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1[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mv5bnjrimdgyzdutnjlmos00n2niltkwnjetmde3nwrjotjlytaxxkeyxkfqcgdeqxvyndy1nzu5njy_v1.jpg]]
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3->"''[William Gillette] leant his considerable gifts as a playwright to the indestructible legend of the Conan Doyle detective and produced the play which is as much a part of the Holmes literature as any of Sir Arthur's own romances. And, as nobody will ever forget, he gave his face to him. For William Gillette was the aquiline and actual embodiment of Holmes himself. It is too little to say that William Gillette resembled Sherlock Holmes; Sherlock Holmes looks exactly like William Gillette.''"
4->-- '''Creator/OrsonWelles''', introducing his own adaptation of Gillette's melodrama for ''Radio/TheMercuryTheatreOnTheAir''
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6''Sherlock Holmes, A Play, wherein is set forth The Strange Case of Miss Alice Faulkner'' was the popular dramatization of Creator/ArthurConanDoyle's Franchise/SherlockHolmes stories, by William Gillette [[note]] Actually Conan Doyle wrote the first draft, but producer Charles Frohman was unhappy with it and convinced Doyle to let Gillette rewrite it -- hence why the two are often given co-credit in modern published editions, despite Doyle having minimal involvement. [[/note]], who also starred as Holmes in the original Broadway production and many subsequent ones. Rather than being an adaption of any of Conan Doyle's stories it takes elements from "A Scandal in Bohemia," "The Final Problem," and "A Study in Scarlet" to weave a completely original though very Holmesian tale.
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8The Miss Faulkner in question was the sister of an unnamed girl whose heart was broken by an ill-fated romance with an unnamed foreign gentleman who is heir to a considerable title; the romance being broken off at the insistence of his family. The love affair ruined that girl's brief life, and Alice has the evidence to prove it. She was taken in by a couple of confidence artists named James and Madge Larrabee (calling themselves Chetwood for the purposes of the scheme), who bought an OldDarkHouse in London to keep her and her poor old mother in and a desk safe to lock the documents in. But they couldn't twist the documents out of her before Sherlock Holmes got on the case.
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10Having his agent Forman (an Inspector on loan from Scotland Yard) in the house posing as butler, Holmes rescues Miss Faulkner and the package from the house, but yields the package to her on account of her possessive attachment to them. Larrabee's old friend, the Cockney crook Sid Prince, places him in contact with Professor Moriarty, king of all criminal enterprise in England. With Holmes slowly working on a chain of evidence that will send Moriarty straight to the gallows, the criminal genius gleefully decides to arrange Holmes's downfall for no fee at all. Holmes, knowing that Larrabee intends to trade him a counterfeit version of the package, hatches a plan of his own, risking his life to obtain the counterfeit package and swindle Alice into willingly giving him the genuine one. It's a dirty trick to play on such a nice girl, he knows.
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12The play was hugely successful. It debuted in 1899 and ran for over thirty years on both sides of the Atlantic with Gillette regularly performing the role on and off for decades. His final stage performance as Holmes was in 1932 at the age of ''79'', his final performance as Holmes in any medium was in 1935 at the age of '''''82''''' for a now lost radio dramatization. Gillette's numerous performances on stage, film, ''and'' radio [[note]] Two broadcasts: one an adaptation of "The Speckled Band" the other a dramatization of his own melodrama, both have been lost to time. [[/note]] ''made'' him the Holmes of his generation long before Creator/BasilRathbone. As Creator/OrsonWelles once said: "It is too little to say that William Gillette resembled Sherlock Holmes; Sherlock Holmes looks exactly like William Gillette". Illustrator Frederic Dorr Steele used Gillette as his model for Holmes for the accompanying illustrations in the American publications of Conan Doyle's stories. A young Creator/CharlieChaplin, then a teenager trying to escape the poverty of the London slums, played Billy regularly for 2½ years, including in one production opposite Gillette.
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14This play is responsible for several Holmes tropes that are not found in Conan Doyle. The deerstalker cap, [[note]] OK, it had been seen in Sidney Paget's illustrations but only when Holmes was in the country. Here Gillette wears it in the third act set in London just because [[/note]] the calabash pipe, the name "Billy" for the previously nameless pageboy, and finally the now famous phrase: "Elementary, my dear Watson" all originated in Gillette's play.
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17!!Film and TV Adaptations:
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19* A 1916 feature film starred William Gillette [[note]] His only film appearance in fact.[[/note]] himself and other members of a then recent production. This version was believed lost for nearly a century, until a copy was found in France in 2014, and after a year long restoration premiered a year later. In France the film had been edited into four episodes as a serial, and the English translation reflects that.
20* It was made again in 1922 with Creator/JohnBarrymore in the title role. The 1922 version is probably most notable for its remarkable cast. Roland Young, who made his film debut as [[TheWatson Watson]], would have a very successful career as a character actor in films like ''Film/{{Topper}}'' and ''Film/ThePhiladelphiaStory''. Creator/WilliamPowell, who became a huge star in TheGreatDepression, also made his film debut here as Forman the butler. Hedda Hopper, who would later leave acting to become a very famous newspaper gossip columnist, plays one of Moriarty's employees. Louis Wolheim, who became a pretty big star later in the silent era, plays a {{Mook|s}}. And Carol Dempster, who spent most of TheRoaringTwenties as the girlfriend, protege, and leading lady of Creator/DWGriffith, appears in the film as the {{Love Interest|s}}, in one of only two films she ever made that weren't directed by Griffith.
21* The credits for the 1939 Basil Rathbone film, ''Film/{{The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes|1939}}'' say that the movie is based off the play, but apart from having Moriarty as the villain [[InNameOnly it has nothing in common with the play.]]
22* A filmed stage performance starring Creator/FrankLangella as Holmes broadcast on HBO in 1981.
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24!!Radio and Audio Adaptations:
25* A now lost broadcast starring Gillette himself in 1935 for ''Radio/LuxRadioTheatre''.
26* A 1939 adaptation starring Creator/OrsonWelles for his ''Radio/TheMercuryTheatreOnTheAir''.
27* In 2006, Blackstone Audio as part of their Hollywood Theatre of the Ear line did a production featuring Creator/MartinJarvis as Holmes and the late Creator/TonyJay as Professor Moriarty as part of "The Sherlock Holmes Theatre" boxset.
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29!!Tropes:
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31* BakerStreetRegular: Billy, the page boy.
32* BatmanGambit: Holmes risks his life to negotiate the purchase of a MacGuffin from the villains, not letting Alice know he knows it's a fake in order to manipulate her into surrendering the real MacGuffin to the Count and Sir Edward, who congratulate Holmes for pulling off this ingenious scheme.
33* CanonForeigner: Alice Faulkner.
34* CanonImmigrant: Billy, who makes his first appearance as a page in this play, was later used by Conan Doyle in some of his own Holmes plays and eventually in a few of the actual canonical stories.
35* DamselInDistress: Alice Faulkner needs Sherlock's help.
36* DeathTrap: The GasChamber at Stepney, personally inspected by Moriarty. Holmes finds it easily escapable.
37* DiabolicalMastermind: Professor Moriarty.
38* ElaborateUndergroundBase: Moriarty's lair is a more realistic version of this trope, being based in the cellar of an old abandoned warehouse. Modern trappings include a private telephone / speaking tube and secret door.
39* GentlemanSnarker: Holmes really outdoes himself in this regard.
40* ItWorksBetterWithBullets: While Moriarty's back is turned, Holmes unloads his revolver so he won't have to worry if Moriarty should suddenly try to use it on him, which he does. HilarityEnsues.
41* MacGuffin: A packet containing letters, photographs, jewelry etc. that were sent to Alice Faulkner's late sister by a foreign gentleman who seduced and ruined her, and the villains want it out of the picture now that he wants to marry. The name of the gentleman is merely whispered inaudibly, and the sister's name is not revealed either.
42* NamedByTheAdaptation:
43** 221B Baker Street's anonymous pageboy becomes "Billy". Doyle himself would use the name in his later stories.
44** Gillette gives Professor Moriarty, the first name of Robert. Conan Doyle wouldn't give Moriarty the name James until 1915 in his final Holmes novel, ''Literature/TheValleyOfFear''.
45* ProofDare: After Holmes triumphantly declares to Larrabee that he can now have him arrested for robbery once he makes his escape, Larrabee scoffs: "My arrest! Ha, ha! Robbery eh— Why even if you got away from here, you haven't got a witness! Not a witness to your name." Holmes answers: "I'm not so sure of that, Mr. Larrabee! Do you usually fasten that door with a knife?" He points to the cupboard door, from behind which a very faint feminine moan is soon heard. Holmes then moves quickly to remove the knife, open the door and liberate the Bound and Gagged Alice Faulkner.
46* SherlockScan: Performed by Holmes on Watson, as usual, and before that on "Mr Chetwood."
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49!!Tropes particular to the 1922 film adaptation:
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51* AdaptationExpansion: Almost the whole first half of the film is set in Holmes's and Watson's youth, before the play.
52* AnimalMotif: Moriarty is associated with a spider spinning a web. In his first scene the film actually shows an image of Moriarty at the center of a literal spider web.
53* DrivenToSuicide: Rose jumps off a mountain in Switzerland after Prince Alexis rejects her. (In the play this happened in the backstory).
54* DullSurprise: This film is good evidence of why D.W. Griffith's efforts to make Carol Dempster a star failed.
55* EvilCannotComprehendGood: Moriarty is flabbergasted when he finds out that Holmes gave the incriminating letters back to Alice.
56* HeelFaceTurn: After confessing to the theft that opens the film, Forman Wells, who was a protege of Moriarty, goes to work for Holmes. In the play he is already Holmes' valet at the beginning.
57* MeetCute: Holmes first meets Alice when he's in university. He's examining some wildlife with his magnifying glass when he slips and falls in the road, whereupon Alice nearly hits him with her cart.
58* MythologyGag: Nothing of the plot is taken from Conan Doyle's writing, but the scene in which Holmes is jotting down a self-assesment of his knowledge of various fields ("Literature: nil...Chemistry: profound") is lifted directly from Watson's assesment of Holmes in ''Literature/AStudyInScarlet''.
59* NamedByTheAdaptation: Again! In the play Alice's sister killed herself in the backstory, and is not named. Here she is named Rose, and her suicide is shown.
60* OriginsEpisode: The film includes a long introductory sequence showing Holmes and Watson as university students together. It also shows Holmes meeting Alice, Prince Alexis, and Moriarty, well before all of them come back into his life. It joins the plot of the play nearly halfway through, when Alice is being held captive by the Larrabees.
61* ReCut: This film was believed for decades to be lost. When it was finally discovered in the 1970s, it existed not as a regular theatrical cut, but a jumbled mass of ''all'' the footage shot for the movie, including alternate takes and deleted scenes. Film historian Kevin Brownlow, working with the film's director, Albert Parker (then in his late 80s), stitched together what is believed to be a relatively close approximation of the film as it ran in theaters.
62* StatingTheSimpleSolution: Played completely straight. After getting a look at Moriarty's elaborate gas chamber trap, Louis Wolheim's {{Mook|s}} asks "Why all the fuss, gov'ner, why not knock 'im on the 'ead?".
63* WorstNewsJudgementEver: "SHERLOCK HOLMES HOUSE BURNED" isn't just a headline, it takes up a whole broadsheet.

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