Re-Imagined Radio | The Immortal Sherlock Holmes
Re-Imagined Radio presents Metropolitan Performing Arts and other community volunteers and their performance of The Immortal Sherlock Holmes.
Sherlock Holmes is the most famous of all fictional detectives and stories about his exploits are considered some of the finest of the detective and crime fiction genre.
Arthur Conan Doyle grew tired of Sherlock Holmes and wanted to shift his
writing focus to other stories. So, he killed off Holmes in "The Final
Problem," first published in 1893. Holmesian fans would have nothing to
do with this and Doyle was forced to bring his fictional detective back
from the dead in The Hound of the Baskervilles, a novel published in The Strand Magazine between 1901 and 1902. Cleverly, Doyle set the time frame before Holmes' death, and so Sherlock Holmes remains immortal even though he never lived.
This Re-Imagined Radio performance has an impressive pedigree. It begins with a stage play written by Arthur Conan Doyle in 1897. The following year, American playwright and actor William Hooker Gillette worked with Doyle to rewrite the play for American audiences who wanted melodramatic stories about stoic, strong heroes keeping their wits about them in both dangerous and romantic situations.
Gillette introduced several props now considered Sherlock Holmes icons, including his curved pipe (easier to hold in the mouth while speaking and did not obstruct the audience's view of the actor's mouth), a splendid dressing gown, the violin, the magnifying glass, the Scottish deerstalker cap, and the phrase "Oh, this is elementary my dear fellow," later changed by the popular press to "Elementary, my dear Watson." Interesting trivia fact: Sir Arthur Conan Doyle never used the phrase "elementary, my dear fellow" in his novels or stories about Holmes.
Gillette performed his Sherlock Holmes melodrama during hundreds of performances in the United States and England. His play was adapted for movies and radio. In 1938, it was adapted and performed by The Mercury Theatre on the Air, starring Orson Welles as Sherlock Holmes. From this lineage Re-Imagined Radio crafted its own adaptation of The Immortal Sherlock Holmes.
LEARN more at the Re-Imagined Radio website.