‘Wuthering Heights’ unleashes fresh wave of Brontë-mania

The latest adaptation of the classic novel is drawing many visitors to Haworth, a small English village where the author and her sisters lived
A footpath sign marking the direction to ‘Top Withins’, a ruined farmhouse notable for its association with Emily Brontë’s novel Wuthering Heights, includes a notice with phonetic Japanese reading ‘Arashi Ga Oka’ (Wuthering Heights), near Haworth, northern England. Photos: Oli Scarff/AFP

Perched on the edge of the rugged Yorkshire moors that inspired Emily Brontë to write her masterpiece Wuthering Heights, the quaint village of Haworth has long been a place of literary pilgrimage.

Now the latest big-screen adaptation of her classic 1847 novel  − starring Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi and with a Charli XCX soundtrack − is drawing a fresh influx of visitors.

It was here that Emily and her sisters, Charlotte and Anne, lived and wrote.

More than 150 years after the sisters’ deaths, “the world is still fascinated with their stories,” said Canadian retiree Nancy Marto, adding that being able to visit Haworth was “a dream come true”.

“I think the fact that there is a new version of Wuthering Heights… speaks to the power of these authors, to Emily, but also to her sisters,” she said.

Two weeks after the release of the film, picturesque Haworth in northwest England with its narrow, cobbled streets and small stone houses, is packed.

Above left: A sign leading to Brontë Street in Haworth, northern England. Top left and bottom: People walking along Main Street in the village centre.

The film, loosely based on the book, was one of the most anticipated of the year.

At the heart of the plot is the passionate relationship between Heathcliff, a boy of mysterious origins taken in by the wealthy Mr Earnshaw and his daughter Catherine.

The moors, battered by the elements, play a central role in the novel, as well as in Emerald Fennell’s film.

A couple exploring the Brontë Waterfall on the South Dean Beck, a location known to have been appreciated by the Brontë sisters, near Haworth.

‘Completely besotted’

Johnnie Brigg, a local tour guide, has been inundated with requests in recent weeks.

“They want to come here and experience the Brontës, the moor, and find their own interpretation of Emily,” he said.

The film would attract a “whole new generation of people” who had not yet read the book but were “completely besotted” after seeing the film, he added.

The parsonage between the village and the moors where the Brontës lived with their clergyman father and brother, Branwell, is now a museum dedicated to their memory.

A display in St Michael and All Angels’ church in Haworth features items linked to the Bronte family, who lived at the adjacent parsonage.

Emily’s sister Charlotte also wrote Jane Eyre here, another classic of English literature.

The museum’s Mia Ferullo, who has been giving talks on “Brontë-mania” for the past fortnight, said “so many people” were “picking up the book for the first time” as a result of the film.

Museum director Rebecca Yorke said 500 people of all ages and backgrounds visited on one Saturday.

Numbers like that were usually only seen in peak season such as during the August summer holidays, Yorke said.

“Everyone is talking about Emily Brontë and Wuthering Heights…. It’s just extraordinary,” she added.

An old copy of the novel Wuthering Heights in a shop window on Main Street in Haworth.
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