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Peggy Webling

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Name
  
Peggy Webling


Role
  
Playwright

Peggy Webling wwwclassicmonsterscomwpcontentuploads20140

Died
  
June 27, 1949, Peckham, London, United Kingdom

Movies
  
Frankenstein, Boundary House

Siblings
  
Lucy Webling, Rosalind Webling, Josephine Webling

Similar People
  
Garrett Fort, John L Balderston, Carl Laemmle - Jr, James Whale, Robert Florey

Peggy Webling (1 January 1871 – 27 June 1949) was a British playwright, novelist and poet. Her 1927 play version of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein is notable for naming the creature "Frankenstein" after its creator, and for being the inspiration of the classic 1931 film directed by James Whale.

Contents

Personal life

She was born Margaret Webling in Westminster, England; her father was a silversmith and jeweler. Peggy and her sisters Josephine, Rosalind and Lucy were precocious at performing amateur theatricals in London, and gained the acquaintance of actress Ellen Terry, and authors Lewis Carroll and John Ruskin. She spent time in Canada and the United States during the periods 1890–1892 and 1895–1897.

Frankenstein

Webling wrote her adaptation of Frankenstein at the request of actor-producer Hamilton Deane, who had a recent success in his stage adaptation of Bram Stoker's Dracula. Webling's Frankenstein was first produced by Deane in Preston, Lancashire in December 1927. After touring in repertory with Dracula for two years, and some revisions by Webling, it opened in London in February 1930, where it played 72 performances. The Times of London wrote, "Miss Webling, translating into terms of the theatre Mary Shelley's one lasting and original composition, has unquestionably succeeded in bringing the monster to life; but the play in which she exhibits this wild beast is as flimsy as a bird cage."

Nonetheless, in April 1931 Universal Pictures bought the film rights to an unproduced American adaptation of Webling's play by John L. Balderston (who had similarly adapted Deane's Dracula for the New York stage), giving the playwrights $20,000 plus one percent of the gross earnings on all showings of any films based on their dramatic work. Balderston himself had a low regard for Webling's play, calling it "illiterate" and "inconceivably crude".

References

Peggy Webling Wikipedia