View allAll Photos Tagged WUTHERINGHEIGHTS

Pics by my boyfriend (Viktor Pjnov).

Illustrated with Wood Engravings

Random House, 1943

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

Olympus OM-D E-M5 + Panasonic 2.8/12-35 mm + LR6

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

Olympus OM-D E-M5 + Panasonic 2.8/12-35 mm + LR6

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.

  

Pics by my boyfriend (Viktor Pjnov).

Olympus OM-D E-M5 + Panasonic 2.8/12-35 mm + LR6

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!

I went to see transformers 2 today with my padre...it was pretty amazing. There was this little kid who ran up and down the aisle because he was scared of the giant robots...then this girl behind me yelled at him because she couldn't hear what shia labeouf was saying...it was chaos! haaha

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.

  

One of the former homes of Kate Bush in Eltham, SE London.

Although it was local knowledge she had bought a property not far from the local landmark Eltham Palace, Kate obviously never publicised the fact: the current name - Wuthering Heights (after the song which propelled her to fame) - was given to it by subsequent owners.

Olympus OM-D E-M5 + Panasonic 2.8/12-35 mm + LR6

Nature takes control again...

 

Ruins of Top Withens - frequently linked to Wuthering Heights. Has a bit more impact large.

Unknown artist, 1960, Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA, relief

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.

  

"I am Heathcliff! He's always, always on my mind!"

 

A weathered copy of wuthering Heights, left in the garden for a year and a half....

See my blog for more.

siobhanrodgersarts.blogspot.com/2008/10/heathcliff.html

View from the presbytery : whenever the Brontës looked through the window they saw the cemetery. Vue depuis le presbytère : lorsque les Brontë regardaient par la fenêtre, elles voyaient le cimetière.

Illustrated with Wood Engravings

Random House, 1943

Crafter, Paula McKay of Altered Eras, has just started to lay out her overskirt in the fabric she commissioned from us! We had a text print in black and white and a few other colorways, but for her vision, we went with a charcoal background with important passages from the original text in shades of Emily Bronte's beloved heather. Cannot wait to see how it turns out when she debuts it at the Haworth Steampunk Festival. Fun to think that Emily's words will be making a visit to the house where she first wrote them!

Travellers have been lured to this spot since the 1880s, barely 30 years after Wuthering Heights had been published. It has been a pilgrimage of sorts for creative types wanting to capture a sense of Brontë. The poets Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes once came here and both went on to publish verses inspired by the setting. Plath described her visit to Top Withens in her journal:

 

Most people never get there, but stop in town for tea, pink-frosted cakes, souvenirs and colored photographs of the place too far to walk to, visiting the Church of St. Michael and All Angels…there are two ways to the stone house, both tiresome.

 

One, the public route from the town along green pastureland over stone stiles to the voluble white cataract that drops its long rag of water over rocks warped round, green-slimed, across a wooden footbridge to terrain of goat-foot-flattened grasses where a carriage road ran…the other – across, the slow heave, hill on hill from any other direction over bog down to the middle of the world…blue white spines of gorse. All eternity, wildness, loneliness…

 

The house – small, lasting – pebbles on roof, name scrawls on rock – inhospitable two trees on the lee side of the hill where the long winds come, pierce the light in a stillness.

Wuthering Heights

 

I had a fantastic year, three books were just printed for Harper Collins US, they have three of my images on the cover.

It is still always a thrill to see your work 'in print'.

This image, on the left, was originally called "ROSEBUD". On the right is the book cover.

Wuthering Heights and the original image.

This macro was taken on Hasselblad with a digital back.

 

SEE LARGE and View On Black

 

All the best, Thanx, M, (*_*)

 

Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved

  

It was the perfect day to visit the Parsonage of the Brontë family in Haworth: the weather was dreary and foggy, and the golden autumn leaves were falling on the graves in the churchyard. It could have been a scene from Wuthering Heights, and we wouldn't have been surprised to see the dark shadow of Heathcliff wandering on the misty moors.

 

In this setting it was just easy to go back to the 19th century and imagine the tragic life of the sisters Charlotte, Emily and Anne Brontë, who all three died of tuberculosis at young age.

 

More photos of England you can find on Green Dreams Photography

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

Morning light on Wuthering Heights.

Out on the wily, windy moors

We'd roll and fall in green

You had a temper like my jealousy

Too hot, too greedy

How could you leave me

When I needed to possess you?

I hated you, I loved you, too

 

Bad dreams in the night

They told me I was going to lose the fight

Leave behind my wuthering, wuthering

Wuthering Heights

 

Heathcliff, it's me, I'm Cathy

I've come home, I'm so cold

Let me in your window

Heathcliff, it's me, I'm Cathy

I've come home, I'm so cold

Let me in your window

 

Ooh, it gets dark, it gets lonely

On the other side from you

I pine a lot, I find the lot

Falls through without you

I'm coming back love

Cruel Heathcliff, my one dream

My only master

 

Too long I roam in the night

I'm coming back to his side, to put it right

I'm coming home to wuthering, wuthering

Wuthering Heights

 

Heathcliff, it's me, I'm Cathy

I've come home, I'm so cold

Let me in your window

Heathcliff, it's me, I'm Cathy

I've come home, I'm so cold

Let me in your window

 

Ooh, let me have it

Let me grab your soul away

Ooh, let me have it

Let me grab your soul away

You know it's me, Cathy

 

Heathcliff, it's me, I'm Cathy

I've come home, I'm so cold

Let me in your window

Heathcliff, it's me, I'm Cathy

I've come home, I'm so cold

Let me in your window

 

Heathcliff, it's me, I'm Cathy

I've come home, I'm so cold

 

WUTHERING HEIGHTS was the debut single from KATE BUSH in 1978.

Music & lyrics by Kate Bush.

Top Withens, near Haworth, has been linked to the classic novel Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte (1847). It is not the building itself, but its situation on the moors which may have inspired the author. The ruins, much visited although remote, have been recently restored.

 

This bleak but beautiful location, miles from the nearest cafe, shop or public convenience, was continually populated by walkers of all ages during the hour and a half I spent there. This shot was taken during a brief moment when none were actually in view, they were either inside the ruins or round the other side or just out of shot.

 

Wuthering Heights, the romance of Catherine and Heathcliffe, has spawned Hollywood blockbuster films and a hit pop song (Kate Bush, 1979), as well as radio and TV productions, three operas, a musical, a ballet and a game. Emily Bronte was one of the famous three Bronte Sisters who lived in Haworth, about 3 and a half miles away. Another sister, Charlotte, wrote the classic Jane Eyre (1847).

 

I have actually read the complete works of Emily Bronte. They consist of the single novel, Wuthering Heights. :-)

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wuthering_Heights

A conceptual portrait session w/ UK model, Lauren DeVille

Essa é a minha parte favorita do livro Wuthering Heights(o morro dos ventos uivantes) ela é muito triste, mas não deixa de ser muito romantica também.

 

Eu escolhi esse livro para fazer a prova do livro do meu inglês, que foi hoje de manha e fotografei ele ontem, junto com a do post it, por isso é o mesmo fundo :)

 

Bijou :*

Pics by my boyfriend (Viktor Pjnov).

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