'Wuthering Heights' by Emily Brontë, adapted by Lucinka Eisler and Ben Lewis
12 May 2023
Emily Brontë’s 'Wuthering Heights' is one of the many classic novels I have never got around to reading. More unusually, until last Saturday I had also somehow managed to avoid the many stage, film, TV and radio adaptations. So when we went to see the new version of 'Wuthering Heights' by the Inspector Sands theatre company at the Royal Theatre in Northampton, I genuinely did not know the story. This excellent production, conceived and developed by Lucinka Eisler and Ben Lewis and jointly produced by China Plate, Inspector Sands, Royal & Derngate, Northampton and Oxford Playhouse, presents the story as a tale recounted by six actors, each playing multiple roles, often questioning each other via a microphone to unpick the events at Wuthering Heights. It's a dark, brutal story of repeated abuse and violence but told, in this production, with much humour. Photos of the characters are helpfully stuck to a board at the back of the stage to provide a family tree - the actors removing their picture when a character dies. The grim tale of Catherine Earnshaw and Heathcliff is recounted in hindsight by the housekeeper Nelly Dean (Giulia Innocenti). It's a very inventive production, excellently acted. Condensing a complicated novel-length plot into a stage play, however, made it feel quite confusing at times - maybe assuming that most people would already be familiar with the story. So it has now prompted me to start reading the novel.
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