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Thursday 28 November 2019

Anne Brontë Bi-centenary Events in Scarborough

 January/February 2020

 
10th January – Woodend (runs until 8th February, 9am-5pm daily).

Opening of the art exhibition at Woodend.  Encapsulates Anne Bronte’s novel, ‘The Tenant of Wildfell Hall’ in 200 pages & artist’s representations of her novel. Free admission.

14th January – Woodend (2pm)

Lecture on ‘The Tenant of Wildfell Hall’ by Tim Tubbs.  Booking required: £5.00.

17th January – Woodend (7pm)
 
Evening Performance of ‘Tracking the Brontës - a presentation with original music’. Booking required. £5.00 or pay at the door if places available.

18th January – Woodend (2pm, 3.30pm. 7pm)

2pm: Afternoon matinee of Tracking the Brontës - a presentation with original music.  £5.00 at the door.

3.30pm: Talk by Catherine Rayner entitled, ‘Buried in Paradise’ on Anne’s last days & the ending of Agnes Grey and Anne’s final poetry, followed by Q&A & book signing. Free admission

7pm: Talk by Dr Edward Chitham on Anne Bronte’s poetry. Followed by Q&A & book signing.  Free Admission.  Tea, Coffee and snacks available to purchase, during the day.

19th January – The Grand Hotel  (all events free admission)

10.30am: Opening of a day of celebrations for the life of Anne Brontë, (10.30-11am) Introduction & presentation of Artists, Writers & Brontë representatives & local dignitaries. Patsy Stoneman, Vice President of the Bronte Society will introduce everyone at The Grand Hotel & thanks those who have organised the celebration of Anne’s life & links with Scarborough & the Yorkshire Coast.

11.15-11.45am: Storyteller, Jan Bee Brown will entertain. 

12noon-1.15pm: Forum for discussion with Bronte writers and artists, includes audience participation. Tea, Coffee and snacks available to purchase, throughout the day.

1.45-2.45pm: Storyteller, Jan Bee Brown will entertain.

2.45-4.00pm: audience may partake of a walk to the beach to cast a pebble into the sea in memory of Anne, followed by a walk to St. Mary’s Church.

St Mary’s Church 3.45-4.00pm: The church bells will ring to welcome everyone.

4pm Graveside: Trish Gurney, The Chair of the Brontë Council, will lay flowers on the grave and read one of Anne’s poems.

4.15pm: everyone enters the church for a time of quiet reflection followed by a piece of music, especially written for the occasion by Sarah Dew. Closing words from Patsy Stoneman to end the weekend.  Tea and coffee and snacks can be purchased at the church.

Woodend Creative Workspace, The Crescent, Scarborough, YO11 2PW

Grand Hotel, St Nicholas Cliff, Scarborough, YO11 2ET


Thursday 9 May 2019

Ken Hutchison's devilish Heathcliff


Richard Wilcocks writes:
Ken Hutchison and Kay Adshead
Browsing through the pages of The Crystal Bucket by Clive James, last read a long time ago (published 1981), I came across his scathing newspaper review of the 1978 BBC mini-series version of Wuthering Heights. He described it as ‘the blithering pits’. Could it have been that bad? I found that the series was in five fifty-minute episodes directed by Peter Hammond, with a screenplay jointly written by David Snodin and Hugh Leonard and a musical score by Carl Davis. I bought the DVD version.

Ken Hutchison plays Heathcliff , Kay Adshead is Catherine Earnshaw. A number of child actors perform, with two assigned to the young Heathcliff. In a display of enthusiastic ‘fidelity’, there is an attempt to cover every single chapter of the novel, but the result inspired a mixture of admiration and ridicule in spite of the relative accuracy of its character representations, and some false accusations that the BBC had commissioned the series mainly because of the great success of Kate Bush’s famous song earlier in the same year. It took more than a few months to put together, of course.

The series is certainly not without merit. Clive James’s remarks possibly refer to the hyperbolically histrionic Kay Adshead as Catherine, to clumsy special effects, and a few inept attempts at melodrama, but Ken Hutchinson plays Heathcliff as brutal, cruel and devilish 'as Emily Brontë conceived of him', at least in the first few episodes. I was quite impressed. He is an interesting contrast to the pin-up stars who in other versions have been cast in the part, and there is hardly any obeisance to the myth of transcendental romance created by the Wiliam Wyler version of the novel in 1939, unless a couple of scenes on Penistone Crag filmed at Ponden Kirk count as parallels to Laurence Olivier and Merle Oberon on a rock formation somewhere near Hollywood.

Carl Davis, who had won much praise for the music composed for The World at War (ITV, 1973 – 74), produced a superb score. True to the novel, and to C P Sanger's calculations, Edgar and Isabella first appear as children of about ten years old through the windows of the Grange, where they pull at a small dog, and Catherine and Heathcliff are shown riding ponies and playing by a beck on the moors, but some of their actions are awkward, for example when Heathcliff shrieks in a temper after Catherine, back from the Grange, calls him dirty. It's easy to go over the top when adapting Wuthering Heights, which is already over the top.

There is an interesting dramatic moment when Nelly discovers the generally neglected Hareton playing with his father’s gun and takes it away from him, and another soon afterwards when the drunken Hindley, as in the novel, holds him over the edge of a balcony, to be caught by Heathcliff. How many adaptations include that? When he is a little older, Hindley is seen beating Hareton viciously with a stick.

The stress on one of the novel’s strong themes -  of child neglect and abuse - is significant, because of the way most feature film adaptations gloss over or minimize it. The presumed psychological effects of the abuse are also included: Heathcliff hangs Isabella’s spaniel, to be rescued by Nelly, and Hareton is seen preparing to hang puppies soon afterwards in the same episode, half-grown puppies. The domestic violence inflicted upon poor Isabella by Heathcliff is shown briefly but shockingly as he swings a heavy chain at her.

The final two episodes covering the second generation are straggly, lacking dramatic impact, I guess partly because of the problem of constantly visualizing scenes of violence, the actors seeming to tire, and partly because the fixed desire for as much fidelity as can be crammed into four hours gives the impression that the narrative is being covered in full out of a kind of duty. Fidelity definitely has its limits.

It’s worth watching, though, if you have the patience, if only because Ken Hutchison very nearly gets there with his Heathcliff.

Sunday 31 March 2019

Anne Brontë Bicentenary (2020) - early notice!


A Fine and Subtle Spirit

- a celebration of music and poetry to commemorate the bicentenary year of Anne Brontë's birth -

At 7.30pm on Saturday 28 March 2020 at Manchester's Cross Street Chapel, there will be a concert of new choral music and poetry to celebrate Anne Brontë.  Specially composed for the occasion, Lucy Pankhurst's 'A Fine and Subtle Spirit' will be joined by other choral settings of Anne's words, among them works by Paul Vowles and by American composers Dale Trumbore, Cristi Cary Miller and Judith Herrington - alongside much-loved sacred works by John Rutter and David Fanshawe, and some of the hymns of Anne herself.   

Poets Liliana Pasterska and Philip Wattswill give first performances of their new poetry along with the Anne Brontë poems of Edwin Stockdale. 

Cross Street Unitarian Chapel, Manchester M2 1NL, UK

Pencil it in now - full details will appear nearer the date, and in due course on www.crossstchapel.org.uk.

Artistic Director Pamela Nash can be contacted at nashhpschdnew@aol.com