"Jane Eyre" is a 1949 American television play adapting the novel Jane Eyre by Charlotte Brontë. It aired as an episode of Studio One and starred Charlton Heston as Rochester.
A woman, Jane Eyre, goes to work as a governess at Thornfield Hall, run by the mysterious Rochester.
The episode was Heston's sixth appearance for Studio One. He had previously made "Of Human Bondage" for the show; like that, this was adapted by Sumner Locke Elliott.
The episode was directed by Franklin J. Schaffner, whose biographer wrote, "From the start of the show to its end, [producer Worthington] Miner's influence is apparent: Schaffner's camera is constantly on the move; in a few years he would be known for his long and graceful tracking shots. Oddly enough, none of the other networks used a moving camera to any extent."
The Independent called it "moving and well integrated."
Producer Hal B. Wallis was so impressed by Charlton Heston's performance he offered him a contract and put Heston in Dark City.