Three exhibitions will mark the main events of the 200th anniversary. Charlotte Great and Small will open at the Brontë Parsonage Museum in February. Commissioned by Tracy Chevalier who has designed 'an exhibition which, through objects and quotations, explores the contrast between Charlotte’s constricted life and her huge ambition':
Highlights include Charlotte’s child-size clothes, tiny books and paintings she made, a scrap from a dress she wore to an important London dinner party, and a moving love letter loaned by the British Library especially for the bicentenary. Quotes from Charlotte’s letters and writings will be projected onto the walls to demonstrate the scale of her hopes and dreams.Almost simultaneously (it opens a few days later but also in February) the National Portrait Gallery in London will hold Celebrating Charlotte Brontë: 1816 – 1855:
Contemporary art installations will also be displayed throughout the Parsonage, with UK and international artists responding to the idea of the miniature. These will include a small bed embroidered with words by and about all of the Brontës, as well as a Knitted Jane Eyre!
This display explores Brontë’s life and literary career through portraits and includes treasures on loan from the Brontë Parsonage Museum.This exhibition will cross the Atlantic and in September it will open at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York, we suppose with the addition of several of their own Brontë treasures. It will close in January 2017.
Central to the display will be the presentation of new research into the only surviving painted portraits of Charlotte with her two sisters, Emily and Anne, by their brother Branwell, in the Gallery’s Collection. This will explore the intriguing story of its discovery folded on top of a wardrobe, subsequent acquisition by the Gallery and its restoration.
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Several other works will be published somehow featuring the Brontës in the background: Mick Jackson's Yuki Chan in Brontë Country; pieces of local history like The Real Wuthering Heights: The Story of The Withins Farms by Steven Wood and Peter Brears; poetry books like The Jane and Bertha in Me by Rita María Martínez. But surely, one of the books that will be reviewed often and featured in headlines will be the first novel by Catherine Lowell: The Madwoman Upstairs or something like an Agatha Christie mystery inside the Brontë narrative:
Samantha Whipple is used to stirring up speculation wherever she goes. Since her father’s untimely death, she is the presumed heir to a long-rumored trove of diaries, paintings, letters, and early novel drafts passed down from the Brontë family—a hidden fortune never revealed to anyone outside of the family, but endlessly speculated about by Brontë scholars and fanatics. Samantha, however, has never seen this alleged estate and for all she knows, it’s just as fictional as Jane Eyre or Wuthering Heights.
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Scheduled for 2016 is Christine Alexander's authoritative and (definitive?) edition of Charlotte Brontë juvenilia: Early Writings of Charlotte Bronte 1837-40. Another book announced for 2016 but not confirmed is Charlotte Brontë from the Beginnings: New Essays from Juvenilia to the Major Works (Edited by Judith E. Pike and Lucy Morrison). And last but not least, this year's Brontë Society Conference will analyse the condition of women in Charlotte Brontë's day. It will be held in Manchester and it will count with speakers like Germaine Greer, Sally Shuttleworth, Claire Harman or Christine Alexander.
The film and TV front seems to be covered by the BBC productions that were unveiled a few months ago: the feature length production To Walk Invisible: The Brontë Sisters written by Sally Wainwright will explore the 'increasingly difficult relationship [of the sisters] with their brother Branwell.' Living Like a Brontë will be a sort of docudrama meets reality TV where three known journalists will be 're-living the sisters’ daily routines, visiting key places in their world and immersing themselves in their letters and diaries, and through the sisters’ interactions with each they’ll discover what it was that served as their sources of inspiration.' Finally Brontës at the BBC will 'dig deep into the BBC’s archive to explore the Brontës’ famous works and discover the fascinating lives these sisters lived'. Maybe it will be a chance to see images from Villette 1970?
And what about the Brontës independent biopic written and directed by David Anthony Thomas? We don't know but we are not very optimistic as there are no news and no updates since last summer.EDIT (01/01/2016): Nevertheless intriguing pictures published on instagram by N Ø R R films gives us hopes that a Brontë biopic is indeed in the works... who knows?
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And Publick Transport will continue touring We Are Brontë!; the Slovak National Theatre will rescue its Jane Eyrová adaptation for some new performances in January with English subtitles; Mel Dodge's Miss Brontë will tour Australia ...
Yes, 2016 will be a very (Charlotte) Brontë year.
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