There are 25 pages.
| Pauline Chase played Peter in London's West End from December 1906 to February 1914 - more times than any other actress. Here she reminisces in Strand Magazine, January 1913.
{2007} | | «View» |
| | image_width | 751 | | image_height | 1142 | | id_index | 2714 | | comments | 0 |
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| Pauline Chase played Peter in London's West End from December 1906 to February 1914 - more times than any other actress. Here she reminisces in Strand Magazine, January 1913.
{2007} | | «View» |
| | image_width | 751 | | image_height | 1146 | | id_index | 2719 | | comments | 0 |
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| Pauline Chase played Peter in London's West End from December 1906 to February 1914 - more times than any other actress. Here she reminisces in Strand Magazine, January 1913.
{2007} | | «View» |
| | image_width | 755 | | image_height | 1150 | | id_index | 2717 | | comments | 0 |
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| Pauline Chase played Peter in London's West End from December 1906 to February 1914 - more times than any other actress. Here she reminisces in Strand Magazine, January 1913.
{2007} | | «View» |
| | image_width | 765 | | image_height | 1147 | | id_index | 2716 | | comments | 0 |
|
| Pauline Chase played Peter in London's West End from December 1906 to February 1914 - more times than any other actress. Here she reminisces in Strand Magazine, January 1913.
{2007} | | «View» |
| | image_width | 777 | | image_height | 1170 | | id_index | 2718 | | comments | 0 |
|
| Pauline Chase played Peter in London's West End from December 1906 to February 1914 - more times than any other actress. Here she reminisces in Strand Magazine, January 1913.
{2007} | | «View» |
| | image_width | 868 | | image_height | 1290 | | id_index | 2713 | | comments | 0 |
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| A rare interview with Barrie on his arrival in New York in September 1914. In it he refers to George as "the real Peter Pan" - see JMB&TLB, p224-225
{2007} | | «View» |
| | image_width | 918 | | image_height | 1803 | | id_index | 2725 | | comments | 0 |
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| | Fay Compton as Peter Pan - dressed up as Napoleon after defeating Captain Hook - in December 1917. Charles Frohman was a great admirer of Napoleon, and had a bust of the Ogre on his desk. It was probably to please Frohman that Barrie added the Napoleonic flourish. | | «View» |
| | image_width | 233 | | image_height | 480 | | id_index | 1647 | | comments | 0 |
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| | Envelope once containing George Llewelyn Davies' service medal, a plack, and Barrie's key to Kensington Gardens, given to him by a grateful Borough Council in 1902 for the fame Peter Pan had brought to the Gardens through the pages of "The Little White Bird". | | «View» |
| | image_width | 900 | | image_height | 577 | | id_index | 1652 | | comments | 0 |
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| | J M Barrie, working in Eilean Shona House, photographed by Nico. Barrie was working on the screenplay for "Peter Pan", later rejected by Paramount in favour of their own version - Retouched | | «View» |
| | image_width | 326 | | image_height | 480 | | id_index | 1762 | | comments | 0 |
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 There are 25 pages.
Please read the notice.
The jmbarrie.co.uk database currently contains 246 records, which are mixture of photographs, letters, and other original documents, most of it unpublished.
Please note that the copyright in the majority of images belongs to the Great Ormond Street Hospital, from whom higher resolution scans can be obtained. Non-commercial use of these images is okay, providing the jmbarrie.co.uk website is acknowledged as the source, and the GOSH copyright clearly stated.
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