HomeEntertainmentEmerald Fennell Credits £62K Education for Life-Changing Impact: From Troubled Youth to...

Emerald Fennell Credits £62K Education for Life-Changing Impact: From Troubled Youth to Acclaimed Success

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Emerald Fennell attributes her success in filmmaking to the unique education she received at a prestigious boarding school, which she believes was instrumental in shaping her career path.

The director of “Wuthering Heights,” now 40, grew up in London but was sent to Marlborough College in Wiltshire. She credits the £62,000-a-year institution with keeping her focused and preventing her from veering off course during her formative years.

Marlborough College is renowned for being among the top 150 private schools globally and ranks within the UK’s top 30 senior schools.

The institution boasts an impressive list of alumni, including the Princess of Wales, comedian Jack Whitehall, and the famous wartime poet Siegfried Sassoon.

During an appearance on the podcast “Ruthie’s Table 4,” Fennell reflected on her experience, stating, “I went to boarding school at 13. It actually was, I think, probably a very good idea.”

‘I think I would have gone quite quickly off the rails in London. Even I knew that even as a child.

Emerald Fennell has said her career as a filmmaker might never have taken off had she not been sent off to a £62,000-a-year boarding school

Emerald Fennell has said her career as a filmmaker might never have taken off had she not been sent off to a £62,000-a-year boarding school

The Wuthering Heights director, 40, attended Marlborough College in Wiltshire which she thinks stopped her from going 'off the rails' (pictured with her sister Coco in 2008)

The Wuthering Heights director, 40, attended Marlborough College in Wiltshire which she thinks stopped her from going ‘off the rails’ (pictured with her sister Coco in 2008)

‘So, even though I was homesick and I did love my family, and as an insomniac at boarding school it’s quite lonely being in a room full of people awake when everyone’s asleep, I think it was probably a more wholesome scenario than if I’d stayed in London.’

Asked what the food at the school was like, Emerald said: ‘It was a lot of toast, and I love toast.

‘I’d been brought up on the ready meal, so I was just like delighted if there were chips for every meal. I mostly grew up on carbohydrates, which was absolutely fine by me.

‘It was only when I hit 18 and realised you actually can’t eat 5,000 calories worth of carbs every day, I was like, ‘No, this diet isn’t sustainable.”

Emerald’s upcoming film, stylised as ‘Wuthering Heights’ in quotation marks, is loosely inspired by Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel but has been lambasted for its casting, costumes and tone among others. 

The director’s version of the gothic classic is based on how she interpreted the novel as a teenager, with the Saltburn creator arguing that it would be impossible to directly adapt a book as ‘dense and complicated’ as the original.

Emerald did not have the blockbuster budget that one would expect for a film that has generated such buzz.

She reportedly turned down a $150million bid from Netflix and ended up with a $80million budget from Warner Bros. after they ensured her they would prioritise a theatrical release.

It is considered one of the 150 best private schools in the world and is also among the top 30 senior schools in the UK

It is considered one of the 150 best private schools in the world and is also among the top 30 senior schools in the UK

Emerald's upcoming film, stylised as 'Wuthering Heights' in quotation marks, is loosely inspired by Emily Brontë's 1847 novel

Emerald’s upcoming film, stylised as ‘Wuthering Heights’ in quotation marks, is loosely inspired by Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel

Amid the backlash, Emerald hit back at the criticism of her new project, defending the differences between her adaptation and the original works.

Speaking to Fandango, Emerald said: ‘I think it’s a lot of things but I think primarily it’s because the book means so much to me and it means so so much to so many people, and I’ve been doing a lot of talking to the Brontë Parsonage Museum and to other people who love this book too because it means a lot to me.

‘It’s every important that everyone who loves it as much as I do feels almost a part of it, I guess.’

She continued: ‘But the thing for me is you can’t adapt a book as dense and complicated and difficult as this book. I can’t say I’m making Wuthering Heights. It’s not possible.

‘What I can say is I’m making a version of it. There’s a version I remembered reading, which isn’t quite real. And there’s a version that I wanted to stuff to happen that never happened.

‘And so it is Wuthering Heights and it isn’t. But really I’d say any adaptation of a novel, and especially a novel like this, should have, you know, quotation marks around it.’

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