Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Wuthering Heights (1959 film)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Directed by
  
Alan Burke

Based on
  
novel by Emily Bronte

Initial release
  
28 October 1959

Screenplay
  
Nigel Kneale

Written by
  
Nigel Kneale

Distributed by
  
ABC

Director
  
Alan Burke

Story by
  
Emily Brontë

Starring
  
Lew Luton Delia Williams

Release date
  
28 October 1959 (live, Sydney) 9 December Melbourne (recorded, Melbourne)

Production company
  
American Broadcasting Company

Cast
  
Lou Vernon, Annette Andre, Lew Luton, Delia Williams

Similar
  
Hurlevent, Emily Brontë's Wutherin, Dil Diya Dard Liya, Look Back in Anger, The Entertainer

Cathy s theme from wuthering heights 1939 alfred newman


Wuthering Heights is a 1959 Australian TV play adapted from the novel Wuthering Heights. It was directed by Alan Burke and based on a script by Nigel Kneale.

Contents

Cast

  • Lew Lutton as Heathcliffe
  • Delia Williams as Cathy
  • Annette Andre
  • David Bluford
  • Richard Davies
  • Geoffrey King
  • Hugh Stewart
  • Nancye Stewart
  • Lou Vernon
  • Production

    The story was mostly filmed live, but some segments were pre-recorded around Sydney. Lew Luton was a DJ and presenter of teen shows at the time.

    Reception

    It was one of three plays that Alan Burke directed that year. He said they all received "tiny ratings" and that Wuthering Heights "was too large for our television conditions, and things went wrong."

    The reviewer for The Age said the play was disappointing and that "the atmosphere of bleakness and howling winds was not created with realism. Noises off were much too prevalent. The casting was not up to standard. . . . Luton showed a lack of understanding on the part of both actor and producer."

    The TV critic for the Sydney Morning Herald thought the play was "straightforward enough in its story-telling and sufficiently wide-ranging in its techniques" but "hardly ever caught the necessary brooding Gothic spirit of the time, the place and the situation." He criticized Lew Luton as being too often "merely surly, when he should have been daemonic, and in general failed to reconcile his desire to work like a twentieth century actor." Other actors were praised, and Alan Burke's direction was called "carefully smooth; but there were moments when the spirit of the production was closer to Stella Gibbons than to Emily Bronte."

    References

    Wuthering Heights (1959 film) Wikipedia