Мистер Маллинер
Эта статья требует дополнительных цитат для проверки . ( июнь 2017 г. ) |
Мистер Маллинер | |
---|---|
Первое появление | « Правда о Джордже » (1926) |
Последнее появление | « Джордж и Альфред » (1967) |
Создан | PG Wodehouse |
Информация во власти | |
Пол | Мужской |
Национальность | Британский |
Мистер Маллинер - вымышленный персонаж из коротких рассказов PG Wodehouse . Г -н Маллинер - блаженный паб Raconteur, который, независимо от того, какая тема разговора, может найти подходящую (хотя и невероятное) историю о члене его семьи, чтобы соответствовать ей.
Как и большая часть работ Wodehouse, истории мистера Маллинера были первоначально написаны для публикации журнала. Тридцать восемь из 43 общих историй «Муллинер» были первоначально опубликованы в период с 1926 по 1937 год. После одного краткого анекдота 1940 года финальные четыре истории появились намного позже, опубликованные между 1958 и 1972 годами.
Обзор
[ редактировать ]Как и его коллега -персонаж Wodehouse, самый старый участник , Raconteur, мистер Маллинер может превратить любой разговор в «воспоминания» или забавную историю. Привычка « Респорил » паба , его коллеги -пьющие идентифицируются только по их напиткам. (Г -н Маллинер - горячий скотч и лимон .) Водхаус показал, что он разработал г -на Маллинера после сбора тетради, полных идей, которые не могли быть использованы, потому что они были слишком грязными, пока у него не было счастливого представления о рыбаке, чье Верность может быть сомневается.
The tales of Mulliner all involve one of his relations: there are dozens upon dozens of cousins, nieces, and nephews. These include stories about loves lost, found and rekindled; fortunes made and lost; and opportunities grasped or missed. They take place across the globe: Los Angeles's Hollywood and the English Country House are the settings for many.
Two Mulliner stories ("Gala Night" and "The Rise of Minna Nordstrom") are not primarily about one of Mr. Mulliner's relatives. However, in these two cases, Mr. Mulliner states that the stories were told to him by relatives; he is therefore reporting a story told to him by a relation, rather than a story about a relation.
Stories
[edit]The Mulliner stories all employ an unusual structure. At the beginning of each story, an unnamed first-person narrator sets the scene at the Angler's Rest pub, describing the conversation at the bar-parlour. This will lead to Mr. Mulliner entering the conversation, generally elaborating on the conversational theme, and remarking that it reminds him of a story involving a relative. Then, no more than a page or two into the story, Mr. Mulliner effectively takes over the narration of the tale, describing the events that befell the relative in question. In the earlier stories, the unnamed first-person narrator returns very briefly to close out the tale back at the Angler's Rest—in later stories, the story ends when Mr. Mulliner has concluded it.
Mr. Mulliner himself is rarely a character in the tales he tells. An exception is the story "George and Alfred", in which Mr. Mulliner tries to help out one of his nephews who has been accused of a crime. In this story, we learn that Mr. Mulliner is a friend of Hollywood studio head Jacob Z. Schnellenhamer, and that he has stayed on Schnellenhamer's yacht while it was cruising the Mediterranean. We also learn that Mr. Mulliner's first name, whatever it may be, is not George.
Little else is revealed of Mulliner's character beyond his large family, his choice of beverage, and his hobby of fishing (which he mentions in one story replaced his earlier hobby of golf). Nevertheless, Mulliner narrates forty-three short stories. Many are collected in the three books, containing nine stories each, which bear his name:
- Meet Mr Mulliner (1927)
- Mr Mulliner Speaking (1929)
- Mulliner Nights (1933)
Fifteen other stories are scattered in other volumes:
- Five in Blandings Castle and Elsewhere (1935)
- Three in Young Men in Spats (1936)
- One in Lord Emsworth and Others (1937)
- One in Crime Wave at Blandings (1937)
- One in Eggs, Beans and Crumpets (1940)
- Two in A Few Quick Ones (1959)
- One in Plum Pie (1966)
- One in The World of Mr Mulliner (1972)
One story -- 1940's "Shock Dogs", which is more of a brief topical conversation than a story -- has never been reprinted or collected in any form outside of its original publication in Punch magazine. [1] It is signed with initials only (P.G.W.) but the Articles and Verse listing in the bound Punch volume CXCVIIJ Jan-June 1940 attributes the story to Wodehouse, P. G. It mentions by name Hitler, Brauchitsch, and Goebbels, which is very unusual for an author who so seldom allowed politics to impinge on his novels and stories.
The World of Mr Mulliner is an omnibus containing 41 of the 43 stories narrated by Mr. Mulliner. It omits "Shock Dogs", and 1937's "Romance at Droitgate Spa", which appears in several other Wodehouse compilations but without the framework of Mr. Mulliner's narration. The World of Mr Mulliner also includes one other story which has a tangential connection to the series: "From a Detective's Notebook" (1959) is narrated by the detective Adrian Mulliner, who had previously been established as one of Mr. Mulliner's innumerable nephews. Strictly speaking, despite its appearance in the Mr. Mulliner omnibus, this tale cannot be considered a Mr. Mulliner story, as Mr. Mulliner does not narrate it, appear in it, and is not actually referenced in it in any way.[2]
Also note that a handful of what were to become "Mr. Mulliner stories" were originally published in magazines without the framework of Mr. Mulliner telling the story in question. (These include three stories about Bobbie Wickham, as well as one about James Rodman.) When revised for book publication, Wodehouse added the Mulliner openings and narration — and it is these revised versions which appear in all Mulliner and Wodehouse anthologies to this day. These revised stories can often be distinguished by Mulliner identifying the prime character of the story as a "distant cousin" (or some other far-flung relation) whose surname is not Mulliner.
Known relatives
[edit]Forebears:
- A Sieur de Moulinières "came over with the Conqueror", presumably in 1066.
- A Mulliner "once received the thanks of his Sovereign for services rendered on the field of Crecy". (The Battle of Crecy occurred in 1346.)
Grandmother:
- Unnamed. Died in the late 19th century. It is this grandmother who made William (below) pledge to not drink until he turned 21—or 41, William can't quite remember which.
Uncles:
- William Mulliner, a businessman; a survivor of the San Francisco earthquake of 1906. ("The Story of William")
Aunts:
- Myrtle Banks, married William
Brothers:
- Wilfred Mulliner, a chemist and inventor of various creams, lotions, and tonics, known in the trade as Mulliner's Magic Marvels. Featured mainly in A Slice of Life (short story) he also has a cameo role (Rev. Augustine Mulliner reads a letter from him) in Mulliner's Buck-U-Uppo, where the tonic Buck-U-Uppo is introduced. Wilfred marries Angela Purdue, the ward of Sir Jasper ffinch-ffarrowmere (with two small f's) and they have two sons, Percival who goes to a prep school in Sussex and Ferdinand who attends Eton College.
- Sir Sholto Mulliner, M.V.O.
- Joseph Mulliner, being the father of Bulstrode. (Mentioned in "The Castaways")
Sisters-in-law:
- Angela Purdue, married Wilfred ("A Slice of Life", Mulliner's Buck-U-Uppo)
- Lady Wilhelmina Mulliner, the widow of Sir Sholto Mulliner and the mother of Archibald. ("The Code of the Mulliners")
First cousins:
- John San Francisco Earthquake Mulliner, son of William and Myrtle
- (unnamed brother of above)
- Clarence Mulliner, photographer ("The Romance of a Bulb-Squeezer")
- Cedric Mulliner, a foppish bachelor of 45 years. ("The Story of Cedric")
- Lady Wickham, novelist under the pen-name "George Masterman"
- Edward Mulliner
- Rupert Mulliner; the father of Anselm. (Mentioned in "Anselm gets his Chance")
- Egbert Mulliner, civil servant ("Another Christmas Carol")
Cousins by marriage:
- Gladys Biggs, married Clarence
- Myrtle Watling, married Cedric
- Sir Cuthbert Wickham, married Lady Wickham
First cousins, once removed:
- Roberta "Bobbie" Wickham, daughter of Sir Cuthbert and Lady Wickham
- Lancelot Mulliner, an artist, Edward's son; a portrait painter in Bott St, London. Brought up by his uncle Theodore. ("The Story of Webster", "Cats Will Be Cats")
- Mervyn Mulliner, a son of a Mr Mulliner's cousin, being a chump. ("The Knightly Quest of Mervyn")
- Anselm Mulliner, a curate, Rupert's younger son ("Anselm Gets His Chance")
- (unnamed older brother of Anselm)
First cousin, once removed, by marriage:
- Gladys Bingley, married Lancelot
Distant cousins:
- James Rodman, mystery novelist
- Agnes Flack, championship golfer and "daughter of a distant cousin"
- Frederick Fitch-Fitch, prospective antique shop owner
- Montrose Mulliner, Assistant Director of the Perfecto-Zizzbaum Motion Picture Corp. of Hollywood ("Monkey Business")
- Wilmot Mulliner, a "nodder" at Perfecto-Zizzbaum ("The Nodder", "The Juice of an Orange")
- (unnamed), a young second cousin who has left his wife and is filing papers of divorce ("The Ordeal of Osbert Mulliner")
Distant cousins by marriage:
- Sidney George McMurdo, insurance executive and scratch golfer; marries Agnes
- Angela Purvis, conjurer's assistant; marries Frederick
- Rosalie Beamish, marries Montrose
- Mabel Potter, a private secretary and ex-bird imitator in Vaudeville; marries Wilmot
Nephews:
Note that Mr. Mulliner has three nephews named George, all different people.
- George Mulliner, a stammerer and crossword puzzle enthusiast, being in love with Susan Blake. ("The Truth About George")
- Ferdinand Mulliner, studying at Eton (older son of Wilfred and Angela)
- Percival Mulliner, at preparatory school in Sussex (younger son of Wilfred and Angela)
- Augustine Mulliner, being a meek curate who eventually rose to married vicar thanks to the Buck-U-Uppo tonic invented by Wilfred Mulliner. (Mulliner's Buck-U-Uppo, "The Bishop's Move", "Gala Night")
- (name unknown), a student at Harchester, younger brother of Augustine
- Lancelot Bassington Mulliner, an aspiring poet ("Came the Dawn")
- Osbert Mulliner, a rich jade collector ("The Ordeal of Osbert Mulliner")
- Frederick Mulliner (brother of Dr George) ("Portrait of a Disciplinarian")
- Dr. George Mulliner, brother of Frederick
- Archibald Mulliner, member of the Drones Club, son of Sir Sholto and Lady Wilhelmina, and a has a masterful impression of a hen laying an egg; a member of the Drones Club and a sock collector. He will have to find more in order to seduce and marry Aurelia Cammarleigh. ("The Reverent Wooing of Archibald", "Archibald and the Masses", "The Code of the Mulliners"; mentioned in "The Fat of the Land")
- Ignatius Mulliner, portrait painter and ukulele player ("The Man Who Gave Up Smoking")
- Mordred Mulliner, a poet; an accidental pyromaniac. ("The Fiery Wooing of Mordred")
- Adrian Mulliner, a nephew of Mr Mulliner, being a private detective. ("The Smile That Wins", "From a Detective's Notebook")
- Sacheverall Mulliner is a nephew of Mr Mulliner, being a very timid man. ("The Voice From the Past")
- Eustace Mulliner, works at the British Embassy in Switzerland. ("Open House")
- Egbert Mulliner, assistant editor of The Weekly Booklover (Best Seller)
- Cyril Mulliner, interior decorator (Strychnine in the Soup)
- Bulstrode Mulliner (son of Joseph Mulliner), screenwriter in Hollywood ("The Castaways")
- Brancepeth Mulliner, an artist in search of a character. ("Buried Treasure")
- Augustus Mulliner; in love with Hermione Brimble. ("The Right Approach")
- Reginald Mulliner, inheritor of a substantial sum of money ("Big Business")
- George Mulliner, screenwriter in Hollywood, identical twin of Alfred ("George and Alfred")
- Alfred Mulliner, professional conjurer known as the Great Alfredo, identical twin of George ("George and Alfred")
Nephews by marriage:
- Aubrey Bassinger, married Charlotte
Nieces:
- Charlotte Mulliner, a poet writing "Vignettes in Verse". ("The Unpleasantness at Bludleigh Court")
Nieces by marriage:
- Aurelia Cammerleigh, married Archibald
- Annabella Spockett-Sprockett, married Mordred
- Hermione Rossiter, married Ignatius
- Mabel Petherick-Soames, married Osbert
- Evangeline Pembury, novelist, married Egbert (Best Seller)
- Amelia Bassett, married Cyril
- Jane, married Augustine
- Hermione Brimble, married Augustus
- Jane Oliphant, married Frederick
- Lady Millicent Shipton-Bellinger, married Adrian
- Muriel Branksome, married Sacheverell
- Susan Blake, married George (her fellow crossword puzzle enthusiast)
Nature of relationship uncertain:
- Theophilus Mulliner, the bishop of Bognor ("The Right Approach")
Other minor characters
[edit]- Aurelia Cammarleigh is a handsome girl, being the one Archibald Mulliner falls in love with. ("The Reverent Wooing of Archibald", "Archibald and the Masses", "The Code of the Mulliners")
- Algernon "Algy" Wymondham-Wymondham is a member of the Drones Club, being the one helped his fellow Archibald Mulliner find back the anonymous girls of his dreams, Aurelia Cammarleigh.("The Reverent Wooing of Archibald")
Original appearances
[edit]- "The Truth about George"
- "A Slice of Life"
- U.K.: Strand, August 1926
- U.S.: Liberty, 7 August 1926
- "Mulliner's Buck-U-Uppo"
- U.K.: Strand, November 1926
- U.S.: Liberty, 4 September 1926
- "The Romance of a Bulb-Squeezer"
- U.K.: Strand, March 1927
- U.S.: Liberty, 12 March 1927
- "The Story of William"
- U.K.: Strand, May 1927
- U.S.: Liberty, 9 April 1927 (as "It Was Only a Fire")
- "Those in Peril on the Tee"
- UK: Strand, June 1927
- US: Liberty, 21 May 1927
- Original UK version is narrated by the Oldest Member, not Mr. Mulliner.
- "Came the Dawn"
- U.K.: Strand, July 1927
- U.S.: Liberty, 11 June 1927
- "The Bishop's Move"
- U.K.: Strand, September 1927
- U.S.: Liberty, 20 August 1927
- "Portrait of a Disciplinarian"
- U.K.: Strand, October 1927
- U.S.: Liberty, 24 September 1927
- "Honeysuckle Cottage"
- Initially published without Mr. Mulliner framework
- U.K.: Strand, February 1925
- U.S.: Saturday Evening Post, 24 January 1925
- Subsequently, rewritten. First appearance as a Mr. Mulliner story in Meet Mr. Mulliner, September 1927
- Initially published without Mr. Mulliner framework
- "The Reverent Wooing of Archibald"
- UK: Strand, August 1928
- US: Cosmopolitan, September 1928
- "The Ordeal of Osbert Mulliner"
- UK: Strand, December 1928
- US: Liberty, 24 November 1928
- "Unpleasantness at Bludleigh Court"
- UK: Strand, February 1929
- US: Liberty, 2 February 1929
- "The Man Who Gave Up Smoking"
- UK: Strand, March 1929
- US: Liberty, 23 March 1929
- "The Story of Cedric"
- UK: Strand, May 1929
- US: Liberty, 11 May 1929
- "Something Squishy"
- Initially published without Mr. Mulliner framework
- UK: Strand, January 1925
- US: Saturday Evening Post, 20 December 1924
- Subsequently, rewritten. First appearance as a Mr. Mulliner story in Mr. Mulliner Speaking, April 1929
- Initially published without Mr. Mulliner framework
- "The Awful Gladness of the Mater"
- Initially published without Mr. Mulliner framework
- UK: Strand, May 1925
- US: Saturday Evening Post, 21 March 1925
- Subsequently, rewritten. First appearance as a Mr. Mulliner story in Mr. Mulliner Speaking, April 1929
- Initially published without Mr. Mulliner framework
- "The Passing of Ambrose"
- Initially published without Mr. Mulliner framework
- UK: Strand, July 1928
- US: Cosmopolitan, August 1928
- Subsequently, rewritten. First appearance as a Mr. Mulliner story in Mr. Mulliner Speaking, April 1929
- Initially published without Mr. Mulliner framework
- "Gala Night"
- UK: Strand, June 1930
- US: Cosmopolitan, May 1930
- "Best Seller"
- Early version published without Mr. Mulliner framework as "Parted Ways"
- UK: Strand, December 1914
- US: Pictorial Review, June 1915
- Subsequently, rewritten. First appearance as a Mr. Mulliner story:
- UK: Strand, July 1930
- US: Cosmopolitan, June 1930
- Early version published without Mr. Mulliner framework as "Parted Ways"
- "The Knightly Quest of Mervyn"
- UK: Strand, July 1931 (as "Quest")
- US: Cosmopolitan, April 1931 (as "Quest")
- "The Voice from the Past"
- UK: Strand, December 1931
- US: American, November 1931
- "The Smile that Wins"
- UK: Strand, February 1932
- US: American, October 1931
- "Strychnine in the Soup"
- UK: Strand, March 1932
- US: American, December 1931 (as "The Missing Mystery")
- "The Story of Webster"
- UK: Strand, May 1932 (as "The Bishop's Cat")
- US: American, February 1932
- "Cats will be Cats"
- UK: Strand, June 1932 (as "The Bishop's Folly")
- US: American, March 1932 (as "The Bishop's Folly")
- "Open House"
- UK: Strand, April 1932
- US: American, April 1932
- "Monkey Business"
- UK: Strand, December 1932
- US: American Magazine, December 1932 (as "A Cagey Gorilla")
- "The Nodder"
- UK: Strand, January 1933
- US: American Magazine, January 1933 (as "Love Birds")
- "The Juice of an Orange"
- UK: Strand, February 1933
- US: American Magazine, February 1933 (as "Love on a Diet")
- "The Rise of Minna Nordstrom"
- Early US version published without Mr. Mulliner framework; UK version is narrated by Mr. Mulliner
- UK: Strand, April 1933
- US: American Magazine, March 1933 (as "A Star is Born")
- "The Castaways"
- UK: Strand, June 1933
- "The Fiery Wooing of Mordred"
- US: Cosmopolitan, December 1934
- UK: Strand, February 1935
- "Archibald and the Masses"
- US: Cosmopolitan, August 1935
- UK: Strand, February 1936
- "The Code of the Mulliners"
- US: Cosmopolitan, February 1935
- UK: Strand, April 1935
- "Buried Treasure"
- UK: Strand, September 1936
- US: This Week, 27 September 1936 (as "Hidden Treasure")
- "Romance at Droitgate Spa"
- Early version published without Mr. Mulliner framework
- US: Saturday Evening Post, 20 February 1937
- UK: Strand, August 1937
- Subsequently, rewritten. First -- and ONLY -- appearance as a Mr. Mulliner story in the 1937 US-only book The Crime Wave at Blandings. All further appearances of this story revert to the pre-Mulliner version. Not collected in The World of Mr. Mulliner.
- "Anselm Gets His Chance"
- US: Saturday Evening Post, 3 July 1937
- UK: Strand, July 1937
- "Shock Dogs"
- UK: Punch, 14 February 1940
- A very brief topical discussion, never reprinted. Not collected in The World of Mr. Mulliner.
- "The Right Approach"
- " Большой бизнес "
- Ранняя версия, опубликованная без мистера Маллинера
- Впоследствии переписано. Первое появление в качестве истории мистера Маллинера в книге 1959 года несколько быстрых
- " Джордж и Альфред "
- Ранняя версия, опубликованная без мистера Маллинера.
- Великобритания: Strand Magazine , декабрь 1912 г.
- США: Коллиер еженедельно , 27 сентября 1913 года (как «брат Альфред»)
- Впоследствии переписано. Первое появление в роли истории мистера Маллинера:
- США: Playboy , январь 1967 г.
- Ранняя версия, опубликованная без мистера Маллинера.
- "Еще одна рождественская песня"
- Ранняя версия, опубликованная без мистера Маллинера
- США: Playboy , декабрь 1970 года
- Впоследствии переписано. Первое появление в качестве истории мистера Маллинера в книге 1972 года « Мир мистера Маллинера»
- Ранняя версия, опубликованная без мистера Маллинера
Адаптация
[ редактировать ]Четырнадцать историй Маллинера были адаптированы для телевидения в рамках телесериала 1974–1978 гг . В эпизоде «Удаление Арчибальда», мистер Маллинер был изображен Уильямом Мервином . [ 3 ]
Ричард Гриффитс снялся в роли г -на Маллинера в серии радиоприемников историй, в том числе шесть эпизодов в 2002 году под названием « Встреча с г -ном Маллинером» и четыре эпизода в 2004 году под названием « Больше г -на Маллинера» . Сериал вышел на BBC Radio 4. [ 4 ]
Примечания
[ редактировать ]- ^ McIlvaine (1990), p. 178, D124.92.
- ^ McIlvaine (1990), с. 115–116, B5. В первом издании мира г -на Маллинера 40 основных историй варьируются от 11 до 20 страниц в длину. «Еще одна рождественская песня» длится не более 5 страниц, а «из ноутбука детектива» - не более 4 страниц.
- ^ «Комедийный игровой дом представляет: благоговейное ухаживание Арчибальда» . Би -би -си геном . Би -би -си. 9 июля 1974 года . Получено 16 октября 2019 года .
- ^ «BBC Genome (списки эпизодов мистера Маллинера)» . Би -би -си геном . Би -би -си . Получено 16 октября 2019 года .
Ссылки
[ редактировать ]- Гаррисон, Даниэль Х. (1989). Кто есть кто в Вудхаусе . Нью -Йорк: International Polygonics, Ltd. ISBN 1-55882-054-X .
- Кузменко, Мишель (Российское общество Вудхауса) (29 июля 2007 г.). "Wodehouse Books" . Библиография . Получено 25 сентября 2007 года .
- Макилвейн, Эйлин; Шерби, Луиза С.; Хейнеман, Джеймс Х. (1990). PG Wodehouse: комплексная библиография и контрольный список . Нью -Йорк: Джеймс Х. Хейнеман, ИСБН 978-0-87008-125-5 .
- Реджи (8 июня 2007 г.). «Вудхаус кто есть: семья Муллинер» . Блэндингс, компаньон работ PG Wodehouse . Архивировано из оригинала 11 октября 2008 года.
- Усборн, Ричард (2003). Слим -соус: PG Wodehouse Companion . Вудсток, Нью -Йорк: Пресса Overlook. С. 137–207. ISBN 1-58567-441-9 .
Внешние ссылки
[ редактировать ]Списки PG Wodehouse символов |
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Персонажи во всех историях Wodehouse |