The Woman in White: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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The book is often considered the first Victorian sensation novel, and has been adapted into a play, several films and an [[Andrew Lloyd Webber]] musical.
The book is often considered the first Victorian sensation novel, and has been adapted into a play, several films and an [[Andrew Lloyd Webber]] musical.
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{{tropelist}}
=== The novel provides examples of: ===

* [[Affably Evil]]: Count Fosco.
* [[Affably Evil]]: Count Fosco.
* [[Arranged Marriage]]: Percival Glyde to Laura Fairlie.
* [[Arranged Marriage]]: Percival Glyde to Laura Fairlie.
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* [[You Got Spunk]]: Marian, in Fosco's opinion. And he ''likes'' spunk.
* [[You Got Spunk]]: Marian, in Fosco's opinion. And he ''likes'' spunk.
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=== The musical adaptation provides examples of: ===
=== The musical adaptation provides examples of: ===



Revision as of 00:57, 15 November 2015

Serialised Victorian novel written by Wilkie Collins.

Walter Hartright, a young drawing master from Victorian London, gets a job teaching art to two young women, half-sisters Marian Halcombe and Laura Fairlie, at Limmeridge house in Cumberland. He soon is tangled in a web of dastardly deeds involving an Arranged Marriage and a Mysterious Waif in the form of escaped mental patient Anne Catherick.

The book is often considered the first Victorian sensation novel, and has been adapted into a play, several films and an Andrew Lloyd Webber musical.


Tropes used in The Woman in White include:

The musical adaptation provides examples of: