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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Maureen WhittakerPublisher: MX Publishing Imprint: MX Publishing Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 3.50cm , Length: 27.90cm Weight: 1.787kg ISBN: 9781787055889ISBN 10: 1787055884 Pages: 468 Publication Date: 12 September 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"""Maureen Whittaker's 'Playing a Part' presents a remarkable and highly readable compendium of the professional career of the scintillating actor Jeremy Brett - who thrilled audiences for four decades onscreen and onstage in roles ranging from Orlando to Dracula, William Pitt the Younger, and Freddie Eynsford Hill - culminating, in his creation of what what is widely regarded as the definitive performance of Sherlock Holmes in Granada's legendary series. As a deep Sherlockian and fan of Jeremy, I loved this book - it is a thrill ride and a suitable way to honour the remarkable career of a courageous, gifted gentleman. Twinkle on, Jeremy."" Bonnie MacBird, BSI, Emmy winning producer, playwright, screenwriter (TRON) and author of 'The Sherlock Holmes Adventure Series'), HarperCollins. A quarter-century after his death, the name of Jeremy Brett is known and honoured world-wide - because in the early 1980s Michael Cox chose him to play Sherlock Holmes in a landmark television series. That one rôle made him an international star and ensured his lasting fame, but it has, regrettably, overshadowed the rest of his career. The reason why Jeremy Brett was a great Sherlock Holmes (many would say the greatest) is that he was one of our finest actors. Yet his work pre-Holmes is little known, as his most notable performances were in the theatre or on television; no recordings exist of his work at the Old Vic, the National Theatre or the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, and only a few are available from such small-screen productions as Love's Labours Lost, The Merchant of Venice and An Ideal Husband. Maureen Whitaker's splendid book - ""the fruit of pensive nights and laborious days""* - redresses the balance, and does justice to Jeremy Brett's whole remarkable career. Roger Johnson, BSI, ASH Editor, The Sherlock Holmes Journal * Sherlock Holmes's description of his own magnum opus in ""His Last Bow""." Maureen Whittaker's 'Playing a Part' presents a remarkable and highly readable compendium of the professional career of the scintillating actor Jeremy Brett - who thrilled audiences for four decades onscreen and onstage in roles ranging from Orlando to Dracula, William Pitt the Younger, and Freddie Eynsford Hill - culminating, in his creation of what what is widely regarded as the definitive performance of Sherlock Holmes in Granada's legendary series. As a deep Sherlockian and fan of Jeremy, I loved this book - it is a thrill ride and a suitable way to honour the remarkable career of a courageous, gifted gentleman. Twinkle on, Jeremy. Bonnie MacBird, BSI, Emmy winning producer, playwright, screenwriter (TRON) and author of 'The Sherlock Holmes Adventure Series'), HarperCollins. A quarter-century after his death, the name of Jeremy Brett is known and honoured world-wide - because in the early 1980s Michael Cox chose him to play Sherlock Holmes in a landmark television series. That one role made him an international star and ensured his lasting fame, but it has, regrettably, overshadowed the rest of his career. The reason why Jeremy Brett was a great Sherlock Holmes (many would say the greatest) is that he was one of our finest actors. Yet his work pre-Holmes is little known, as his most notable performances were in the theatre or on television; no recordings exist of his work at the Old Vic, the National Theatre or the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, and only a few are available from such small-screen productions as Love's Labours Lost, The Merchant of Venice and An Ideal Husband. Maureen Whitaker's splendid book - the fruit of pensive nights and laborious days * - redresses the balance, and does justice to Jeremy Brett's whole remarkable career. Roger Johnson, BSI, ASH Editor, The Sherlock Holmes Journal * Sherlock Holmes's description of his own magnum opus in His Last Bow . ""Maureen Whittaker's 'Playing a Part' presents a remarkable and highly readable compendium of the professional career of the scintillating actor Jeremy Brett - who thrilled audiences for four decades onscreen and onstage in roles ranging from Orlando to Dracula, William Pitt the Younger, and Freddie Eynsford Hill - culminating, in his creation of what what is widely regarded as the definitive performance of Sherlock Holmes in Granada's legendary series. As a deep Sherlockian and fan of Jeremy, I loved this book - it is a thrill ride and a suitable way to honour the remarkable career of a courageous, gifted gentleman. Twinkle on, Jeremy."" Bonnie MacBird, BSI, Emmy winning producer, playwright, screenwriter (TRON) and author of 'The Sherlock Holmes Adventure Series'), HarperCollins. A quarter-century after his death, the name of Jeremy Brett is known and honoured world-wide - because in the early 1980s Michael Cox chose him to play Sherlock Holmes in a landmark television series. That one rôle made him an international star and ensured his lasting fame, but it has, regrettably, overshadowed the rest of his career. The reason why Jeremy Brett was a great Sherlock Holmes (many would say the greatest) is that he was one of our finest actors. Yet his work pre-Holmes is little known, as his most notable performances were in the theatre or on television; no recordings exist of his work at the Old Vic, the National Theatre or the Stratford Shakespeare Festival, and only a few are available from such small-screen productions as Love's Labours Lost, The Merchant of Venice and An Ideal Husband. Maureen Whitaker's splendid book - ""the fruit of pensive nights and laborious days""* - redresses the balance, and does justice to Jeremy Brett's whole remarkable career. Roger Johnson, BSI, ASH Editor, The Sherlock Holmes Journal * Sherlock Holmes's description of his own magnum opus in ""His Last Bow"". 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