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Bram Stoker

Abraham “Bram” Stoker (8 November 1847 - 20 April 1912) was an Irish writer of novels and short stories, who is best known today for his 1897 horror novel Dracula. During his lifetime, he was better known for being the personal assistant of the actor Henry Irving and the business manager of the Lyceum Theatre in London, which Irving owned.

Early life

He was born in 1847 at 15 Marino Crescent, located today in Fairview, but then in Clontarf, Dublin, Ireland. His parents were Abraham Stoker (1799-1876) and the feminist Charlotte Mathilda Blake Thornely (1818-1901). Stoker was the third of seven children. Abraham and Charlotte were members of the Clontarf Church of Ireland parish and attended the parish church (St. John the Baptist located on Seafield Road West) with their children, who were both baptised there.

Stoker was bed-ridden until he started school at the age of seven, when he made a complete recovery. Of this time, Stoker wrote, “I was naturally thoughtful, and the leisure of long illness gave opportunity for many thoughts which were fruitful according to their kind in later years.”

After his recovery, he became a normal young man, even excelling as an athlete (he was named University Athlete) at Trinity College, Dublin , which he attended from 1864 to 1870. He graduated with honours in mathematics. He was auditor of the College Historical Society and president of the University Philosophical Society, where his first paper was on “Sensationalism in Fiction and Society”.

Early career

In 1876, while employed as a civil servant in Dublin, Stoker wrote a non-fiction book (The Duties of Clerks of Petty Sessions in Ireland, published 1879) and became the theatre critic for the newspaper Dublin Evening Mail. In December 1876, he gave a favourable review of the actor Henry Irving’s performance as Hamlet at the Theatre Royal in Dublin. Irving read the review and invited Stoker for dinner at the Shelbourne Hotel, where he was staying. After that they became friends. He also wrote stories, and in 1872 “The Crystal Cup” was published by the London Society, followed by “The Chain of Destiny” in four parts in The Shamrock.

Lyceum Theatre and later career

In 1878 Stoker married Florence Balcombe, a celebrated beauty whose former suitor was Oscar Wilde. The couple moved to London, where Stoker became acting-manager and then business manager of Irving’s Lyceum Theatre, a post he held for 27 years. On 31 December 1879, Bram and Florence’s only child was born, a son that they christened Irving Noel Thornley Stoker. The collaboration with Irving was very important for Stoker and through him he became involved in London’s high society, where he met, among other notables, James McNeil Whistler and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (to whom he was distantly related). In the course of Irving’s tours, Stoker got the chance to travel around the world. In the mid 1890s, Stoker is rumoured to have become a member of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, though there is no concrete evidence to support this claim. One of Stoker’s closest friends was J.W. Brodie-Innis, a major figure in the Order, and Stoker himself hired Pamela Coleman Smith, as an artist at the Lyceum Theater.

Stoker supplemented his income by writing novels; the best known being the vampire tale Dracula which was published in 1897. Before writing Dracula, Stoker spent eight years researching European folklore and stories of vampires. Although, loosely based on the macabre and cruel character of Vlad Tepes or Vlad the Impaler, a 15th century prince of Wallachia in Transylvania, a region also renowned for stories of vampires and werewolves, Stoker had plenty of material to draw on from early and contemporary Irish history.

The Great Famine (1845-47) and subsequent cholera outbreaks fuelled many stories of horror and of people being buried alive. In Celtic times storytellers were passed on of dreadful tales of the “undead”, those who were destined to wander the earth forever seeking the blood of others. These ghouls were known to have had bad blood or droch fhola (pronounced as druc ula!)

Dracula is an epistolary novel, written as collection of diary entries, telegrams, and letters from the characters, as well as fictional clippings from the Whitby and London newspapers. Stoker’s inspirations for the story were a visit to Slains Castle in Aberdeenshire, and a visit to the crypts under the church St. John the Baptist where Stoker was baptised. The Suicide’s Plot in Ballybough may well have inspired the “stake through the heart” method of vampire killing.

[audio:http://www.rte.ie/podcasts/2009/pc/pod-v-010409-14m36s-mooney.mp3]
Interesting podcast about Bram Stoker and Oscar Wilde and the woman who connected them

Death

Bram Stoker died in 1912, and was cremated and his ashes placed in a display urn at Golders Green Crematorium. After Irving Noel Stoker’s death in 1961, his ashes were added to that urn. The original plan had been to keep his parents’ ashes together, but after Florence Stoker’s death her ashes were scattered at the Gardens of Rest.

Posthumous

The short story collection Dracula’s Guest and Other Weird Stories was published in 1914 by Stoker’s widow Florence Stoker.

The first film adaptation of Dracula was named Nosferatu. It was directed by Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau and starred Max Schreck as Count Orlock. Nosferatu was produced while Florence Stoker, Bram Stoker’s widow and literary executrix, was still alive. Represented by the attorneys of the British Incorporated Society of Authors, she eventually sued the filmmakers. Her chief legal complaint was that she had been neither asked for permission for the adaptation nor paid any royalty. The case dragged on for some years, with Mrs. Stoker demanding the destruction of the negative and all prints of the film. The suit was finally resolved in the widow’s favour in July 1925. Some copies of the film survived, however and the film has become well known.

Bibliography

Novels

Short story collections

  • Under the Sunset (1881), comprising eight fairy tales for children
  • Snowbound: The Record of a Theatrical Touring Party (1908)
  • Dracula’s Guest and Other Weird Stories (1914), published posthumously by Florence Stoker

Uncollected stories

  • “Bridal of Dead” (alternate ending to The Jewel of Seven Stars)
  • “Buried Treasures”
  • “The Chain of Destiny”
  • “The Crystal Cup”
  • “The Dualitists”; or “The Death Doom of the Double Born”
  • “Lord Castleton Explains” (chapter 10 of The Fate of Fenella)
  • “The Gombeen Man” (chapter 3 of The Snake’s Pass)
  • “In the Valley of the Shadow”
  • “The Man from Shorrox”
  • “Midnight Tales”
  • “The Red Stockade”
  • “The Seer” (chapters 1 and 2 of The Mystery of the Sea)

Non-fiction

  • The Duties of Clerks of Petty Sessions in Ireland (1879)
  • A Glimpse of America (1886)
  • Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving (1906)
  • Famous Impostors (1910)
  • Bram Stoker’s Notes for Dracula: A Facsimile Edition (2008) Bram Stoker Annotated and Transcribed by Robert Eighteen-Bisang and Elizabeth Miller, Foreword by Michael Barsanti. Toronto: McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-3410-7

Thanks to Wikipedia for most of this information.

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4 Responses to “Bram Stoker”

  1. 1
    Noel:

    Interesting article but when did The Crescent become part of Fairview??? Stoker was born in The Crescent now as then in Clontarf. The road in front of the Crescent is the Clontarf Road and the border of Clontarf runs up the Malahide Road to the north. The nearest next location is Marino and Fairview is further west. Many people mistake Marino - and especially Marino Mart for Fairview.

  2. 2
    Denis:

    I’d say The Crescent is in Fairview alright. It’s opposite Fairview Park after all, and many would say that Clontarf doesn’t begin until you pass under the Railway bridge. Are you suggesting the part of Fairview Park is actually in Clontarf? Who says the Malahide Road is the border anyway? The only meaningful (i.e properly documented) borders in Dublin are the postal districts.

    I’d be interested though if you have evidence of borders between neighbourhoods and townlands within those postal districts. Old maps aren’t that useful because the presuppose a large area of “no man’s land” between distinct settlements or villages.

    The issue is always clouded by the tendency to associate all areas bordering an area with more social caché with the “better” area. Hence East Fairview becomes Clontarf, West Ballymun becomes Glasnevin, Bayside becomes Sutton and so on.

    If you ask me, Bram was a Fairview man :-)

  3. 3
    DublinLocal.com » Ballybough:

    [...] designated an area of burial known colloquially as ‘the suicide plot’ from which Bram Stoker derived the idea of the cross for his novel ‘Dracula,’ the cross being the junction of [...]

  4. 4
    Hugh A Walsh:

    Bram returns to Clontarf Castle next October 2010
    Skookfest

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