Trilby (novel)
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Trilby (1894) is a gothic horror novel by George du Maurier and one of the most popular novels of its time, perhaps the second best selling novel of the Fin de siècle period after Bram Stoker's Dracula. Trilby is set in the 1850s in an idyllic bohemian Paris. Though it features the hijinks of three lovable English artists — especially the delicate genius Little Billee — its most memorable character is Svengali, a Jewish rogue, a masterful musician, and an irresistible hypnotist.
Trilby O'Ferrall, the novel's heroine, is a magnificent half-Irish girl working in Paris as an artists' model and laundress; all the men in the novel are in love with her. The relation between Trilby and Svengali forms only a small portion of the novel, which is mainly an evocation of a milieu, but it is a crucial one.
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[edit] Plot summary
Trilby is literally tone-deaf: "Svengali would test her ear, as he called it, and strike the C in the middle and then the F just above, and ask which was the highest; and she would declare they were both exactly the same."
Even so, Svengali hypnotizes her and transforms her into a great diva, la Svengali. Under his spell, Trilby becomes a talented singer, performing always in an amnesiac trance. At a performance in London, Svengali is stricken with a heart attack and is unable to induce the trance. Trilby is unable to sing in tune and is subjected to "laughter, hoots, hisses, cat-calls, cock-crows." Not having been hypnotised, she is completely baffled and cannot remember anything about Svengali or her singing career.
[edit] Reception
The novel was adapted into a long-running play starring Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree as Svengali. John Barrymore played the title role in the Warner Brothers release Svengali (1931). A musical adaptation by Frank Wildhorn, entitled Svengali, was staged twice in 1991.
The novel inspired Gaston Leroux's novel The Phantom of the Opera (1910) and introduced the phrase "in the altogether" (meaning "completely unclothed") to the English language, as well as indirectly inspiring the name of the Trilby hat, originally worn on stage by a character in the play.
The novel contained a thinly veiled portrait, in the character of the pompous and eccentric "idle apprentice" Joe Sibley, of painter James McNeill Whistler. Whistler threatened to sue for libel unless the character was removed and Du Maurier apologized. The writing was revised, and no public apology was made.
[edit] Miscellaneous
In "Angels of Music" by Kim Newman, published in Tales of the Shadowmen Vol. 2 (2006), Erik gathers his own Charlie's Angels-like team of female agents, the so-called Angels of Music, consisting of Christine Daae, Irene Adler and Trilby O'Ferrall.
[edit] External links
- Article about Trilby on Mount Holyoke College's "Bohemianism and Counterculture" site.
- Trilby; Complete online text of the novel.
- Trilby; Complete online text, from Project Gutenberg.
- Herbert Beerbohm Tree archive at the University of Bristol Theatre Collection, University of Bristol