In the profoundly moving new Black Box Theatre production, we learn that to “Eyre” is human and to forgive, divine. Joe Urbaitis and Kiera Lynn Martin star in “Jane Eyre” at the Black Box, 1623 5th ...
Travel back in time to the days of Georgian England with the Orinda Starlight Village Players’ production of Jane Eyre. With bonnets and corsets and riding boots, the audience is swept into an era ...
Houston Chronicle: Review: Alley Theatre's revamp of Charlotte Bronte's 'Jane Eyre' is a breath of fresh air
Review: Alley Theatre's revamp of Charlotte Bronte's 'Jane Eyre' is a breath of fresh air
Houston Press: Love is in the Alley’s Charming Production of Brontë Classic Jane Eyre
Love is in the Alley’s Charming Production of Brontë Classic Jane Eyre
For "Jane Eyre," the musical on stage at the Gainesville Community Playhouse, John Caird and Paul Gordon have written one beautiful song that lingers in the memory. Called "In the Light of the Virgin ...
Chuck in a quietly sparkling turn by Judi Dench as Mrs Fairfax, the housekeeper at Thornfield Hall, and a commendably pious performance by Jamie Bell as whiskery clergyman St John Rivers, and you're ...
Mrs. is a title used before a married woman’s name (e.g., “Mrs. Carlton”). It shouldn’t be used for an unmarried woman, regardless of her age. It originated as an abbreviation of “Mistress,” but it’s now pronounced [miss -iz] and should be written in its abbreviated form, not as “Mistress.”
Mrs. originated as a contraction of the honorific Mistress (the feminine of Mister or Master) which was originally applied to both married and unmarried women in the upper class. Writers who used Mrs for unmarried women include Daniel Defoe, Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding, and Samuel Johnson.