English Bents, pre-1900, and Sherlock Holmes.

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Bax Burley

Can't Leave
Jul 20, 2021
307
3,238
Pennsylvania
Hello all,

I remember reading an article once about the bent billiard not becoming popular in England until approximately 1900, during the Boer War, and the introduction of the Hungarian/Oom Paul. Can anyone point me to any similar articles explaining this?

The main reason I ask, I'm actually playing Sherlock Holmes on stage in November, and I know Holmes only had 3 pipes mentioned in canon: his clay, his cherrywood, and his beat up second hand briar. We always see Holmes with a calabash or bent pipe in filmed/stage versions, which I know was a 20th century thing, so as not to hide the actor's face.

If I am going for historical accuracy, would we have to assume that Holmes' briar pipe mentioned in the late 1880's, and already secondhand, would almost certainly be a straight pipe? (Ian Richardson was pictured with a nice straight apple in one of the 1983 films, but most of the time he either had a Rathbone-esque Peterson, or a calabash.)
 
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Bax Burley

Can't Leave
Jul 20, 2021
307
3,238
Pennsylvania
I wouldn't go too accurate with that character. I mean with habits of using cocaine, morphine, opium and many others, you might have an issue before the production shuts down.
Yes, I won't exactly be using a hypo on stage. But I have the perfect clay and cherrywood....I really want to pick the perfect briar. People expect a bent, though. Just like they'll expect the deerstalker hat, even if he only wore it occasionally, when traveling.
 
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sablebrush52

The Bard Of Barlings
Jun 15, 2013
19,768
45,349
Southern Oregon
jrs457.wixsite.com
Here's one of mine, Barling 1882:

iJpeyRe.jpg
 

dino

Lifer
Jul 9, 2011
1,954
13,626
Chicago
Here are illustrations by Sidney Paget, the artist of the original stories, that will give you some perspective.
First is from "The Blue Carbuncle" showing his pipe rack, that seems to show his cherrywood, his clay, and his briar.

1663397211933.png

The second is from "The Man with the Twisted Lip" publisher the same year as "The Blue Carbuncle" shows him smoking "his old briar."
1663396775176.png
 

Bax Burley

Can't Leave
Jul 20, 2021
307
3,238
Pennsylvania
Here are illustrations by Sidney Paget, the artist of the original stories, that will give you some perspective.
First is from "The Blue Carbuncle" showing his pipe rack, that seems to show his cherrywood, his clay, and his briar.

View attachment 169729

The second is from "The Man with the Twisted Lip" publisher the same year as "The Blue Carbuncle" shows him smoking "his old briar."
View attachment 169726
I forgot I had seen these, and that's definitely a straight one. But all these pictures of bent 1880's/'90s pipes are quite eye opening. Thank you all!

I should add that I'm directing this, as well. I direct a university program. I cast two students as Holmes and Watson, Watson dropped out of the main role, and my Holmes actor asked would I please play Holmes and could he take over Watson. I adapted the script over the summer myself, and I get to choose my pipes of course. It's good to be in charge. Three of them are keen to learn to smoke, with stage tobacco, of course. (The actor playing Ryder also smokes, specifically called for.)
 

simong

Lifer
Oct 13, 2015
2,610
15,601
UK
I forgot I had seen these, and that's definitely a straight one. But all these pictures of bent 1880's/'90s pipes are quite eye opening. Thank you all!

I should add that I'm directing this, as well. I direct a university program. I cast two students as Holmes and Watson, Watson dropped out of the main role, and my Holmes actor asked would I please play Holmes and could he take over Watson. I adapted the script over the summer myself, and I get to choose my pipes of course. It's good to be in charge. Three of them are keen to learn to smoke, with stage tobacco, of course. (The actor playing Ryder also smokes, specifically called for.)
Forgive my ignorance but what’s this ‘stage tobacco’ about? Black shag & Honeydew are two of the blends I remember Holmes’s smoking. Clan would probably go down well with the audience as it’s got a delightful room note, despite it being one of the worst blends to actually smoke.
Good luck with the play, sounds great fun!👍