<<

: The Brontë Sisters Written and Directed by

A drama tracing the lives of beloved novelists Charlotte, Emily, and Anne Brontë On MASTERPIECE Sunday, March 26, 2017 on PBS at 9pm ET

Ever since they were revealed to the world as quaint country-women and not the notorious Bell brothers of their pseudonyms, the Brontë sisters have fascinated legions of devoted readers. MASTERPIECE brings these remarkable literary geniuses to life with a beautifully filmed and acted two-hour drama, To Walk Invisible: The Brontë Sisters, airing on Sunday, March 26, 2017 at 9pm ET on PBS.

Written and directed by Sally Wainwright (Happy Valley, ), To Walk Invisible makes a perfect companion to MASTERPIECE’s past adaptations of Brontë novels: The Tennant of Wildfell Hall (1997, Peabody Award), (1998 and 2009), and (2007, three Primetime Emmys®).

Depicting the evolution of secluded, dutiful clergyman’s daughters into authors of the most controversial fiction of the 1840s, the drama stars Finn Atkins (Eden Lake) as Charlotte, who shocked society with her edgy epic, Jane Eyre; (War and Peace) as Emily, author of the darkly gothic and disturbing Wuthering Heights; and Charlie Murphy (Happy Valley) as Anne, whose true-to-life love story The Tenant of Wildfell Hall was deemed “coarse and disgusting” by Victorian critics.

Also starring are (Wolf Hall) as their distracted father, Reverend Patrick Brontë; and Adam Nagaitis (Houdini and Doyle) as the sisters’ only brother, Branwell, whose wild and dissipated life contributed to vivid characters in each of their novels.

To Walk Invisible was filmed in and around , the picturesque village where the Brontë sisters lived and which is now a mecca for Brontëphiles from all over the world. Scenes at their parsonage home were shot in an exact replica that recreates the feel of a lived-in mid-19th-century provincial dwelling, with the sisters congregating around the dining table to pen their stories and plot their editorial strategy.

Based largely on Charlotte’s voluminous letters, the film follows the Brontë sisters in the eventful three-year period that saw them rise from ordinary, unmarried women, taking care of the household and their widowed father, to the secret authors of the world’s most sensational literature.

– more – To Walk Invisible: The Brontë Sisters Press Release, Page 2

Although he never suspected it, Branwell was the inspiration. A would-be poet and artist, he was a complete failure due to alcoholism and opium addiction. As Reverend Brontë slowly went blind, Branwell was on an even more precipitous downward slide, inciting the sisters to do something to keep the family out of the poor house.

They had already tried being governesses—a thankless job except it provided good material for novels. So they set about turning personal experiences, keen observations, and unflinching honesty into fiction. Worried that female writers wouldn’t be taken seriously, they adopted male-sounding pseudonyms: Currer Bell for Charlotte, Ellis Bell for Emily, and Acton Bell for Anne, retaining their own initials.

The last name, Bell, may have been inspired by the arrival of a new set of bells for their father’s church, a momentous event in Haworth. Another possible source is the middle name of Reverend Brontë’s assistant priest, (played by Rory Fleck Byrne, Grantchester), who later married Charlotte after the tragically early deaths of her siblings.

But Charlotte gave her publisher a deeper reason for anonymity—and provided the title for this film: “I think if a good fairy were to offer me the choice of a gift, I would say—grant me the power to walk invisible.”

To Walk Invisible: The Brontë Sisters is a BBC Studios and BBC Wales production, in partnership with The Open University, co-produced with Lookout Point and MASTERPIECE. It is written and directed by Sally Wainwright. Executive producers are Faith Penhale and Sally Wainwright, Matthew Read for BBC and Rebecca Eaton for MASTERPIECE.

About MASTERPIECE The top-rated primetime show on PBS, MASTERPIECE is celebrating its 45th anniversary in 2016. MASTERPIECE is presented on PBS by WGBH Boston. Rebecca Eaton is executive producer. Funding for the series is provided by Viking River Cruises and Farmers Insurance® with additional support from public television viewers and contributors to The MASTERPIECE Trust. MASTERPIECE is known for presenting iconic shows such as Upstairs Downstairs, Prime Suspect, The Forsyte Saga, Poldark, Sherlock, Downton Abbey and Victoria. pbs.org/masterpiece

MASTERPIECE Press Contacts Ellen Dockser, [email protected], 617-300-5338 Laura Garvey, [email protected], 617-300-5342 Heidi Schaeffer, [email protected], 310-854-4800

January 2017

FUNDING FOR MASTERPIECE PROVIDED BY