tilly Wheeler)

The Independent highlights a 2020 Penguin Classics audiobook of Wuthering Heights narrated by British actor Aimee Lou Wood (with Kristin Atherton), presenting it as a compelling way to revisit Emily Brontë’s only novel amid renewed interest sparked by the latest film adaptation. USA Today discusses how Jacob Elordi’s Heathcliff dramatically lifts Margot Robbie’s Catherine in a visually intense scene that reflects the raw, physical passion of the film.

The Times interviews Olivia Chaney:
The spirit of the Wuthering Heights heroine Cathy has visited Olivia Chaney at key moments in her life. Writing the songs for her second album, Shelter, in 2018, she retreated to a tiny tumbledown stone cottage in the North York Moors, where she lived for a couple of months without electricity or heating as winter was setting in. “I’d wake up in the morning and have to light two fires to make coffee and defrost my fingers,” she says. “I pretty much gave up washing. I remember going for a long walk one day and finding myself in the middle of a hunt. The way the huntsmen looked at me made me realise I’d gone full Mad Cathy.”
More recently Chaney, 43, was approached by Emerald Fennell, who had heard the singer’s 2013 recording of the traditional folk ballad The Dark Eyed Sailor and wanted to use it — alongside the soundtrack by Charli XCX — as Cathy and Heathcliff’s theme in her adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic novel. The song is used to powerful effect in the film’s most pivotal scenes, when the lovers part and when they are reunited after Heathcliff’s long absence. (...)
As we sit by the wood-burner in her cosy kitchen in York, Chaney reflects on the serendipity of Fennell choosing her work for this particular project. “If you had asked me which literary adaptation I would most have wanted my music to feature in, it would always have been Wuthering Heights. It’s my favourite novel. It felt life-changing when I first read it.” (...)
Brontë was a keen pianist and the family are known to have owned Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, a collection of “literary ballads” edited by the novelist Walter Scott. “So these songs would have been very much part of their lives,” Chaney says. (Alice O’Keeffe)

According to Los Angeles Times, the moody, atmospheric aesthetic associated with Emily Brontë’s novel — characterised by dark woods, saturated colours like emerald and burgundy, and layered, warm lighting — is influencing current home-decor trends.

Halifax Courier highlights some of the local places where the film was filmed:
Bridestones Moor, famed for its interesting rock formations, sweeping moorland vistas and wildlife, is set to star on the big screen.
The striking landscape will be part of Emerald Fennel’s upcoming adaptation of the Emily Brontë novel Wuthering Heights. (Abigail Kellett)

Anita Rani in the Daily Mail thinks that Jacob Elordi in this Wuthering Heights is too white. Numéro thinks that 2026 marks a cultural shift from goth-inspired aesthetics to a broader romanticism in fashion and lifestyle, fueled by major media like Wuthering Heights and Bridgerton, which are driving renewed interest in empire-waist silhouettes, Regencycore, and emotionally rich, historically-inflected styles. Elle Canada interviews Alison Oliver.

   

Wuthering Heights 2026 Reviews (VIII)

Good ones

Was I entertained? Yes, actually. I didn’t long to leave my seat, and even found myself silently giggling over scenes that were clearly Elordi fanservice. “Was this in the book?’” a friend I watched it with (who actually has read the book) asked jokingly. No, reader, Heathcliff doesn’t have steamy sex with Catherine in the novel, nor does he take off his shirt to reveal glistening pecs and chest hair (spoiler alert). I suppose Fennell, and quite a few readers, wished he did, and that’s the crazy fantasy this film tries to bring forth. It’s a fairly good time at the movies if you show up with zero expectations beyond wanting to be occupied for a couple of hours. I just wish Fennell had ditched the title entirely and leaned into framing this as its own hideous, intriguing creature. 
Fennell’s “Wuthering Heights” is clearly engineered as a strategic, box-office Valentine’s release, buoyed by its sanitized, more palatable rendering of Cathy and Heathcliff’s love. We can’t fault her entirely for that: she’s hardly the first filmmaker to sand down Brontë’s rough edges. It’s a spectacle best experienced if you’re willing to surrender to it and ride the waves of its chaos rather than fight them. (Pilar Gonzalez)
 Everyone should watch this film. To see how Robbie and Elordi carry this damaged, feral love. To notice the care in every image, the intention behind every rough edge. And to sit with a version of Wuthering Heights that feels painful, deliberate, and deeply felt, one that stays long after the lights come up.
It’s dark and obsessive, gothic and damaged; not a love story, but a story of love torn apart, reclaimed, used, discarded, and haunting long after it’s gone. (Esha Aphale)
X-Press Magazine: (9 out of 10)
This rather modern-feeling adaptation can be accused of being so ridiculous, overdramatic, overly sexualised, hysterical, crass, and even a tad soap operatic. But it can also be called completely self-assured of all that it wants to be. It allows the heightened emotions of its two romantic but longing characters and applies them to the film, making it look as frenzied as a romance is between a young couple. There are so many scenes of characters looking on longingly in the pouring rain. It never misses a chance to be so damn dramatic, but it works for this film, as it never stumbles in tone. (David Morgan-Brown)
Khaleej Times (4 out 5 stars):
In her interpretation, Fennell dissects love and all its synonyms. The care. The admiration. The longing stares across rooms and stables. The steamy, breathless passion. The selflessness. And then the flip side — selfishness, jealousy, obsession, possessiveness, toxicity. It’s messy and destructive; dare I say, for some, it might even feel uncomfortably relatable. Not because we endorse the chaos, but because we recognise the intensity of loving someone who feels like they are stitched into your very being.
But let’s be clear: there is obvious underlying toxicity here, and at times it makes the film more provocative than romantic. There’s a particularly jarring moment where Heathcliff, driven by jealousy, manipulates and uses an innocent girl. She appears to indulge it, almost drawn to the danger, but the abruptness of it is horrifying. It’s uncomfortable to watch because it forces you to confront what certain emotions can bring out in people. (...)
I genuinely don’t think I’ve seen a tale of obsessive, destructive love like this in a long time. Is it perfect? No. Is it subtle? Definitely not. But is it an experience, especially on Valentine’s weekend, when you're surrounded by pretty love stories? Absolutely. (Husain Rizvi)
Lukewarm

Ara (in Catalan): (2.5 out of 5 stars)
La mare de totes les relacions tòxiques. (...) La directora d'Una jove prometedora i Saltburn revalida aquí la seva aposta, intermitentment efectiva, per acumular plans enlluernadors, però sorprèn que malgrat disparar la libido de Margot Robbie i Jacob Elordi, i entretenir-se amb postals sadomasoquistes, acabi entregant un film que no només mira des d’una distància prudencial els abismes de violència física i emocional de la seva font sinó que tanca els ulls per higienitzar les accions més abominables dels protagonistes. D’entre tot aquest desgavell sobresurt la tasca compositiva de Charli XCX, que ha trobat en aquest projecte una via per explorar registres i sonoritats ben allunyades de les fosforescències verdes de brat. (Gerard Casau) (Translation)
Clash: (6 out of 10)
 It’s ambitious and entertaining, but in aiming for spectacle it loses some of Brontë’s darkness, perhaps its greatest flaw. No matter the caveats, comparisons will still be made with the story that inspired it, and in that sense “Wuthering Heights” is an interesting experiment that shocks more than it inspires. (Victoria Luxford)
 Cathy and Heathcliff, who are kept apart for long stretches of the story, are as star-crossed as they come — it's telling that in one scene, Isabella is recounting the plot of "Romeo and Juliet" — but the chemistry between the two leads never quite ignites the screen. Elordi and Robbie inhabit their roles, and the mechanics of the story do their part in keeping them apart. But does their love burn with the heat of a thousand flames? Ehh, not quite.
Still, there is plenty to admire in this "Wuthering Heights," not the least of which is the way it makes the nearly 200-year-old material feel contemporary and vital. (The goth-pop soundtrack by Charli xcx helps in that department as well.) This is a large-scale costume drama with an epic scope, and Fennell makes sure it's anything but stodgy. (Adam Graham)
Bad ones

For her shiny new take on “Wuthering Heights,” the writer-director Emerald Fennell has drenched the screen with torrential rain, filled it with pantomimes of passion and tried hard to compete with Emily Brontë. What a mistake! Over the past century or so, Brontë’s only novel has been nipped and tucked in assorted adaptations — for film, television, theater, opera, ballet and song — that have pushed and pulled it in different directions. It’s been glossed up, brought down to earth and read through the lenses of gender, class and race. Yet like its violently emotional lovers, Catherine and Heathcliff, the book resists taming. (...)
One problem with Fennell’s take, though, is that she wants to focus on the lovers while saying a lot about a lot. She tosses out ideas about women, men, sex, freedom and dominance, even while eliding the question of Heathcliff’s race, and trying to transmit the power of Brontë’s writing visually. Some of this is banal. Such is the case when, after some torturous narrative turns, Catherine weds her wealthy neighbor, Edgar Linton (Shazad Latif), her new suffocating life is signaled by a dollhouse replica of her marital home. (...)
There’s more — so much more — including her simpering sister-in-law, Isabella (Alison Oliver), a human kick-me sign, and the soft, light-beige walls of Catherine’s bedroom that have been designed to resemble her skin, marbled veins and all. Why? Why not? Each room offers more sumptuous, strainingly clever details that expound on the same themes without deepening them. It’s like being force-fed candy.
Every reader makes “Wuthering Heights” into her own, and the same holds true for Fennell. Yet as the movie progresses — especially after Catherine and Heathcliff temporarily go their separate ways — Fennell’s embellishments grow more exaggerated and distracting, and her hold on the story becomes increasingly tenuous. (Manohla Dargis)
Cineuropa (in Italian):
 Fin dalla prima sequenza - una impiccagione in piazza in cui alcune giovani donne commentano maliziose l’erezione post mortem del condannato - Fennell gioca con un erotismo sfrontato visto da parte femminile, una risposta emotiva a qualcosa di primordiale, come lei stessa ha dichiarato, che l’ha sconvolto profondamente quando ha letto il libro per la prima volta a quattordici anni. Desideri ed emozioni sottintesi nel romanzo sono esplicitate di continuo con metafore poco sottili - appiccicosi tuorli d’uova, lumache striscianti nella lucida bava e l’impasto morbido del pane - che alludono a secrezioni intime.
L’estetica è aggiornata al presente attraverso i costumi indossati da Robbie della premio Oscar Jacqueline Durran, che attingono all’epoca elisabettiana e vittoriana, con l’omaggio esplicito al vestito rosso indossato da Rossella O’Hara in Via col Vento, fino alle creazioni della moda contemporanea; con le scenografie di Suzie Davies che citano Barbie; la colonna sonora di Anthony Willis e il discutibile hyperpop di Charlie XCX. Non c’è bisogno di sapere che le IP generalmente funzionano bene per il pubblico che vuole vedere storie che già conosce, per predire un sicuro successo tra l’audience più giovane di un film che scompone e ricompone a piacimento un libro che ha saputo scavare nelle profondità dell'amore e della perdita e ha esplorato lo svilupparsi di una passione malata e autodistruttiva. E che qui viene espressa con selvaggia e grottesca intensità. (Camillo De Marco) (Translation)
Visually, this is a stunning movie. Musically, it adds a modern beat that conveys emotion well. But those are pretty much the only nice things I have to say about 2026’s Wuthering Heights. (Emily Tsiao)
Eye-catching but superficial. (...)  This ‘Wuthering Heights’ is a teenage sex dream that ends halfway through the book, which is maybe where 14-year-old Fennell stopped. In fact, in this version, neither Cathy nor Heathcliff have children, which means there can be no trauma passed on to the next generation, which is totally at the heart of this dark, complex, brutal novel that shouldn’t be a Valentine’s date, I promise you. Fennell’s treatment is eye-catching but superficial and because Robbie’s Cathy is like a capricious Scarlett O’Hara and Elordi’s Heathcliff is a hot boyfriend who broods, you can never buy into them as deeply connected soulmates. #TeamPurist all the way. (Deborah Ross)
   

Jane Eyre Rehearsals, Toxic Heathcliff, Genius Costumes and Weird Emily

Broadway World publishes a couple of videos (Sweet Liberty and Sirens) of the rehearsals of the Gordon & Caird Jane Eyre concert next Sunday in Broadway:
The one-night-only concert event will bring Paul Gordon and John Caird’s musical adaptation of Charlotte Brontë’s novel to the stage with the New York City Chamber Orchestra and a 400-voice chorus.
Henningsen will star as Jane Eyre opposite Karimloo as Edward Fairfax Rochester. The cast will also include Natalie Allen, Clara Bishop, Caroline Bowman, Runako Campbell, Robert Curtis, David Michael Garry, Jada German, Marc Kudisch, Ada Manie, Austin Scott, Emily Skinner, Elizabeth Stanley, Christianne Tisdale, and Brittany Nicole Williams. Casting is subject to change.
Directed by Tony Yazbeck, with music direction by Brad Haak, the concert staging places emphasis on the score’s orchestration and vocal writing while presenting the sweeping narrative in symphonic form. The newly released videos highlight moments from rehearsal as the principals, orchestra, and chorus prepare the story of resilience, passion, and self-discovery for performance. (A.A. Cristi)
And still with Gordon & Caird's Jane Eyre, Broadway World also announces that the 2024 chamber version of the musical is now available to license:
This re-imagined chamber adaptation of the piece premiered in 2024 at Theatre Raleigh in North Carolina. The updated version features a smaller orchestra size, a slimmed-down cast (with opportunities for doubling), and changes to the lyrics and book. 
Paul Gordon and John Caird were eager to make this updated adaptation the definitive version available for licensing, as it hues closer to their original vision of the piece and is more accessible to theatres because of the flexible casting and orchestration options.
“We are so happy this new chamber adaptation is now available for licensing,” shared Gordon and Caird. “In these uncertain times we believe audiences want to feel uplifted when going to the theatre. Jane Eyre might take some dark turns, but the story is infused with such feeling, such passion, it restores the soul. If it makes you cry, we trust it will be for all the right reasons.” (Nicole Rosky)
Los Angeles Times wants Kate Bush's Wuthering Heights to have a big comeback.
 As a reader, I’m more of a “Jane Eyre” girl than a “Wuthering Heights” girl. Of course, I first devoured the novels at an age when I was too young to understand the Heathcliff-Catherine ourobouros dynamic; lonely, bookish orphan Jane was more my speed.
But when I got to college and fell madly in love for the first time, I was primed for the Kate Bush version of “Wuthering Heights,” an avant-garde musical number, all shrieks and pleading. Somehow Bush, that Ur-diva of the ’80s, wrapped up the plot of Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel better than any SparkNotes could (this was long before AI). Swathed in lyrics and melody instead of chaptered prose, I got it: Here were two people who embodied the idea behind can’t live with or without you.
I’m still a reader, one who spends some of my reading time professionally, as a book critic. Talk about wild and windy moors, temper and jealousy! Yet I come back again and again like Cathy, to my own “only master,” stories, words and their creators. In the words of Kate Bush, I can’t “leave behind my Wuthering Wuthering Wuthering Wuthering Heights ...“ (Bethanne Patrick)
The Washington Post has an article about Heathcliff in Emily Brontë's novel and the film, but mainly the novel. About the birth of the toxic boyfriend trope and many other things, but there is one that we found particularly interesting. We don't really fully agree, but it has a point: 
You know what this issue is? It’s an Old Testament/New Testament problem. The Heathcliff in the first half of the novel is a brute, but a comprehensible one. His actions aren’t good, but they exist on a spectrum of human emotion that you can wrap your brain around. Yes, one would be furious if one overheard the love of one’s life tell someone else that marrying you would “degrade” her. Yes, it would suck badly if you went off to make the fortune required to be worthy in her eyes, but by the time you’d done it, she’d married someone else.
(We’re not going to speak of the mistreatment of Isabella’s dog, which also occurs in the first half. We’re going to assume Brontë understands she literally screwed the pooch on that one and would change it if she could.)
But Heathcliff’s malevolence really peaks in the second half of the novel, which I hadn’t remembered until I reread it last week. Catherine dies and there’s still 200 pages left. Heathcliff uses those 200 pages to ruin the lives of the next generation of Earnshaws and Lintons. He punishes Catherine’s daughter because her father was Edgar, not him. He punishes his own son because his mother was Isabella, not Catherine.
He repeats the abuse that he suffered as a child, he seizes property, he’s monstrous. Nobody gets a moment’s peace until he dies, a full three decades in the future.
The new movie doesn’t show any of this, nor do other cinematic adaptations. It cuts off at the novel’s midpoint and for good reason: because when Catherine dies, any sympathy we might have had for Heathcliff dies too. Now he’s not a sexy man propelled by love and longing, he’s an absolute weirdo who needs whatever the 19th century version of therapy is. (Leeches?)
The people who create posts on Reddit about Heathcliff being a monster seem to remember that the second half of the novel exists. The people who love him anyway might have done what I did: quietly forget it. Treat it as a collection of ideas for a sequel that somebody accidentally published. Treat it as apocrypha, not canon.
Treat it as the escapism your silly heart occasionally longs for. It’s fiction, after all — the idea that somebody is so madly in love with you that they would rather your decrepit, annoying ghost shamble after them for all eternity than live even one minute alone. (Monica Hesse)
Hello! Fashion finds the costumes in Wuthering Heights 2026 no less than genius:
Durran’s costumes are clever because they work psychologically, not just historically. Just like the movie. Emerald recently said the upcoming film is not tied to a specific, rigid time period, but rather acts as a "fantasy of a fantasy" that focuses on the emotional experience of the story rather than historical accuracy. 
Instead of romanticising the period, the clothes reflect power, repression, and emotional states. Catherine’s shifts in dress throughout the narrative mirror her movement between wildness and social constraint. The use of latex-looking fabrics and bold colour is genius because it quietly modernises Wuthering Heights without breaking its gothic core. The latex adds an unnatural sheen, suggesting control, restriction, and something almost suffocating, while the colour choices signal emotional states and power shifts rather than strict realism. Together, they make the characters feel trapped in their desires, turning costume into a visual language for obsession and repression instead of mere period accuracy. (Olivia Lower)
CNN also goes for the costumes, but finds them kind of derivative: Omar Kiam's Wuthering Heights 1939. 
Cathy’s costumes in Fennell’s film veer into [William] Wyler territory often: she teases fellow character Isabella Linton about her doomed crush on Heathcliff in the Thrushcross Grange manor, while wearing a white tulle frock with velvet appliqué vines that looks strikingly similar to a dress actress Merle Oberon wore on-screen in 1939. Then there is the blood-red, velvet hooded cape and white fur hand-warmer Robbie wears when Cathy visits Wuthering Heights for the first time since marrying Edgar Linton. Oberon, too, donned a velvet, fur-trimmed hood and fur handwarmer in Wyler’s version. The number of jewels adorned on Robbie don’t look as out of place when you see Oberon wearing a near-identical tiara, drop earrings and floral diamond necklace some 87 years earlier.
“When I’m asked about why the costumes are a particular way, I find that really difficult to answer,” designer Durran said in London. “It’s a kind of instinctive, emotional reason.” Fennell agreed: “It’s not connected to the period, it’s connected to the emotional truth.” (...)
Ultimately, Fennell is referencing a period in history, just not 1847, when Brontë wrote the novel, and not the late 1700s, when it is set. By choosing her references from the big screen rather than history, she’s made a film for cinephiles, not the bookworms. The result might be as shallow as a puddle on a sunny day — but it certainly caught the light. (Leah Dolan)
Finally, Dazed has something to add:
It goes without saying that extensive research and understanding of the era is imperative – it’s the foundation of any good costume designer. However, when we’re (mostly) already dealing with works of fiction, who’s to say that costume designers can’t add a few flourishes of their own? Ultimately, it’s about the story that the director is trying to tell. And if a pair of Converse, a diamond grill, or Margot Robbie wrapped up in cellophane helps to communicate that story, then why the hell not? (Isobel Van Dyke)
Vanity Fair tries to unveil the mystery of Emily Brontë, the weirdest of the sisters:
 Of literature’s “three weird sisters”—as writer Ted Hughes famously dubbed the Brontës—Emily is the weirdest, probably because history knows so little about her. Sandwiched between bestselling Jane Eyre author Charlotte, the family’s press-savvy manager and myth-maker, and Agnes Grey writer Anne, the sweet and pious peacemaker, was Emily Jane, the elusive middle sister whose personality still evades readers nearly two centuries after her untimely death.
“The strange one,” as she’s often called, may have been autistic, antisocial, agoraphobic, and/or anorexic. She may have been a lesbian, or in an incestuous relationship with her brother. In any case, the author of Wuthering Heights—arguably the horniest Gothic novel ever written—was probably a virgin with a vivid imagination. As a soaking-wet Heathcliff on horseback rides over wild moors and onto movie theatre screens yet again in Emerald Fennell’s reimagining of the novel, here are some burning questions biographers are still asking about the strangest Brontë sister. (...)
Modern armchair psychologists have inevitably diagnosed Emily Brontë with a revolving door of diseases and disorders, from “neurosis” to agoraphobia to social anxiety to—the most popular pick of recent years—neurodivergence or autism. “She was probably somewhere on the spectrum, like lots of people are,” says Brontë biographer Nick Holland. “Autism would certainly explain a lot.” But the meaning, if any, of a modern-day diagnosis is debatable. “The idea of autism didn’t even exist in the 19th century,” says [Deborah] Lutz, “so it’s not very helpful.” (...)
But Branwell was one of so few men in Emily Brontë’s world that historians have considered him to be a possible inspiration for Heathcliff, Catherine’s adopted brother turned love interest. Another possibility is William Weightman, the flirtatious curate with whom the 2022 film Emily imagined a torrid affair. Robert Heaton was a neighbour said to have planted Emily a pear tree, which embarrassed her. In Sexual Personae, Camille Paglia argued Emily was a lesbian, and she herself is Heathcliff—yearning for love she cannot have.
Another once perfectly reasonable explanation for the Brontës’ monstrous literary talent? Witchcraft. Ted Hughes likened the trio to “three weird sisters,” the witches whose prophecy begins Macbeth—invoking an old theory with deep roots. “That they were witches with some kind of elemental power came from the late 19th-century idea that women couldn’t be intellectuals or craftswomen, they were just channels receiving and transmitting information,” says [Graham] Watson. It’s “all nonsense, of course,” he adds, though perhaps not entirely undeserved—Emily was eternally fascinated with superstition and the occult. (...)
Even after she got sick, Emily went about her days as she always did, such that no one realized how close she was to death. Legend says she refused to retire to her bed, as is customary, and died on the sofa in the dining room instead. True or not, some 80,000 Brontë devotees still visit annually their former home in Haworth, now a Brontë museum, to see the sofa that once held the strangest Brontë—a defiant enigma until her very end. (Rosemary Counter)
Rayo quotes one of the many interviews with Margot Robbie when she recalls one of the scenes that never reached the final cut: 
"There was a scene where she was sort of reading a sexy book at one point," Olivia began, before Margot clarifies: "Yeah, Emerald found 18th Century p-rn... and the scene didn't make the movie but it was like Isabella saying her prayers before bed, and then getting to bed and pulling out this 18th Century p-rn - which exists, it's really weird." (Priyanca Rajput)

Ara explores why 'yearning' has become fashionable in series and cinema. Marie Claire explores the (many, many) differences between the Wuthering Heights 2026 film and book. Daily Mail goes straight ahead for the good stuff: How racy is the film and let's dissect all the raunchy scenes. Secret Manchester and The National explore some of the shooting locations of the film. The Toronto Star interviews Emerald Fennell.

   

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