Sherlock Holmes, the fictional Victorian detective whose global popularity continues to this day, has had more imagined resurrections than Elvis. |
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Along with Sherlock Holmes, Tarzan and James Bond, the wonder dog is one of the most enduring characters in British literature. |
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Over the years there have been many of adaptations of Sherlock Holmes and countless actors interpreting the role. |
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His dodgy memoirs are ultimately more thrilling than the open-and-shut casebook of Sherlock Holmes. |
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A fic in the genre of alternative universe, here Sherlock Holmes is a famous chef and Watson is running a struggling family restaurant. |
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He's wearing a Sherlock Holmeseque half-caped coat and carrying his deerstalker in his hand. |
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Sherlock Holmes gets given an honorary fellowship from the Royal Society of Chemistry. |
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The case went unsolved for sometime, until she busted out her diamond-studded gold magnifying glass and bubblegum pink Sherlock Holmes hat. |
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Sherlock Holmes is not just the brainiest hero in British literature, he is the only one whose whole reason for existence is brainpower. |
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Of course, you could protest that sherlock did not really exist and the Ripper did. |
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How these two men could ever have trusted one another is a mystery worthy of Sherlock Holmes. |
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Sherlock Holmes's quick eye took in my occupation, and he shook his head with a smile as he noticed my questioning glances. |
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Fictional sleuth Sherlock Holmes is credited with first realising the value of soil in criminal investigations. |
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Salter accounts for most of the music in the first headnote, with only Sherlock Holmes and The Voice of Terror written by Skinner. |
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Despite looking fabulous in a deerstalker and maintaining a healthy interest in opium, I am not Sherlock Holmes. |
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Professor James Moriarty, Sherlock Holmes's mortal enemy, wants to get his hands on a revolutionary new bombsight. |
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Sherlock Holmes is a permanent fixture in popular culture, and he is particularly in fashion at the moment. |
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It had a light-heartedness that was endearing and worthy of that Sherlock Holmes genre it so alluringly wanted to emulate. |
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Sherlock Holmes' reputation rests upon his powers of observation, memory and deduction. |
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Conan Doyle eventually left medicine and created Sherlock Holmes, a character who brought science to the masses. |
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Indeed, Danger Mouse, in spite of his eyepatch and zippy car, is more like the indomitable Sherlock Holmes in temperament and ability than the suave ladykiller James Bond. |
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The Sherlock Holmes stories are the prototypes of modern detective stories. |
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All local budding Sherlock Holmes, Agatha Christies and other nosy parkers were running around last weekend trying to figure out what happened Friday Night at Bowmore Point. |
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But, I repeat, no one doubted that he who controlled the Conan Doyle copyright could also say yea or nay to the further use of the character Sherlock Holmes. |
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Conan Doyle had no scruples about bringing him back from the dead after he drowned with Moriarty in the Reichenbach Falls at the end of The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes. |
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The mystery of how Britain's leading expert on him came to be lying garrotted to death on his own bed may have been solved by the author's greatest creation, Sherlock Holmes. |
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Master of deduction Sherlock refuses to put together the evidence that his girlfriend Alyssa is cheating on him. |
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He ensured that Jeremy Brett donned the deerstalker, and his electrifying performances guaranteed that for millions he became the television Sherlock Holmes. |
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Sherlock Holmes put down the Daily Gazette where he had been perusing the agony column, his daily ritual, and retrieved a letter from his coat pocket. |
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He is a pudgy, bespectacled, homburg-wearing cuckold of a Sherlock in those fish-grey postwar years of 1970s England. |
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The question master was Kieran Sherlock who set the quiz in motion. |
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But of course Sherlock knew better, and got on the case quick sharp. |
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Sherlock realises Frankland, who participated in the project, has continued it in secret. |
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In June 2011, it was announced that Russell Tovey would appear in Sherlock series two in its second episode. |
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In addition, the three episodes of the second series show Sherlock dealing, respectively, with love, fear, and death. |
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Stapleton, the mother of the child who wrote to Sherlock at the beginning of the episode requesting that he help her find her missing rabbit. |
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In one scene, after Sherlock first witnesses the hound, Sherlock makes deductions about a mother and son from a nearby table. |
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And he wore a Sherlock Holmesy kind of cap with a swarm of salmon flies upon it, that to my boyish fancy was more splendid than a crown. |
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I collect Sherlockiana first and foremost because I am a Sherlock Holmes bug. |
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Sherlock Holmes is brought in to determine if the dog is in fact real or supernatural. |
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Sherlock and Cumbermania may cause women to go mad, but what do the guys think of it all? |
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In 1927, Doyle spoke in a filmed interview about Sherlock Holmes and spiritualism. |
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Two famous fictional characters who wore deerstalker hats were Sherlock Holmes and Holden Caulfield in J. D. Salinger's Catcher in the Rye. |
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The Sherlock Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle often visit riverside parts as in The Sign of Four. |
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Watson states that Sherlock Holmes has retired to a small farm upon the Downs near Eastbourne. |
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Conan Doyle's The Adventure of the Devil's Foot featuring Sherlock Holmes is set in Cornwall. |
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Christie became increasingly tired of Poirot, just as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle did with his character Sherlock Holmes. |
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He also starred in Without a Clue, portraying Sherlock Holmes and also acted as Chief Insp. |
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He has also received four Primetime Emmy Award nominations, winning Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Movie for Sherlock. |
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Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories helped found the tradition of detective fiction. |
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The Sherlock Holmes stories are generally considered milestones in the field of crime fiction. |
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Short stories featuring Sherlock Holmes were published in the Strand Magazine. |
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There is a statue of Sherlock Holmes in Picardy Place, Edinburgh, close to the house where Doyle was born. |
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Details about Sherlock Holmes's life, except for the adventures in the books, are scarce in Conan Doyle's original stories. |
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The Sherlock Holmes stories helped marry forensic science, particularly Holmes' acute observation of small clues, and literature. |
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It also appears at the end of the 1929 film The Return of Sherlock Holmes, the first Holmes sound film. |
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York Mews South, off Crawford Street, was renamed Sherlock Mews, and Watson's Mews is near Crawford Place. |
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Watson's description of Sherlock Holmes when he first makes his acquaintance in A Study in Scarlet. |
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His first screen appearance was in the 1900 Mutoscope film, Sherlock Holmes Baffled. |
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Brett played the detective in four series of Sherlock Holmes for Britain's Granada Television from 1984 to 1994 and appeared as Holmes on stage. |
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Holmes has also appeared in video games, including the Adventures of Sherlock Holmes series of seven titles. |
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His great grandson was Joseph Bell who Arthur Conan Doyle has credited Sherlock Holmes as being loosely based on from Bell's observant manner. |
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They were lowbrow pastiche. The Adventures of Vicarage Leadbetter, a low-budget pisstake of Sherlock Holmes written for Radio Four. |
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The Hound of the Baskervilles is the third of the crime novels written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle featuring the detective Sherlock Holmes. |
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James Mortimer asks Sherlock Holmes to investigate the death of his friend, Sir Charles Baskerville. |
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Sherlock Holmes and the Hound of the Baskervilles is a casual game by Frogwares. |
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The legend may have been part of the inspiration for the Sherlock Holmes novel The Hound of the Baskervilles. |
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This was part of the film series entitled The Last Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. |
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The protagonist of this novel, Christopher John Francis Boone, mentions Sherlock Holmes several times throughout the book. |
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This explanation satisfies Lestrade but not Sherlock, who insists the dog he saw was monstrous. |
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Sherlock deduces a chemical weapon designed to trigger violent hallucinations was responsible. |
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MarkLynch, Steven Aurin and MikeyRonannetted for Sports Bar, withBen Sherlock and Paul Lloyd replying for Trafalgar. |
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Professor Sherlock says, 'The only two products on the market clinically proven to improve hair loss are Minoxidil and Propecia. |
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Technological man is either a specialist-savant like Sherlock Holmes or an emasculated drone like Dagwood Bumstead, according to McLuhan. |
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The Sherlock star said he would gladly swap his deerstalker hat for a long dark cape to fight crime. |
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It was also one of the most adapted novels in the Sherlock Holmes series. |
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Sherlock surmises that John was poisoned by the leaking pipes in the laboratory, and John realises Sherlock locked him in the labs in order to test his theory. |
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The central idea is that Sherlock Holmes and others of that family are mind dependent abstract objects with a make believe and a set theoretical component. |
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The whole event of how Grace lost his wicket has been captured by Doyle's teammate Shacklock, after whom Doyle named his famous detective Sherlock. |
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Sherlock Holmes of the series Benedict Cumberbatch won the outstanding lead actor in a miniseries or movie at the 66th Primetime Emmy Awards on Monday night. |
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They span from the more common groups such as Politics Society and the History Society to more niche interests like the Sherlock Holmes Society and the Baking Society. |
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This time it's super sleuth Sherlock, who has to put on his thinking cap when the wife of Dr Watson suddenly disappears and Holmes comes face to face with his mortal enemy. |
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As Sherlock and John prepare to leave the next morning, John wonders why he saw the hound in the lab despite not having inhaled the gas from the hollow. |
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But Lyons was left to reflect on a game where his side waited until the 71st minute to copper-fasten the win with a Jason Sherlock point against Leinster's minnows. |
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Cumberbund enjoyed himself immensely, playing Sherlock with great panache. |
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Later important depictions of London from the 19th and early 20th centuries are Dickens' novels, and Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories. |
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While he's grateful for his fans' support since the phenomenal success of Sherlock, Benedict is also very forthright about some of the more intrusive aspects of Cumbermania. |
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Also let loose in the jungle are a host of other rarely sighted creatures, including Sherlock Livingstone, Everard and Jane, Lucy Livingstone and Fairy Gingernuts. |
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After John receives a call from Mortimer that Henry has run off with a gun, John, Sherlock and Lestrade run to the hollow to find Henry about to commit suicide. |
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Locking himself in an empty cage, he calls Sherlock, who rescues him. |
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At night the Victorian brass fittings bathe everything in an intimate yellow glow, so you appear to be wandering through a peasouper fog in Sherlock Holmes' London. |
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Calling Mycroft, Sherlock gains access to Baskerville again. |
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Sherlock reacts with anger, denying there is something wrong with him. |
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At a local inn, Sherlock is visibly shaken and confesses he saw the hound. |
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When Sherlock and Henry arrive at the hollow, they both see the hound. |
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Sherlock and John arrive in Dartmoor to find the hound is a local legend. |
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The story was adapted in 1988 for Granada television's The Return of Sherlock Holmes starring Jeremy Brett as Holmes and Edward Hardwicke as Watson. |
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King's Sherlock Holmes novel The Moor, a Sherlockian pastiche. |
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He has reviewed crime novels for various publications and websites since 1987 and has written columns for print and online magazines such as Sherlock and Bookdagger. |
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Holmes starred Ian McKellen as a retired Sherlock Holmes living in Sussex, in 1947, who grapples with an unsolved case involving a beautiful woman. |
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It also formed the basis for the Gillette's 1916 film, Sherlock Holmes. |
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Widely considered a British cultural icon, the London Metropolitan Railway named one of its 20 electric locomotives deployed in the 1920s for Sherlock Holmes. |
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For the 1951 Festival of Britain, Holmes's living room was reconstructed as part of a Sherlock Holmes exhibition, with a collection of original material. |
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Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, in his 1924 Sherlock Holmes tale The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire, mentions that Dr Watson played rugby for Blackheath. |
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In April 2015, Cumberbatch was nominated for his sixth British Academy Television Award for Best Leading Actor for the third series of the Sherlock. |
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All we really want to know though is will there be a series four? When? What will happen? Will Sherlock be all right? Will there ever be a Sherlolly? |
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Saintsbury secured a role for Chaplin in Charles Frohman's production of Sherlock Holmes, where he played Billy the pageboy in three nationwide tours. |
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Sir Berkeley stroked his beard and looked Sherlock Holmesish. |
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In contrast to the original, however, the producers decided to centre Sherlock in their adaptation, so Sherlock only threatens to stay behind in London. |
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