View allAll Photos Tagged WUTHERINGHEIGHTS
(the calligraphy is from Huang Xiang's original poem)
Emily Bronte
The great light of the moon is me
The blue shadows and light
All are me
I am a resilient barbaric
Hand
Green cliffs flying birds and
Clumps of flowers
Pubescent wild cattle
This then is my form
My manifold rough
Form
My skin glistens with
Yellow-gold meadows and bright golden desert
Tantalizing breasts exposed
Round virgin hills bared
Mountain peaks on my body ceaselessly
Rise and fall
Blood vessels like crashing waves that
Flow back and
Completely surround me
Wuthering Heights by Tip Top Productions (Jan 2020)
29/01/20 - 01/02/20
Emily Brontë's classic comes to The Forum Studio Theatre. The saga of two Yorkshire families in the remote Pennine Hills, and the doomed relationship of Heathcliff and Cathy Earnshaw is brilliantly brought to life in Jane Thornton’s new stage adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic novel.
Production Team
Directed by Laura Coard
Cast List
HEATHCLIFF PAUL QUINN
CATHERINE EARNSHAWSOPHIE WOLSTENCROFT
HINDLEY EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
ISABELLA LINTONJOANNA MITTON
EDGAR LINTON BENJAMIN GOODWIN
NELLY DEANRACHEL SUMNER
YOUNG CATHERINEEMMA CHARNOCK
YOUNG LINTON FERRIS WILD
HARETON EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
EMILY BRONTE KATIE DEYES
FRANCES EARNSHAW & SERVANTEVE COWIESON
OLD EARNSHAW/ JOSEPH/ DOCTORSI KNEALE
For more information see:
www.chestertheatre.co.uk/wuthering-heights/1251
#ChesterCulture
This is another selfie from Anglesey. Hannah and I took a couple of trips to Beaumaris (and had mega ice cream :) This day was our last day and really overcast and grey which is the perfect pallet for Hannah. I was still feeling like my beach selfie hadn't quite had the movement in my scarf that I wanted so, after a lot of mulling, I realised there was a public right of way leading up a hill past some cows overlooking the water and the nearby islands.
I thought about taking my jacket off, but I actually liked the harder profile it gave me. And then, I spent a good half an hour throwing my scarf out and shooting it. When it came to the edit, I could easily have picked my favourite image, edited it in colour and uploaded. But actually there were so many interested shapes I wanted to try something a bit different, so I spent a long evening teaching myself photoshop elements.
The concept for this was that of casting your cares away, however as the edit progressed, what I began to think about were those things in life that keep us in bondage, they attach themselves to us and wind around us, wind into our minds and tangle us up. It is easy to say we are carefree or without stress, but are we ever free of the bonds that tie us up?
East Riddlesden Hall is a 17th-century manor house in Keighley, West Yorkshire, now owned by the National Trust. The hall was built in 1642 by a wealthy Halifax clothier, James Murgatroyd. There is a medieval tithebarn in the grounds.
East Riddlesden Hall perches on a small plateau overlooking a bend in the River Aire on its way downstream from the town of Keighley. Interesting features include well-restored living accommodation on two floors, two Yorkshire Rose windows, walled garden, the ruined Starkie wing and several ghosts (reputedly). A hiding place for Catholic priests was installed during the 16th century.
The property was extended and re-built by James Murgatroyd and his wife Hannah, using local Yorkshire stone, in 1648. He also built other stone manor houses throughout the West Riding of Yorkshire. In the great hall, a small fireplace can be seen above the main fireplace, where the floor for the first floor accommodation was not built. James Murgatroyd was a Royalist and this can be seen in royalist symbols and graffiti on and in the building. For example, the Bothy (now the tea room and shop) has the heads of Charles I of England and Henrietta Maria of France carved in the top most stone work.
According to a NODA National News feature in 2007, the Murgatroyd family are reputed to be the inspiration for the Murgatroyd Baronets in the comic opera Ruddigore by Gilbert and Sullivan, and the opera has been performed at the Hall. W. S. Gilbert is supposed to have stayed often at the Hall. The feature comments that the Murgatroyds became notorious "for their profanity and debauchery". A legend arose that the River Aire changed its course in shame, in order to flow further away from the hall and its occupants(the river does indeed sweep into a wide U-bend to skirt the meadow, giving the building a wide berth). The feature continues "Members of the family were fined, imprisoned and excommunicated". It asserts that the character of Sir Despard Murgatroyd in Ruddigore is based on James Murgatroyd.
Filming location
East Riddlesden Hall has been used as a filming location for the 1992 film Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights and for the 2009 TV adaptation. It was also used in Sharpe's Justice episode from the Sharpe TV series in 1997. It also featured in series eight of the paranormal television programme Most Haunted.
The Grade I Listed former parsonage in haworth, home to the Patrick Brontë, local vicar and his four children (1820-1861)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bront%C3%AB_Parsonage_Museum
Haworth, West Yorkshire is known for its connection with the Brontë Sisters and the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway
Ho sognato nella mia vita, sogni che sono rimasti sempre con me, e che hanno cambiato le mie idee; sono passati attraverso il tempo e attraverso di me, come il vino attraverso l'acqua, ed hanno alterato il colore della mia mente.
Emily Brontë
Gemma Arterton Signing Autographs after her performance in The Little Dog Laughed at the Garrick Theatre.
Gemma Arterton Signing Autographs after her performance in The Little Dog Laughed at the Garrick Theatre.
I sought, and soon discovered, the three headstones on the slope next the moor: on middle one grey, and half buried in the heath; Edgar Linton's only harmonized by the turf and moss creeping up its foot; Heathcliff's still bare.
I lingered round them, under that benign sky: watched the moths fluttering among the heath and harebells, listened to the soft wind breathing through the grass, and wondered how any one could ever imagine unquiet slumbers for the sleepers in that quiet earth.
(It's the end of Wuthering Heights)
Wuthering Heights by Tip Top Productions (Jan 2020)
29/01/20 - 01/02/20
Emily Brontë's classic comes to The Forum Studio Theatre. The saga of two Yorkshire families in the remote Pennine Hills, and the doomed relationship of Heathcliff and Cathy Earnshaw is brilliantly brought to life in Jane Thornton’s new stage adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic novel.
Production Team
Directed by Laura Coard
Cast List
HEATHCLIFF PAUL QUINN
CATHERINE EARNSHAWSOPHIE WOLSTENCROFT
HINDLEY EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
ISABELLA LINTONJOANNA MITTON
EDGAR LINTON BENJAMIN GOODWIN
NELLY DEANRACHEL SUMNER
YOUNG CATHERINEEMMA CHARNOCK
YOUNG LINTON FERRIS WILD
HARETON EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
EMILY BRONTE KATIE DEYES
FRANCES EARNSHAW & SERVANTEVE COWIESON
OLD EARNSHAW/ JOSEPH/ DOCTORSI KNEALE
For more information see:
www.chestertheatre.co.uk/wuthering-heights/1251
#ChesterCulture
Creative imagery by www.Lunaesque.com The team are:
Photography & Editing © Ange Harper Photography
Models The Druidess Of Midian & J. Gabriel
Hair Dressing & Set © Jane Hunter of Im-permanence
MUA © Charlotte Gabriella Savoury of www.Illamasqua.com
Costume design © www.thedarkangel.co.uk Facebook Fan Page
SFX and Assistance by Steve Baldwin
They went out of their way to produce this slide show for me. It appeared unexpectedly in the "For You" section of my Photos App. So, who am I to disagree, best or not? It's a pretty good slide show., at least it's short and to the point.
Wuthering Heights is Emily Brontë's only novel. It was first published in 1847 under the pseudonym Ellis Bell, and a posthumous second edition was edited by her sister Charlotte. The name of the novel comes from the Yorkshire manor on the moors on which the story centres. (As an adjective, wuthering is a Yorkshire word referring to turbulent weather.) The narrative tells the tale of the all-encompassing and passionate, yet thwarted love between Heathcliff and Catherine Earnshaw, and how this unresolved passion eventually destroys both themselves and many around them.
Now considered a classic of English literature, Wuthering Heights' innovative structure, which has been likened to a series of Matryoshka dolls, met with mixed reviews by critics when it first appeared. Though Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre was originally considered the best of the Brontë sisters' works, many subsequent critics of Wuthering Heights argued that its originality and achievement made it superior. Wuthering Heights has also given rise to many adaptations and inspired works, including films, radio, television dramatisations, musicals and songs (notably the hit Wuthering Heights by Kate Bush - see below), ballet and opera.
This is Valentines day 2009 ,Lyn Marie wanted to get photos for the website with a Bronte theme ,
It was biiter cold and there had been a fairly heavy snow fall ,
this was her Valentines "present" she really wanted to get these shots !
This is Jane Eyre wandering the mooors after she leaves rochester ,
Lyn reckons that if it was winter when Jane was wandering then it would explain her getting so ill so quickly
this looking down the moor from top withins ,,the setting for wuthering heights another Bronte book
Wuthering Heights by Tip Top Productions (Jan 2020)
29/01/20 - 01/02/20
Emily Brontë's classic comes to The Forum Studio Theatre. The saga of two Yorkshire families in the remote Pennine Hills, and the doomed relationship of Heathcliff and Cathy Earnshaw is brilliantly brought to life in Jane Thornton’s new stage adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic novel.
Production Team
Directed by Laura Coard
Cast List
HEATHCLIFF PAUL QUINN
CATHERINE EARNSHAWSOPHIE WOLSTENCROFT
HINDLEY EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
ISABELLA LINTONJOANNA MITTON
EDGAR LINTON BENJAMIN GOODWIN
NELLY DEANRACHEL SUMNER
YOUNG CATHERINEEMMA CHARNOCK
YOUNG LINTON FERRIS WILD
HARETON EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
EMILY BRONTE KATIE DEYES
FRANCES EARNSHAW & SERVANTEVE COWIESON
OLD EARNSHAW/ JOSEPH/ DOCTORSI KNEALE
For more information see:
www.chestertheatre.co.uk/wuthering-heights/1251
#ChesterCulture
Near Keighley, Yorkshire
Built on a plateau overlooking the River Aire, surrounded by fields and meadows this former agricultural property has foundations dating back to 973. The stone, locally sourced from the edge of Ilkley Moor, has been blackened by time and industry and is still just as rough to touch as it originally was. Over time the land has been sold off leaving the house enveloped by Riddlesden as we know it today.
This warm, friendly and intimate home has a chequered history spanning through the decades from Tudor times to the present day. Large mullioned windows and the two perfectly formed rose windows speak of wealth. Step through the 400 year old solid studded oak door and see the original locking mechanism which is still in use today.
Inside you're welcomed by a blend of deep rich panelling and intricate plaster work ceilings. Floorboards varying in width tell a story of the many stages of this wonderful jigsaw puzzle of a house. Each room offers up a taste of life in the past. Stone fireplaces vary in size and detail, apothecary jars would have been used for medicinal purposes and the delightful lantern clock announces its presence through its distinctive chime. These are just a few of the items which have stories just waiting to be told.
The house has seen many a family in residence; none of which were noble. Stories of the merchant class and tenant farmers unravel with scandal and intrigue. The most infamous names to dominate East Riddlesden Hall’s history are the Maudes, Paslew, Rishworths, Murgatroyds and the Starkie family.
Old76 Music-inspired Art 2013
Original coloured pencils on paper and later digital BW reworked...
THE KICK INSIDE
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Kick Inside
Music & lyrics by Kate Bush 1978
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I've pulled down my lace and the chintz.
Oh, do you know you have the face of a genius?
I'll send your love to Zeus.
Oh, by the time you read this,
I'll be well in touch.
I'm giving it all in a moment or two.
I'm giving it all in a moment, for you.
I'm giving it all, giving it, giving it.
This kicking here inside
Makes me leave you behind.
No more under the quilt
To keep you warm.
Your sister I was born.
You must lose me like an arrow,
Shot into the killer storm.
You and me on the bobbing knee.
Didn't we cry at that old mythology he'd read!
I will come home again, but not until
The sun and the moon meet on yon hill.
I'm giving it all in a moment or two.
I'm giving it all in a moment, for you.
I'm giving it all, giving it, giving it.
This kicking here inside
Makes me leave you behind.
No more under the quilt
To keep you warm.
Your sister I was born.
You must lose me like an arrow,
Shot into the killer storm.
A photo at the gate to top Withens Farm ,,now a ruin ,its linked to Emily Brontes Wuthering Heights .This was Valentines day we had a family walk up there with the dog and did a shoot here at at Bronte falls ,
the tree on the hill was Lyn Maries choice for the photo ,I took it
Wuthering Heights by Tip Top Productions (Jan 2020)
29/01/20 - 01/02/20
Emily Brontë's classic comes to The Forum Studio Theatre. The saga of two Yorkshire families in the remote Pennine Hills, and the doomed relationship of Heathcliff and Cathy Earnshaw is brilliantly brought to life in Jane Thornton’s new stage adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic novel.
Production Team
Directed by Laura Coard
Cast List
HEATHCLIFF PAUL QUINN
CATHERINE EARNSHAWSOPHIE WOLSTENCROFT
HINDLEY EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
ISABELLA LINTONJOANNA MITTON
EDGAR LINTON BENJAMIN GOODWIN
NELLY DEANRACHEL SUMNER
YOUNG CATHERINEEMMA CHARNOCK
YOUNG LINTON FERRIS WILD
HARETON EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
EMILY BRONTE KATIE DEYES
FRANCES EARNSHAW & SERVANTEVE COWIESON
OLD EARNSHAW/ JOSEPH/ DOCTORSI KNEALE
For more information see:
www.chestertheatre.co.uk/wuthering-heights/1251
#ChesterCulture
Wuthering Heights by Tip Top Productions (Jan 2020)
29/01/20 - 01/02/20
Emily Brontë's classic comes to The Forum Studio Theatre. The saga of two Yorkshire families in the remote Pennine Hills, and the doomed relationship of Heathcliff and Cathy Earnshaw is brilliantly brought to life in Jane Thornton’s new stage adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic novel.
Production Team
Directed by Laura Coard
Cast List
HEATHCLIFF PAUL QUINN
CATHERINE EARNSHAWSOPHIE WOLSTENCROFT
HINDLEY EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
ISABELLA LINTONJOANNA MITTON
EDGAR LINTON BENJAMIN GOODWIN
NELLY DEANRACHEL SUMNER
YOUNG CATHERINEEMMA CHARNOCK
YOUNG LINTON FERRIS WILD
HARETON EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
EMILY BRONTE KATIE DEYES
FRANCES EARNSHAW & SERVANTEVE COWIESON
OLD EARNSHAW/ JOSEPH/ DOCTORSI KNEALE
For more information see:
www.chestertheatre.co.uk/wuthering-heights/1251
#ChesterCulture
Creative imagery by www.Lunaesque.com The team are:
Photography & Editing © Carri Angel
Models The Druidess Of Midian & J. Gabriel
Hair Dressing & Set © Jane Hunter of Im-permanence
MUA © Charlotte Gabriella Savoury of www.Illamasqua.com
Costume design © www.thedarkangel.co.uk Facebook Fan Page
SFX and Assistance by Steve Baldwin
Wuthering Heights by Tip Top Productions (Jan 2020)
29/01/20 - 01/02/20
Emily Brontë's classic comes to The Forum Studio Theatre. The saga of two Yorkshire families in the remote Pennine Hills, and the doomed relationship of Heathcliff and Cathy Earnshaw is brilliantly brought to life in Jane Thornton’s new stage adaptation of Emily Brontë’s classic novel.
Production Team
Directed by Laura Coard
Cast List
HEATHCLIFF PAUL QUINN
CATHERINE EARNSHAWSOPHIE WOLSTENCROFT
HINDLEY EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
ISABELLA LINTONJOANNA MITTON
EDGAR LINTON BENJAMIN GOODWIN
NELLY DEANRACHEL SUMNER
YOUNG CATHERINEEMMA CHARNOCK
YOUNG LINTON FERRIS WILD
HARETON EARNSHAW ZAK TALBOT
EMILY BRONTE KATIE DEYES
FRANCES EARNSHAW & SERVANTEVE COWIESON
OLD EARNSHAW/ JOSEPH/ DOCTORSI KNEALE
For more information see:
www.chestertheatre.co.uk/wuthering-heights/1251
#ChesterCulture
East Riddlesden Hall is a 17th-century manor house in Keighley, West Yorkshire, now owned by the National Trust. The hall was built in 1642 by a wealthy Halifax clothier, James Murgatroyd. There is a medieval tithebarn in the grounds.
East Riddlesden Hall perches on a small plateau overlooking a bend in the River Aire on its way downstream from the town of Keighley. Interesting features include well-restored living accommodation on two floors, two Yorkshire Rose windows, walled garden, the ruined Starkie wing and several ghosts (reputedly). A hiding place for Catholic priests was installed during the 16th century.
The property was extended and re-built by James Murgatroyd and his wife Hannah, using local Yorkshire stone, in 1648. He also built other stone manor houses throughout the West Riding of Yorkshire. In the great hall, a small fireplace can be seen above the main fireplace, where the floor for the first floor accommodation was not built. James Murgatroyd was a Royalist and this can be seen in royalist symbols and graffiti on and in the building. For example, the Bothy (now the tea room and shop) has the heads of Charles I of England and Henrietta Maria of France carved in the top most stone work.
According to a NODA National News feature in 2007, the Murgatroyd family are reputed to be the inspiration for the Murgatroyd Baronets in the comic opera Ruddigore by Gilbert and Sullivan, and the opera has been performed at the Hall. W. S. Gilbert is supposed to have stayed often at the Hall. The feature comments that the Murgatroyds became notorious "for their profanity and debauchery". A legend arose that the River Aire changed its course in shame, in order to flow further away from the hall and its occupants(the river does indeed sweep into a wide U-bend to skirt the meadow, giving the building a wide berth). The feature continues "Members of the family were fined, imprisoned and excommunicated". It asserts that the character of Sir Despard Murgatroyd in Ruddigore is based on James Murgatroyd.
Filming location
East Riddlesden Hall has been used as a filming location for the 1992 film Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights and for the 2009 TV adaptation. It was also used in Sharpe's Justice episode from the Sharpe TV series in 1997. It also featured in series eight of the paranormal television programme Most Haunted.
Estos son los libros con los que he empezado el 2011. El año nuevo me pilló a medias con John Irving, después me decidí por Randy Paush y su última lección, y madre mía, que tristeza. Eso si, una moraleja digna de ser tomada al pié de la letra. Para recuperarme de las lágrimas, cogí al señor Piedrahita, del que no había leído nada (y no lo hubiera hecho si no me hubieran regalado el libro), y lloré. De la risa. Grande, grande. Y ahora he empezado con Wuthering Heights, que lo quería leer de hace tiempo y esta edición bonita me ha llevado a ello. Exacto, esta edición bonita. Y es que... hay libros con portadas muy feas rondando por ahí.
¿Lo mejor de todo? Todos fueron regalos :)
Y ahora, a lo que iba... la lista de libros del 2010. Los ha habido buenos, muy buenos, aceptables y meh meh. Como cada año. Es lo que tiene leer casi todo lo que te cae en las manos... y no querer dejar un libro a medias.
1.- The Road - Cormac McCarthy.
2.- An Education - Lynn Barber
3.- Las Saturnales - Lindsey Davis
4.- The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath
5.- Man and Wife - Tony Parsons
6.- Alejandría - Lindsey Davis
7.- Rebeca - Daphne Du Maurier
8.- 44 Scotland Street - Alexander McCall Smith
9.- Expresso Tales - Alexander McCall Smith
10.- Love over Scotland - Alexander McCall Smith
11.- Paper Towns - John Green
12.- The World according to Bertie - Alexander McCall Smith
13.- The unbeareable lightness of scones - Alexander McCall Smith
14.- Una mujer va al médico - Ray Klum (lágrimas y lágrimas)
15.- The Girls Guide to Hunting and Fishing - Melissa Bank (uno que me podría haber ahorrado... y que estaré encantada de regalar, si alguien lo quiere).
16.- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - JK Rowling
17.- El nombre del viento - Patrick Rothfuss
18.- One Day - David Nicholls.
19.- Maldito Karma - David Safier. Me pilló en mitad de Shanghai sin nada más que leer. Sinceramente, no entiendo el éxito del libro...
20.- My favourite Wife - Tony Parsons (comprado en el Bookworm de Beijing, un café librería genial).
21.- A friend of teh family - Lisa Jewell.
22.- Los Pilares de la Tierra - Ken Follet (un misterio el por qué no lo había leído antes).
23.- El tiempo entre costuras- María Dueñas. A+.
26.- Diari d'una cangur - Emma Mclaughlin
27.- The Hunger Games - Suzanne Collins
28.- Beat the Reaper - Josh Bazell
29.- Totes les coses que no ens vam dir - Marc Levy.
30.- Catching Fire - Suzanne Collins
31.- La Sociedad Literaria y el pastel de piel de patata de Guersney - Mary Ann Schafer
32.- Arlington Park - Rachel Cusk (meh meh meh)
33.- Mockingjay - Suzanne Collins
34.- Never let me go - Kazuo Ishiguro.
35.- El Hotel New Hampshire - John Irving (la mitad :))
Aparte empecé a leer Everything is iluminated, y se quedó en la página 2, y A Game of Thrones, que apenas llegó al capítulo 2. Pero que planeo leer (ambos) este año. Simplemente no me apetecía cuando los cogí y pobres, ahí se quedaron.
Alguna recomendación?? Siempre son bien recibidas!
Creative imagery by www.Lunaesque.com The team are:
Photography & Editing © Ange Harper Photography
Model The Druidess Of Midian
Hair Dressing & Set © Jane Hunter of Im-permanence
MUA © Charlotte Gabriella Savoury of www.Illamasqua.com
Costume design © www.thedarkangel.co.uk Facebook Fan Page
SFX and Assistance by Steve Baldwin
Creative imagery by www.Lunaesque.com The team are:
Photography & Editing © Ange Harper Photography
Model The Druidess Of Midian
Hair Dressing & Set © Jane Hunter of Im-permanence
MUA © Charlotte Gabriella Savoury of www.Illamasqua.com
Costume design © www.thedarkangel.co.uk Facebook Fan Page
SFX and Assistance by Steve Baldwin