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Irving and Hudson: Bram Stoker Tells What He Thinks about the Controversy (1886)

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The Forgotten Writings of Bram Stoker
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Abstract

New York. Oct. 31, 1886. Mr. Bram Stoker, the confidential business manager of Mr. Henry Irving, arrived today on the Etruria of the Cunard line. When Mr. Irving’s cablegram of last Friday to your correspondent concerning Mr. Wilson Barrett’s letter of Oct. 18 was shown to Mr. Stoker, he became intensely interested, and read the dispatch and Mr. Hudson’s subsequent explanations of it eagerly.

This interview is reprinted from The Boston Herald (November 1, 1886): 1.

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John Edgar Browning

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© 2012 John Edgar Browning

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Browning, J.E. (2012). Irving and Hudson: Bram Stoker Tells What He Thinks about the Controversy (1886). In: Browning, J.E. (eds) The Forgotten Writings of Bram Stoker. Palgrave Macmillan, New York. https://doi.org/10.1057/9781137330840_15

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