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You are here: Home Leisure Arts & Culture Dracula revived by Bram Stoker descendant
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31/10/2009Dracula revived by Bram Stoker descendant

Dracula revived by Bram Stoker descendant A new sequel to “Dracula,” co-written by Bram Stoker’s great-grandnephew, gets back to the gothic side of the tale.

Bram Stoker's own blood runs through the veins of a sequel to his 1897 novel Dracula. The book, which comes out worldwide this month, was penned by a great-grandnephew who hopes to revive the original vampire myth.

Dracula: The Un-Dead, a thick almost 500-page epic being translated into 17 languages, is the fruit of an unlikely six-year collaboration between Dacre Stoker, a 51-year-old Canadian onetime coach and teacher, and a New York screenwriter enamoured of vampires, 39-year-old Ian Holt.

"When people think of Dracula they think of handsome Bela Lugosi," said Holt, a gothic type wearing a T-shirt featuring the 1920s Hungarian actor and heart-throb who starred in the first Broadway play based on Stoker's book, as well as the subsequent 1931 movie.

"Dracula was nothing like that,” Holt said in an interview. “He was old and hunched over, had hair on his palms and bad breath."

"He was out of the grave, he smelt like death," added Stoker. "We're going back to the original characters."

AFP PHOTO/PIERRE VERDY
Canadian Dacre Stoker, great grand nephew of the original author of Dracula Bram Stoker, gestures as he answers to journalists on 16 October 2009 in Paris, to present his Dracula sequel entitled "Dracula: The Un-Dead"

A sequel in the making

It was Holt -- whose passion for the theme stems from Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 Dracula movie -- who initially came up with the idea of a sequel to the Irish writer's 19th century work.

In search of more information, he stalked descendants of the historical Transylvanian-born Vlad III Dracula of Wallachia, better known as "Vlad The Impaler," toured Europe on the vampire's tracks, met with scholars and joined the Transylvanian Society of Dracula.

In 2003, he said, he came up with the idea of getting backing for a sequel novel from the Stoker family, who had lost the copyright early in the 20th century.

And Dacre, one of a score of close family scattered across Britain, Ireland, Canada and the United States, signed on. "He had Bram's genes and the name," said Holt.

From then on, the two worked together, studying notes left for the original work by Bram Stoker, writing the plot and building characters.

"We go back to the original but we don't leave it at that," Stoker said.

Meta-Dracula

The sequel is set in 1912, 25 years after the finale of the first epistolary novel, as a series of chilling murders in London and Paris triggers a vampire hunt across Europe and unleashes terror of "the prince of darkness."

Book coverAfter careful analysis of 19th century notes left by Stoker, a theatre director who minutely researched background for the original novel, the two revived one of the old characters and added in a few, including a Scotland Yard detective and a lesbian vampire countess.

More significantly perhaps, Dacre Stoker also opted to throw his ancestor into the novel.

Why create a Bram Stoker character? "He was misunderstood, mysterious, no one knows why he wrote Dracula," the great-grandnephew said.

"He died without knowing the success of his iconic character. His life was a struggle."

Talks are under way to produce a movie version of the book, though the authors refused to say with whom.

But if they had their say, Johnny Depp would play Dracula and Catherine Zeta-Jones would star as the blood-sucking lesbian countess.

Claire Rosemberg/AFP/Expatica


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