BRAM STOKER - AUTOGRAPH LETTER UNSIGNED 03/13/1891 WITH SIR HENRY IRVING - HFSID 43774
Price: $1,000.00
[BRAM STOKER] and SIR HENRY IRVING
Letter written by Bram Stoker, author of Dracula, and signed
by legendary actor Sir Henry Irving in 1891 regarding problems with theatre
seating. Irving and Stoker were both managers at London's Lyceum
Theatre.
Autograph letter signed "HIrving". 2 pages, 5x7¾, 1 sheet
folded, otherwise in fine condition. March 13, 1891. Addressed to T.
Schoenbush, Esq. In full: "Dear Sir I must thank you for calling my
attention to the matter in the galley which you find uncomfortable. I have given
instructions to have the evil done away with & I trust that when the work
has been carried out you will find its use Comfortable I am Remaining Faithfully
yours". STOKER (1847-1902) is famed as the author of
Dracula (1897). The Irish Stoker published several stories while
pursuing an unrewarding career as a civil servant. In 1878, his lifelong
friend, actor Henry Irving, invited him to London as an actor and manager of the
Lyceum Theatre. While performing these duties, Stoker continued to write,
producing a series of eerie fairy tales for children (Under the Sunset,
1882) and his first novel, The Snake's Pass (1890). In 1890 he also began
research for Dracula. Stoker was not the first to write stories about
vampires, but his was the most famous work, and the first to use the name of
Dracula. It is no accident that when the Horror Writers' Association began
giving annual achievement honors in 1987, they named the prize the Bram
Stoker Award. Known for his melodramatic acting and lavish productions, IRVING
(1838-1905), born John Henry Brodribb, was the leading British actor of
his day and, as a theatre manager, turned the struggling Lyceum Theatre into the
country's premiere theatre. Irving was a merchant's clerk when he received a
100-pound in 1856 inheritance that allowed him to buy his own wigs and props and
buy into an amateur production of Romeo and Juliet. He trouped in stock
theatre for 10 years, appearing in over 330 plays and most of Shakespeare's
theatrical repertoire, before finding his first real success in a 1866 play
in London, Hunted Down. His career took off in 1871, when he
appeared in The Bells at the Lyceum. Irving became one of the
company's stars and, in 1878, became the Lyceum's manager, a position he held
until 1902. He also hired Ellen Terry as his leading lady that year, and
the two went on to form one of the most famous partnerships in theatrical
history. The plays he produced were sometimes short on literary merit, but
he made up for questionable material with spectacular (and murderously
expensive) sets, music and lighting, and audiences on both sides of the Atlantic
rewarded him with packed houses. The Lyceum's fortunes began to go south in
1897 with a financially disastrous play about Peter the Great, put on by his son
Lawrence, and an equally disastrous fire that destroyed the theatre's stored
scenery. Illness kept him from touring the next year, and the Lyceum's box
office take suffered for it. He died, still on tour, after a 1905 performance of
Alfred, Lord Tennyson's Becket. He was knighted in 1895, the first
actor to receive this honor. Irving was a lifelong friend of
Dracula author Bram Stoker, who became the Lyceum's business manager and
gave the young author his first real exposure to high society. Lightly
toned, soiled and creased. Signature and salutation have bled lightly but are
legible. Body of letter, but not signature, has smeared lightly in places but is
legible. Folded in half and unfolded. Otherwise in fine condition.
Following an offer submission, users will be contacted at their account email address within 48 hours. Our response will be to accept your offer, decline your offer, or send you a final counteroffer. All offers can be viewed within the "Offer Review" area of your HistoryForSale account. Please review the Make Offer Terms prior to submitting an offer.
If you have not received an offer acceptance or counter-offer email within 24-hours please check your spam/junk email folder.