Friday, January 27, 2017

Quarter 4 Review 2/8



002 Historical Drama – Old

Appropriately, Vampyre Man by Joseph O’Connor was as much a biography of Bram Stoker as it was of Henry Irving.  I don’t know that many people know the influence the great actor Henry Irving was on Bram Stoker, who was his manager, and in creating the character of Dracula, though I think this play exaggerates somewhat.  Nevertheless, I really enjoyed the play.  Anton Loesser steals the show as a larger-than-life Irving, though some of the metaphors are a bit obvious—an aristocrat who sucks people dry!  Darragh Kelly is wonderful as a Bram Stoker who disbelieves that any lasting fame will ever come to him through his writing.  His wife, Florence (Eva Birthistle), is a difficult role given what we know of her (she basically had Nosferatu destroyed because of the copyright issue), but her frustrations and difficulties are understandable and realistic.  I liked the idea of Stoker as a clerk with a poetic soul who gambled it all to run Irving’s theatre with very little prior practical experience—an inspiration to us all.  Amanda Redman was Ellen Terry, who has a soft spot for both Stoker and Irving.  Very compelling.  The play was directed by Stephen Wright and was originally broadcast in 2015.

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