Sherlock
Holmes, the fictional character created
by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is, perhaps,
the most popular literary character
adapted to the performing arts. The
adventures of Sherlock Holmes have
been transformed for the dramatic
stage (Sherlock Holmes, 1899, and
The Crucifer of Blood, 1978), the
musical stage (Baker Street, 1965),
ballet (The Great Detective, 1953),
film, radio and television. On television,
the character has appeared in specials,
series, parodies, animation, made-for-television
films, and even in a recurring role-playing
game by the android Data (Brent Spiner)
on Star Trek: The Next Generation.
The
actors who have undertaken the role
for television include Ronald Howard
(son of film actor Leslie Howard),
Alan Napier, Peter Cushing, Christopher
Lee, Frank Langella, Tom Baker (later
the Doctor in Dr. Who), Edward Woodward,
Charlton Heston, Roger Moore, Leonard
Nimoy, Peter O'Toole (as the voice
of the detective in the Australian
animated Sherlock Holmes and the Baskerville
Case), and Jeremy Brett. Even Basil
Rathbone, who portrayed the character
in 14 feature films and eight years
on the radio, played Holmes on the
small screen. Comic actors such as
Milton Berle, Monty Python's John
Cleese, Larry Hagman, and Peter Cook
have all played the master sleuth
in television parodies.
Sherlock
Holmes was the first fictional character
adapted for television. The Three
Garridebs, a trial telecast, was broadcast
on 27 November 1937 from the stage
of New York City's Radio City Music
Hall by the American Radio Relay League.
The live presentation was augmented
with filmed footage to link scenes
together. Louis Hector played the
detective, and William Podmore played
his associate, Dr. Watson.
Until
1951, Holmes' appearances on television
were limited to a variety of special
broadcasts, including the hour-long
parody, Sherlock Holmes in the Mystery
of the Sen Sen Murder, on the 5 April
1949 episode of NBC's Texaco Star
Theatre. The satire featured Milton
Berle and Victor Moore as Holmes and
Watson, and a guest appearance by
Basil Rathbone as Rathbone of Scotland
Yard.
The
first television series of Sherlock
Holmes adventures was produced in
the United Kingdom. Vandyke Pictures
intended for its half-hour adaptation
of The Man with the Twisted Lip, starring
John Longden as Holmes and Campbell
Singer as Watson, to be the first
of a six-episode series. However,
the pilot did not impress executives,
and only the one episode was broadcast
(in March 1951). Three months later,
the BBC aired its own pilot, an adaptation
of The Mazarin Stone, with Andrew
Osborn as Holmes and Philip King as
Watson. In late 1951, the BBC produced
the first television series of Sherlock
Holmes adventures, but with a new
producer and new actors (Alan Wheatley
as Holmes and Raymond Francis as Watson).
Six of Arthur Conan Doyle's stories
were adapted to the 35-minute format
by C.A. Lejeune, a film critic for
The Observer.
Basil
Rathbone who, for many years gave
what was considered the definitive
portrayal of Holmes, reprised his
role as the detective in a half-hour
live presentation for the 26 May 1953
episode of CBS' Suspense. The episode,
The Adventures of the Black Baronet,
was adapted by Michael Dyne from an
original story by crime novelist John
Dickson Carr and Adrian Conan Doyle,
son of the character's creator. The
episode was intended as a pilot for
an American series, but it was not
selected for programming by any network.
The
first and only American television
series of Sherlock Holmes adventures
finally aired in syndication in the
fall of 1954. The 39 half-hour original
stories were produced by Sheldon Reynolds
and filmed in France by Guild Films.
Ronald Howard starred as Holmes and
Howard Marion Crawford starred as
Watson. The series' associate producer,
Nicole Milinaire, is considered to
be the first woman to attain a senior
production role in a television series.
Since
1954, American adaptations of the
Holmes stories have been limited to
various made-for-television films
(e.g., The Return of the World's Greatest
Detective with Larry Hagman as Holmes,
Sherlock Holmes in New York with Roger
Moore as Holmes, and The Hound of
The Baskervilles) or televised stage
plays (Frank Langella's Sherlock Holmes
and The Crucifer of Blood with Charleton
Heston).
In
addition to producing made-for-television
Holmes films in Britain, the BBC continued
to produce other series of Holmes
adventures. A 1965 series of 12 adaptations
was produced by David Goddard and
featured Douglas Wilmer who, The Times
noted, bore an "uncanny resemblance"
to the sleuth in the original book
illustrations by Sydney Paget. A 1968
series starring Peter Cushing dispensed
with many of the conventions invented
by other actors for the character,
such as the meerschaum pipe, the deer-stalker
cap, and the phrase, "Elementary,
my dear Watson." The series aspired
to be true to the character as written
in the novels. In an attempt to capitalize
on Cushing's popular work in 1950s
and 1960s horror films, the BBC series
accentuated the elements of horror
and violence in the original stories.
In
1984, Britain's Granada Television
mounted the most popular series to
date. Shown under various titles (The
Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, The
Return of Sherlock Holmes, and The
Casebook of Sherlock Holmes) in Britain,
the series was broadcast in the U.S.
as part of PBS' Mystery! series. Critics
have praised the high quality of the
series' productions, including an
authentic-looking Baker Street, and
Jeremy Brett's performance as Holmes
has been ranked as among the finest
portrayals of the detective.
The
appeal of the character has not been
limited to English-speaking countries.
An original teleplay, The Longing
of Sherlock Holmes (Touha Sherlocka
Holmes), in which Holmes is tempted
to commit the perfect crime, was produced
for Czechoslovakian television in
1972. In 1983, Russian television
produced a series of five 80-minute
adaptations of Conan Doyle's stories
featuring leading Soviet actors Vassily
Livanov and Vitaly Solomin as Holmes
and Watson.
-Susan
Gibberman
http://www.museum.tv/ |