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Brontë and Mitchell
* Andie MacDowell as Brontë Mitchell

Brontë and ),
Anne's father, Patrick Brontë ( 1777 – 1861 ), was born in a two-room cottage in Emdale, Loughbrickland, County Down, Ireland.
Charlotte was born in Thornton, Yorkshire in 1816, the third of six children, to Maria ( née Branwell ) and her husband Patrick Brontë ( formerly surnamed Brunty or Prunty ), an Irish Anglican clergyman.
* Shirley ( novel ), an 1849 novel by Charlotte Brontë
* Lines ( Emily Brontë poem ), written in December 1837
* An area of County Down is known as the Brontë Homeland ( situated between Rathfriland and Banbridge, where Patrick Brontë had his church ), after Patrick Brontë ( originally Brunty ), father of Anne, Charlotte, Emily and Branwell.
At some point, the father of the sisters, Patrick Brontë ( born Brunty ), decided on the alternative spelling with the diaeresis over the terminal e to indicate that the name has two syllables.
Patrick Brontë ( 17 March 1777 – 7 June 1861 ), was born in County Down, Ireland, of a very poor family of farm workers.
Patrick's wife Maria Brontë, née Branwell, ( 15 April 1783 – 15 September 1821 ), originated from Penzance, Cornwall and came from a comfortably well off middle-class family.
The Victorian period was the golden age of the realistic English novel, represented by Jane Austen, the Brontë sisters ( Charlotte, Emily and Anne ), Charles Dickens, William Thackeray, George Eliot and Thomas Hardy.
* Heathcliff ( Wuthering Heights ), the central character from the novel Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë
Her subsequent feature films included three with director André Téchiné: French Provincial ( Souvenirs en France, 1975 ); The Bronte Sisters ( Les Sœurs Brontë, 1979 ), in which she portrayed Charlotte ; and Barocco ( 1976 ), for which she won a second César for her performance alongside Isabelle Adjani and Gérard Depardieu.
An exemplar post-colonial novel is Wide Sargasso Sea ( 1966 ), by Jean Rhys, a predecessor story to Jane Eyre ( 1847 ), by Charlotte Brontë, a literary variety wherein a familiar story is re-told from the perspective of a subaltern protagonist, Antoinette Cosway, who, within the story and the plot, is a socially oppressed minor character who is renamed and variously exploited.
* Villette ( novel ), a novel by Charlotte Brontë.
Some are commemorated in groups, such as the joint memorial for the Brontë sisters ( commissioned in 1939, but not unveiled until 1947 due to the war ), the sixteen World War I poets inscribed on a stone floor slab and unveiled in 1985, and the four founders of the Royal Ballet, commemorated together in 2009.
* " Spellbound " ( poem ), written by Emily Brontë
* Brontë ( play ), a play by Polly Teale, originally produced by the Shared Experience theatre company

Brontë and takes
The band does not reference 19th-century literature in their lyrics to any real extent, despite the fact the band takes its name from the novel Wuthering Heights by Emily Brontë, and despite the allusion in the name of their 2004 album Far From the Madding Crowd to Thomas Hardy.

Brontë and part
The town area, which is part of the Brontë Country, has a population of 89, 870, making it the third largest civil parish in England.
The Pennine Way passes six miles ( 10 km ) east of Burnley ; the Mary Towneley Loop, part of the Pennine Bridleway, the Brontë Way and the Burnley Way offer riders and walkers clearly-signed routes through the countryside immediately surrounding the town.
Just as Jane Austen had addressed the restricted lives women faced in the early part of the century, Charlotte Brontë, Anne Brontë, Elizabeth Gaskell and George Eliot depicted women's misery and frustration.
The area surrounding the waterfall is mainly moorland and farmland but is part of Brontë Country.

Brontë and marriage
Brontë in turn uses her fake marriage credentials to rent the apartment of her dreams.
Contacted by the Immigration and Naturalization Service to arrange an interview to determine her marriage is legitimate, Brontë tracks down Georges, who is working as a waiter.
Charlotte Brontë spent her honeymoon at Cuba Court in 1854 following her marriage to Arthur Bell Nicholls ( See Charlotte Brontë ).
According to Backsheider, Betsy Thoughtless is a novel of marriage, rather than the more popular novel of courtship and thus foreshadows the type of domestic novel that would culminate in the 19th century such as Charlotte Brontë ’ s Jane Eyre.

Brontë and with
The daughter of a poor Irish clergyman in the Church of England, Anne Brontë lived most of her life with her family at the parish of Haworth on the Yorkshire moors.
All three Brontë sisters worked as governesses or teachers, and all experienced problems controlling their charges, gaining support from their employers, and coping with homesickness — but Anne was the only one who persevered and made a success of her work.
* Map of Locations associated with Wuthering Heights and Emily Brontë
* The Tenant of Wildfell Hall ( 1848 ) by Anne Brontë is written in the form of letter from the narrator to his friend with the main heroine's diary inside it.
" He also made visits to his sister at Headingley, during which he visited the Brontë Parsonage at Haworth, where he was " chiefly impressed by a pair of Charlotte Brontë's cloth-topped boots, very small, with square toes and lacing up at the sides.
Advised by her attorney she could face criminal charges if their deception is uncovered, Brontë reluctantly invites Georges to move in with her.
Georges is a fiery tempered selfish slob and smoker who prefers red meat to vegetarian food, while Brontë is shown as a somewhat uptight and cold liberal progressive obsessed with her plants and wrapped up in environmental issues.
Following the release of Devotion, a Hollywood biography of the Brontë sisters filmed in 1943 but withheld from release during the suspension and litigation, de Havilland signed a three picture deal with Paramount Pictures.
Haworth is a tourist attraction, best known for its association with the Brontë sisters.
Tourism accounts for much of the local seasonal trade, with the major attractions being the steam railway and the Brontë parsonage.
In the 19th century, the town and surrounding settlements were largely industrialized, which put it at odds with the popular portrayal in Wuthering Heights, which only bore resemblance to the upper moorland that Emily Brontë was accustomed to.
The riots provided Charlotte Brontë with material for her novel Shirley.
One was Charlotte Brontë, who had been a pupil at Roe Head with Mary Taylor, the daughter of Joshua Taylor, a banker and wool merchant.
* Haworth: where the Brontë Sisters lived, is very popular with Japanese tourists, as Wuthering Heights has a cult following in Japan.
He announced at the time that he was also writing – with Tony Law-a sitcom pilot about the god Thor, for BBC Two, and script-editing another pilot, a sitcom about the Brontë sisters.
Far from suffering from the negative influences that never left them and which were reflected in the works of their later, more mature years, the Brontë children absorbed them with open arms.
Branwell's Charlotte Zamorna, one of the heroes of Verdopolis, towards increasingly ambiguous behaviour, and the same influence and evolution recur with Emily Brontë, especially in the characters of Heathcliff in Wuthering Heights, and Mr. Rochester in Jane Eyre, who display the traits of a Byronic hero.
Later in 1958, Floyd's Wuthering Heights ( after Emily Brontë ) was premiered at the Santa Fe Opera, with Curtin as the heroine.
* The Red House, a historic house in Gomersal, Yorkshire, with connections to Charlotte Brontë
Haworth is a village and tourist attraction in the English county of West Yorkshire, best known for its association with the Brontë sisters.
In his prolific career as a book illustrator, Eichenberg worked with many forms of literature but specialized in material with elements of extreme spiritual and emotional conflict, fantasy, or social satire, illustrating such authors as include Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Charlotte and Emily Brontë, Poe, Swift, and Grimmelshausen.

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