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Phantasmagoria
Polidori’s The Vampyre from theatricals to vampire-slaying kits
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Sam George explores vampire theatricals, focusing on the stage progeny of Polidori’s The Vampyre. In 1820, John Robinson Planché adapted Charles Nodier’s Parisian dramatisation Le Vampire of the same year for the English stage. Focusing on Planché, George argues that the Romantic vampire, and the plays that are its legacy, have a shared origin in phantasmagoria, from the German ghost stories that inspired Byron’s vampire fragment at the Villa Diodati, to the spectacular summoning of revenants on stage in Paris. George demonstrates how crucial stage props and stage effects (such as the star trap and vampire trap) are to the changing representation of the vampire, registering important shifts. George argues that it was Polidori, not Byron (nor Bram Stoker, the stage manager at The Lyceum), whose work succeeded in founding the stage vampire.

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The legacy of John Polidori

The Romantic vampire and its progeny

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