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.)
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.)