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The 1931 Universal Pictures film adaptation of Frankenstein directed by James Whale and starring Boris Karloff as the now iconic Monster claims in its credits to be 'Adapted from the play by Peggy Webling'.
Webling's play sought to humanize the creature, was the first stage adaptation to position Frankenstein and his creation as doppelgängers, and offered a feminist perspective on scientific efforts to create life without women, ideas that suffuse today's perceptions of Frankenstein's monster. The original play script exists in several different versions, only two of which have ever been consulted by scholars; no version has ever been published. Nor have scholars had access to Webling's private papers and correspondence, preserved in a family archive, so that the evolution of Frankenstein from book to stage to screen has never been fully charted. In Peggy Webling and the Story behind Frankenstein, Dorian Gieseler Greenbaum (Webling's great grandniece) and Bruce Graver present the full texts of Webling's unpublished play for the first time. A vital critical edition, this book includes: - the 1927 British Library Frankenstein script used for the first production of the play in Preston, LancashirePeggy Webling (1 January 1871 - 27 June 1949) was a British playwright, novelist and poet.
Dorian Gieseler Greenbaum is a historian at the University of Wales Trinity St David, specialising in the history of astrology, cosmology and divination. Her publications include The Daimon in Hellenistic Astrology: Origins and Influence (2016) and 'Abu Ma'shar and the Tradition of Planetary Lots in Astrology', in Mastering Nature in the Medieval Arabic and Latin Worlds (2024). She is the great-grandniece of Peggy Webling, the playwright, and holds a private archive of her papers. She has lectured on the history of Webling's Frankenstein for specialists and general audiences.
Bruce Graver is Professor of English at Providence College, USA, specialising in British Romantic literature. He edited Wordsworth's Translations of Chaucer and Virgil (1998), co-edited Wordsworth and Coleridge's Lyrical Ballads (2003), and has written and lectured widely about various British Romantic writers and 19th-century visual culture.
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