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Monday, May 12, 2008

Monday, May 12, 2008 2:14 pm by Cristina in , , , ,    6 comments
The Independent presents the London Children's Ballet production of Jane Eyre, which will open on Thursday, May 15.
The London Children's Ballet is set to bring Charlotte Brontë's masterpiece, Jane Eyre, to London's West End. This adaptation, performed by 54 rising stars between the ages of nine and 15, follows the young orphan Jane's bittersweet journey from her bleak time at the charity school, Lowood, through to her tender relationship with Mr Rochester.
The new choreography, by Nicole Tongue, is set to a score composed by Julia Gomelskaya for the company's original production in 1997. It looks to be the latest success from the company, renowned for past performances such as The Scarlet Pimpernel.
A ballerina trained at London's Royal Ballet School, Tongue was commissioned to re-choreograph the work to suit a contemporary audience. "Jane Eyre is the story of one person's journey of self-discovery: as a young girl she learns to temper her anger and sense of injustice; as a woman she finds the courage to remain steadfast in her desires, and as an educated woman she finds the happiness that she is worthy of," says Tongue. "I hope the adults and the kids get a flavour of that through the show."
Turning to choreography was "a natural step" for Tongue, who started dancing aged three. She has choreographed for Birmingham Royal Ballet and Bristol Old Vic Theatre School.
For Jane Eyre, she auditioned 600 children and selected 52. "We want to give talented young dancers the chance to be part of a professional West End production. For the majority, this experience confirms their dreams. It is very exciting to see the children respond and pick up the steps very quickly. Jane Eyre is a dense and complex story, and when you see kids getting excited and enjoying it, it makes me excited." (Anjli Raval)
The more we read the more it sounds like a really unique take on the novel. Very worth it, we think, if you are in the area between May 15 and 18.

The Independent also has an article on the exhibition Lichfield at the Chris Beetles Gallery in London. The exhibition features the photographs taken by Patrick Lichfield. One of them sounds particularly interesting:
. . . a portrait of Oliver Reed in his overgrown greenhouse evokes the actor's wild, Heathcliff-esque moodiness. (Carola Long)
Click here to see the portrait.

Did you know that Carrie Bradshaw from Sex and the City and Jane Eyre could appear in the same paragraph along with Bridget Jones and Elizabeth Bennet? Here's proof, from The Telegraph:
For many women, she is as forceful a literary character as Jane Eyre or Elizabeth Bennet, and destined to play as pivotal a role in our cultural history as Bridget Jones. I am talking, of course, about Carrie Bradshaw, heroine of Sex and the City. (Bryony Gordon)
If you say so...

Today's blogs are mainly related to Jane Eyre: Bohenia has designed a pair of Jane Eyre-inspired earrings. Morsie Reads reviews briefly Dame Darcy's illustrated version of Jane Eyre. You Were There shares a few icons based on Jane Eyre 2006. And Uncle Eddie's Theory Corner posts a YouTube clip discussing Jane Eyre.

Finally, Harpham Pix posts what could be an HDR (?) image of the Black Bull.

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6 comments:

  1. I've just heard of this Carrie Bradshaw; the media seems intent on shoving this lady and her crew down our throats recently with the onslaught of press for the film.

    Love that Harpham Pix link! Thank you!

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  2. We will see how many Brontë-Carrie Bradshaw references we get in the runup to the film opening. Hopefully not that many.

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  3. Oliver Reed in typical moody pose! He would've been a perfect Heathcliff in his day - see his Bill Sykes in Oliver.
    http://www.oliver1968.co.uk/reed02C.jpg

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  4. A missed chance! It looks like back then they didn't shoot a new version every year or so :P

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  5. I found this on an Oliver Reed site:

    'A key to his character may lie in his favourite writers and heroes. Hemingway, Steinbeck and Jack London predominate as interpreters of The Way Things Are. Yet, the fictional heroes with whom he best identifies are Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights and Mr Rochester in Jane Eyre, very much the Gothic genesis of his life style.'

    http://sbellamy.demonweb.co.uk
    /OR/Press/press1970_23.html

    and on his imdb profile:

    'At one point I would have liked the role of Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights (1970). Then I saw it done by Laurence Olivier on television and he was so good that I decided to forget about it.'

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  6. That's interesting - many thanks, tattycoram! :)

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