With... Adam Sargant
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It's our last episode of series 1!!! Expect ghost, ghouls and lots of
laughs as we round off the series with Adam Sargant, AKA Haunted Haworth.
We'll be...
3 weeks ago
When Arnold finally brings them together, the encounter is intense and graphic, the realest sex you'll see in a British film - even though Arnold slightly dissipates the effect by over-stressing Clyde's Heathcliff aspect, making him a soulful hard man with a penchant for wood-carving and an ear for a fox's bark in the city night. (Jonathan Ramney)The Guardian seems to answer a question from some days ago, is there a pop-up version of Jane Eyre? It seems that we have a pop-up Heathcliff :P
Sam appears, a pop-up Heathcliff: 'What's all this about, this cosy family outing?' he spits at Ruth, before recovering.We have so few references to The Professor that we always post whatever we found. This time it's a list of audiobooks that deal with college life:
The Professor By Charlotte Bronte, read by Frederick Davidson (Blackstone Audiobooks)But the best Brontë mention today is this one from the ContraCostaTimes:
Campus life was always tricky, even in the Victorian era. In her first work of fiction, Charlotte Bronte chronicles the messy love life of an English professor. This is a must-listen-to for any Bronte fan, as it is loosely based on her own unrequited love for a married teacher in Brussels.
As part of their tribute to Jacques Rivette, Berkeley's Pacific Film Archive is showin a double bill of the New Wave director's classics "Wuthering Heights" and "Love on the Ground" tonight. Jane Bronte's 19th century novel has been reset in 1930s Cevennes. 6.30 and 9 p.m., PFA, 2575 Bancroft Way at Bowditch, Berkeley. $8 per film/$12 for both, 510-642-5249, http://www.bampfa.berkeley.edu/.Yes, Jane Brontë, the well-known author of Wuthering Heights :P
Oh my! Did they mean Jane (Eyre) Bronte or Emily Jane Bronte I wonder?? Still, an awful blunder!
ReplyDeleteI'm "hoping" they looked it up somewhere and didn't see there was an EMILY before Jane Brontë - but who knows. Terrible, anyway.
ReplyDelete