Jane Eyre
A Musical in Two Acts. Book and additional lyrics by John Caird.
Based on the novel of the same name by Charlotte Bronte. Music
and lyrics by Paul Gordon.
Opened 10 December 2000 at the Brooks Atkinson Theatre and closed
10 June 2001 (210 perfs).
STORY:
Act One
Narrating her story, Jane Eyre looks back on herself as an
unhappy and mistreated child. Young Jane is an orphan barely
tolerated by Mrs. Reed, the wife of her late uncle, and brutalised
by her sadistic son, John. Mrs. Reed sends the spirited Jane
to a charitable school for girls run by the self-righteous
and cruel Mr. Brocklehurst. Lowood Institution is a grim and
unhealthy place only made bearable for Jane by the presence
of an older girl, Helen Burns, who shares with her a love of
books, art and nature. Helen teaches Jane that forgiveness
is all that makes life worth living.
During an outbreak of typhus at the school, Helen becomes
sick and dies. Jane is comforted by daily visits to her grave.
She survives the school long enough to grow up and become a
teacher there, but she yearns for freedom. Jane obtains a post
as governess to a young French girl, the ward of the mysterious
Mr. Rochester of Thornfield Hall. The housekeeper, the chatty
if slightly deaf Mrs. Fairfax, welcomes Jane to the house.
Jane quickly warms to her pupil, Adele, and to life at Thornfield,
especially after the appearance of the darkly brooding and
sardonic Mr. Rochester.
Rochester explains the presence of his ward, Adele, and his
dissipated past. Despite their differences, Rochester and Jane
are drawn to each other, though their feelings remain unspoken.
In the middle of the night, a mysterious Figure sets fire to
Mr. Rochester's bed, and Jane saves Rochester's life by dousing
the fire with a basin of water. Jane realises that she is falling
hopelessly in love with Rochester, but he seems incapable of
returning her love, though clearly attracted to and intrigued
by her. He invites several fashionable aristocrats for an extended
stay and pays court to one of them, Blanche Ingram, a beautiful
lady of rank who pledges her devotion to the finer things.
When a man named Mason joins the house-party, Mr. Rochester
is inexplicably shaken, and makes Jane promise to stand by
him always. Jane hopes to allay his torment, which appears
to be caused by the unnamed Figure on the upper floor of Thornfield,
whom Jane believes to be Grace Poole, a close-mouthed seamstress.
Rochester is in despair about his feelings for Jane, while
she prays that she can bring him peace. The inarticulate cries
of the mysterious Figure from the attic haunt both of them.
Act Two
A sense of irrational attraction and dread is expressed by
the Ensemble as Mason attempts to confront the mysterious Figure
and is viciously attacked by her. Mr. Rochester enlists Jane's
assistance to treat Mason's wounds, while telling her nothing
of the cause of the attack.
Rochester tells Jane he is to be married, and she tells him
in return that, if such be the case, she must leave Thornfield.
Seeming not to care, he leaves the decision to her. In a moment
of desperate self-honesty, she paints an unsparing portrait of
herself, and a flattering one of the gorgeous Blanche. Out walking
in the garden, the lovely Blanche calculates Thornfield's (and
Mr. Rochester's) net worth while Jane sadly contemplates having
to leave them.
The listless houseguests are delighted when "the Gipsy"
arrives to read their palms, but are so upset by their fortunes
that they soon break up the party and go home. Rochester has
chased Blanche away, and finally confesses his love to an incredulous
Jane and asks her to be his wife.
The happiness of the couple somewhat disconcerts Mrs. Fairfax
but plans go ahead for the wedding. On the wedding morning, however,
the dreadful secret of the Figure in the attic is revealed. Rochester
tries to hold on to Jane, but they both know her conscience will
never allow her to stay by his side as anything but his wife.
Jane runs off, taking nothing with her and leaving behind a
desperate Rochester. The madwoman in the attic runs amok, setting
fire to Thornfield Hall and luring Rochester onto the burning
roof as he attempts to save her.
Alone and penniless, hungry and exhausted, Jane makes her way
back to her childhood home at Gateshead Hall. There she meets
St. John Rivers, a young clergyman living in the house of her
dying aunt, Mrs. Reed. St. John tries to reconcile Jane and Mrs.
Reed, but despite Jane's genuine application of Helen Burns'
philosophy of forgiveness, Mrs. Reed dies a bitter and despairing
woman. St. John also decides that Jane would make the perfect
wife for a missionary, and a reluctant but grateful Jane is almost
ready to accept when she hears "The Voice Across the
Moors." She feels she cannot leave England until she
learns what has become of Mr. Rochester. Now a woman with her
own money - inherited from her aunt - she returns to find Thornfield
a burnt out shell. Jane discovers Mason there at the grave of
his sister, Bertha Mason Rochester, the doomed madwoman of the
attic. Mason tells Jane of the fire, and of Rochester's sad fate.
Reunited with Rochester, now blind and partially crippled, but
a free man at last, they declare themselves "Brave Enough
for Love"
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CAST
(in order of appearance):
Jane Eyre
Young Jane
Young John Reed
Mrs. Reed
Mr. Brocklehurst
Miss Scatcherd
Marigold
Helen Burns
Schoolgirls
Mrs. Fairfax
Robert
Adele
Grace Poole |
Edward Fairfax Rochester
Bertha
Blanche Ingram
Lady Ingram
Mary Ingram
Young Lord Ingram
Mr. Eshton
Amy Eshton
Louisa Eshton
Colonel Dent
Mrs. Dent
Richard Mason
The Gypsy
Vicar
St. John Rivers |
The action is set in England in the 1840s at Gateshead Hall,
Lowood School, Thornfield Hall and the surrounding Yorkshire Moors.
Musical Numbers
ACT 1
- The Orphan - Jane
- Children of God - School Girls, Mr Brocklehurst,
Mrs Reed, Miss Scratcherd, Ensemble
- Forgiveness - Mary Ingram, Young Jane, Jane
- The Graveyard - Jane, Young Jane, Ensemble
- Sweet Liberty - Jane , Ensemble
- Perfectly Nice - Marguerite, Adele, Jane
- As Good as You - Edward
- Secret Soul - Jane, Edward
- The Finer Things - Blanche
- Oh How You Look in the Light - Edward, Blanche,
Ensemble
- The Pledge - Jane, Edward
- Sirens - Edward, Jane, Miss Scratcherd
ACT 2
- Things Beyond This Earth - Ensemble
- Painting Her Portrait - Jane
- In the Light of the Virgin Morning - Jane , Blanche
- The Gypsy - The Gypsy
- The Proposal - Jane , Edward
- Slip of a Girl - Marguerite, Jane , Robert, Adele
- The Wedding - Ensemble
- Wild Boy - Edward, Jane , Bertha, Ensemble
- Sirens (reprise) - Jane , Edward
- Farewell Good Angel - Edward
- My Maker - Jane , Ensemble
- Forgiveness (reprise) - Mrs Reed, Jane , Ensemble
- The Voice Across the Moors - St John Rivers, Jane
, Edward
- Poor Sister - Richard Mason, Jane
- Brave Enough for Love -
Jane , Edward, Ensemble
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