Im having a problem believing that 'space' itself bends around gravity. Light passing through a gravitational field would not necessarily be curving with space but merely be affected by gravity and passing through the given space.
A star which goes supernova colapses into a pulsar. Gravitational force grows so great that it has just taken the matter of the star and condensed it to a tight mass. In a highly energetic state, the matter is eficiently packed together and 'squeezed' under extreme pressure, causing energy to be released at the weakest point which is the poles.(hense pulsar)
A star that developes into a black hole would undergo the same process, and achieve the same result without the eratic wobble. The gravitational force is so great that it pulls even light waves in. What do i think that would look like? I imagine a map of the magnetic field and figure that the 'blackness' would follow the same shape. the difference being the magnetic field is elongated around the equatorial circumfrence due to the tremendous force of the gravity, not to rule out an excrutiatingly high rotation speed.
The black hole would produce the same energy jets, from the poles, originating from the matter in the centre.
