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The events leading to the duel are described. Louis has travelled to Paris to find Emilie de L'Esparre, with whom he has fallen in love. She has married, and he vows to accept the situation; her husband admires Louis' honesty in admitting the past affair, and asks him to protect her while he is away.
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A special sort of trap door, afterwards known as a
Corsican trap, glide trap or ghost glide, was made for the play. It gave the impression of a ghost gliding across the stage as it rose up through the floor. It was an important part of the play's success, and was installed in theatres where the play
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he plays them; preserving a gentlemany demeanour, a drawingroom manner very difficult to assume on the stage, if one may judge from its rarity, which intensifies the passion of the part, and gives it a terrible reality.... The duel between him and Wigan was a masterpiece on both sides; the Bois de
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Chateau-Renaud, with his friend and second Baron de
Montgiron, try to flee the country, but their carriage crashes in the same clearing in the forest. Fabien dei Franchi appears: they think it is the ghost of Louis until he introduces himself. After a long sword fight, Chateau-Renaud is killed. At
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wrote: "Charles Kean... seems now... settling down into the conviction that his talent does not lie in any
Shakespearian sphere whatever, but in melodrames.... Charles Kean plays the two brothers; and you must see him before you will believe how well and
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At his home in a castle in
Corsica, Fabien dei Franchi becomes aware that his brother Louis, in Paris, is in danger. At the end of the act, after making peace between feuding local families, he has a vision of Louis' death in a duel.
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The play, directed by
Charles Kean, opened at the Princess's Theatre on 24 February 1852. Charles Kean played both of the brothers Fabien dei Franchi and Louis dei Franchi, and
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Act I and Act II are understood as taking place at the same time. Each of the brothers Fabien dei
Franchi and Louis dei Franchi are able to sense if the other is in danger.
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The play was very successful: it soon ran at other London theatres, and in the following months it opened at the
Adelphi Theatre in Edinburgh and at the
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Chateau-Renaud, known as a womanizer and duellist, is pursuing Madame L'Esparre, and he challenges Louis to a duel. In the
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in Dublin. At the
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Boulogne itself has scarcely seen a duel more real or more exciting...."
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University of Kent
Special Collections, accessed 4 March 2017.
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From 1850 Dion
Boucicault was employed by the actor
301:. Manchester University Press, 1989. Pages 27–28.
299:Players and performances in the Victorian Theatre
281:Players and performances in the Victorian Theatre
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297:, 28 February 1852. Quoted in: Taylor, George.
172:Queen Victoria saw the play several times, and
138:the end, the ghost of Louis appears once more.
331:The Corsican Trap: Its Mechanism and Reception
207:The Corsican Trap: Its Mechanism and Reception
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283:. Manchester University Press, 1989. Page 23.
236:. Cambridge University Press Archive, 1984.
517:Cheech & Chong's The Corsican Brothers
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313:Theatrecrafts.com, accessed 4 March 2017.
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38:The Corsican Brothers; or, the Fatal Duel
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545:Adaptations of works by Alexandre Dumas
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555:Plays by Dion Boucicault
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127:Forest of Fontainebleau
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442:The Bandits of Corsica
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560:Plays based on novels
490:The Corsican Brothers
458:The Corsican Brothers
450:The Corsican Brothers
434:Apoorva Sagodharargal
426:The Corsican Brothers
418:The Corsican Brothers
399:The Corsican Brothers
379:The Corsican Brothers
268:The Corsican Brothers
178:Edward Henry Corbould
167:Queen's Royal Theatre
75:The Corsican Brothers
31:Edward Henry Corbould
27:The Corsican Brothers
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311:Trap Doors On Stage
337:2017-03-05 at the
147:George Henry Lewes
142:Critical reception
87:Xavier de Montépin
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493:(1985) (TV)
466:Aggi Pidugu
550:Melodramas
540:1852 plays
534:Categories
294:The Leader
219:2017-03-05
184:References
61:Background
257:219877701
47:melodrama
335:Archived
100:Synopsis
324:The Era
152:quietly
133:Act III
520:(1984)
512:(1970)
501:Parody
485:(1972)
477:(1971)
469:(1964)
461:(1961)
453:(1955)
445:(1953)
437:(1949)
429:(1941)
421:(1917)
402:(1852)
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238:Page 6
117:Act II
410:Films
108:Act I
391:Play
253:OCLC
85:and
382:by
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53:by
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