Showing posts with label Sherlockian events. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherlockian events. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 27, 2016


EXCLUSIVE: Screenwriter James Coyne has been tapped to pen a rewrite ofSherlock Holmes 3. This re-kickstarts the threequel to Warner Bros’ franchise, which will return Robert Downey Jr, Jude Law and director Guy Ritchie. Ritchie/Wigram Productions, Team Downey, Silver Pictures, Dan Lin and Warner Bros are producing it.
It was October 2011 when Deadline broke the news that Iron Man 3 scribe Drew Pearce had been set by the studio to pen the next installment of the series. That came just before the second pic, Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows bowed. It ended up outgrossing the 2009 original with a $186.8 million domestic haul and a worldwide take of $545.4M.
Coyne reteams with Lionel Wigram and Warners, after he penned last year’s Black List script Treasure Island for them. He is repped by Gersh and Felker Toczek Suddleson Abramson.


Also;

While critics didn’t exactly love 2011’s Sherlock Holmes: A Game of ShadowsRobert Downey Jr.’s blockbuster sequel snatched up over $545 million worldwide. That’s a number studios don’t exactly ignore, especially Warner Bros.
Which is why they’re still going ahead with a third film. Now, way back in 2011, it was announced that Iron Man 3 screenwriter Drew Pearce was slated to figure out the next mystery for Holmes to solve. Not anymore.
As Deadline reports, they’ve now hired James Coyne to piece together a proper puzzle, which jives with what Downey Jr. said last week about filming starting later this year.
Sadly, Coyne doesn’t have much to his name, which makes this choice seem rather elementary, but at least we’ll have Downey Jr., Jude Law, and director Guy Ritchie back into the fold.

Monday, April 25, 2016

It's offical . . .

Daughter received her first official investiture into a Sherlock Holmes society this past Friday.
She is now a member of that august group The Chester Baskerville society.

Always a fun night when we go to one of their events. As much social as Sherlockian.

She made sure we framed her certificate the next morning.

Maybe she will beat me to the BSI?

Friday, May 30, 2014

One of Art Shroeder's favorite events will return soon. . .


The Noble Bachelors will once again host the 'Silver Blaze' race at Fairmount Park on July 12th 2014. I will post here as I get more details.


Tuesday, May 27, 2014

It has been a good Sherlockian week for me. . . .

Yes it has.
Lots of good stuff.

First, I received my poster that Doyleokian gave us heads up about.




Looking forward to getting it framed.

Next, I received my copy of the latest edition of 'The Watsonian', which is always a treat,




In which I am humbled to be a contributor to this time.



And then, after first looking forward to, then fretting over how fast my fingers and internet service are, I was able to make a reservation for. . .




And on top of all that, 'Elementary' is over for the year, which puts Brad in a better mood, so I am going to join him on his trip through his summer reading list.
Which is listed below.

I am, however, a day late starting and need to catch up.

May 26, 1903, Tuesday -- "Shoscombe Old Place" (M)
June 1, 1889, Saturday -- "The Stock-broker’s Clerk" (M-Wd-S)
June 1, 1894, Friday -- "The Mazarin Stone" (S)
June 4, 1902, Wednesday -- "The Six Napoleons" 
June 8, 1889, Saturday -- "The Boscombe Valley Mystery" (M-D-Wd)
June 19, 1902, Thursday -- "The Three Garridebs"(Y-M-Wd)
June 20, 1888, Wednesday -- "The Greek Interpreter" (Wd-S)
June 21, 1889, Friday -- "The Man with the Twisted Lip" (M-D-Y-Wd)
June 23, 1881, Thursday -- "The Musgrave Ritual"
June 30, 1889, Sunday -- "The Engineer’s Thumb" (Y-S)
July 3, 1880, Saturday -- "The Gloria Scott"
July 10, 1895, Wednesday -- "Black Peter" (Y-M-Wd)
July 16, 1881, Saturday -- Holmes meets Watson in Chapter One of A Study in Scarlet
July 19, 1887, Tuesday -- "The Second Stain" (Wd-S)
July 25, 1898, Monday -- "The Dancing Men" (M-Wd)
July 26, 1902, Saturday -- "The Disappearance of Lady Francis Carfax" 
July 29, 1887, Friday -- "The Naval Treaty" (M-D)
July 30, 1907, Tuesday -- "The Lion’s Mane" (M-Y-Wd)
August 1, 1894, Wednesday -- "The Norwood Builder" (M)
August 2, 1914, Sunday -- "His Last Bow" (M-D-Y)
August 20, 1898, Saturday -- "The Retired Colourman" (Y-S)
August 30, 1887, Tuesday -- "The Crooked Man" (Wd)
August 30, 1889, Friday -- "The Cardboard Box" (M-Wd)

So, all in all, I would say that is a good Sherlockian week.

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Thanks to Jack Wilson for this story. . . .

Sherlock Holmes: Can a fictional man be a London icon?

Sidney Paget illustration of of The Adventure of Silver BlazeSherlock Holmes has been reimagined time and time again since his first outing in 1887 (image from 1892)

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"The air of London is the sweeter for my presence," Sherlock Holmes once said, and yet the detective never lived, nor died. He existed solely in our imaginations.
Now, the Museum of London is planning a new exhibition focusing on the detective, citing the creation of the author and medic Sir Arthur Conan Doyle as one of London's most "iconic" figures.
The museum says it will be the first time since the Festival of Britain in 1951 that there has been a major Sherlock Holmes exhibition.
It comes complete with artefacts which it is hoped will unpick the origins of the character and shine a gaslight on Victorian London.
Sherlock HolmesPipes, deerstalker hats and guns have become synonymous with the character
Curator Alex Werner said: "Sherlock Holmes was an incredibly powerful, cultural, London icon.
"The main challenge was anything you select [for this exhibition] has nothing to do with Sherlock Holmes because he is a character, but on the other hand it has everything to do with him.
"Take the pipe. It's a minor object, but put next to Sherlock Holmes it takes on a real life and we can draw on fantastic objects from around the world to tell the story of London."
The Strand magazineThe Strand reached a weekly audience of half a million people
The exhibition will use Holmes as a "prism" to look at the city and to take a closer look at the character's analytical mind, forensic science of the time and his Bohemian nature crossed with what being an English gentlemen meant in Victorian England.
It will also look at what possibly prompted the creation of the character, with the original pages from Edgar Allan Poe's hand-written manuscript The Murders in the Rue Morgue (1841) among the items that will be on display.
It was considered by many to be the first detective story, and Conan Doyle is known to have read it and the detective character C Auguste Dupin was said to be one of his "boyhood heroes".
Strangely, the author had originally intended Holmes to be a minor character in his own literary work.
He hoped that people would devour his novels, plays and poetry, but it was the detective who drew in the crowds, initially through The Strand magazine, which had a weekly audience of about half a million people. He later completed 56 stories about the character.
Original drawings by Sidney Paget, who illustrated the stories in the magazine, feature in the exhibition alongside an oil painting of the author scribbling in his "ideas book".
Dr Pat Hardy, the curator for paintings and prints, has worked on the exhibition selecting images which represent Holmes's London.
Sidney Paget portrait of Arthur Conan DoyleThe exhibition will feature Sidney Paget's portrait of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Dr Hardy said: "The urban landscape that was inhabited by that very famous character conveys an idea of London at the turn of the century - a very modern city - a large imperial network with efficient communication and transport networks.
"We have recreated the ideas of these journeys by some of the artwork.
"He's always rattling up Holborn to get to King's Cross in the hansom cabs.
"Sherlock Holmes is a presence both seen and unseen in this city."
The idea for the show came from the success of the museum's previous London "icon" shows on Jack the Ripper and Charles Dickens, but this is the first attempt at a fictional character.
Project manager Annette Day said: "It's been two years since we first had the idea. Dickens had proved very popular and we thought about how literature can help us understand the city.
A view of the StrandHolmes "is set in a specific time period, but he adapts to any place and any time"
"We really grasped the challenge and had to be really creative with the way we use and look at the objects."
One of the items on display will be an authentic collapsible top hat which has been X-rayed so that people can see how it works, which Ms Day said mimics the "details and deductions" of Holmes.
There is also a collection of shoes which "Sherlock would have looked at and known if you walked with a limp".
Benedict CumberbatchBenedict Cumberbatch is one of the latest actors to reinvent the character
The exhibition also dedicates space to the character's life on stage and in film, including the Derek Rose camel dressing gown Benedict Cumberbatch wore in the BBC's most recent series of Sherlock.
The performances of actors gone by, including William Gillette, who was performing the character while Conan Doyle was still writing, and Jeremy Brett are also considered to see if they offer clues as to why Holmes has endured 125 years, being reinvented by every generation.
Mr Werner said: "The closest person to compare him with are the comic book heroes of the 20th Century - they've been revived and refreshed.
"Sherlock Holmes was a man of action and so he's a bit like a Batman, but earlier.
"He is one of London's icons. He helped to make London the way it is. He is the most famous Londoner who never lived and never died."
In the fashion of Sherlock Holmes, the Museum of London has promised more will be revealed before the exhibition opens on 17 October.

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