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  1. 18 de fev. de 2016 · After Bram’s death, Florence won an action against Prana Films, the German company that made Nosferatu, an unauthorized version of Dracula. She was granted £5,000 in royalties along with an undertaking that every copy of Nosferatu would be destroyed. (The above sketch of Balcombe is by Oscar Wilde). 9.

  2. W/O Abraham Stoker Florence Balcombe outlived her husband by 25 years and died in 1937 at the age of 78. She was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium, and her ashes scattered at the Gardens of Rest there. The original plan had been to keep her ashes and those of her husband together in a display urn. After Irving Noel...

  3. 5 de jan. de 2018 · Florence Balcombe and the war for Nosferatu. Poster for the 1922 film Nosferatu. In December 1878, Bram Stoker married Florence Balcombe in St Anne’s Church on Dublin’s Dawson Street. Once pursued romantically by Oscar Wilde, the daughter of Lieutenant-Colonel James Balcombe of Clontarf was instead smitten by the future author of Dracula.

  4. 13 de mar. de 2021 · En Por Fin no es Lunes hablamos de la mujer de Bram Stoker, Florence Balcombe, de nacionalidad irlandesa y, según parece, con bastante carácter. Bram Stoker y Oscar Wilde habían sido ...

  5. Florence Balcombe was born on the 17th of July, 1858. She was popular for being a Family Member. Best remembered as the wife of Dracula author Bram Stoker, this Irishwoman destroyed numerous copies of the 1922 movie Nosferatu in retribution for the filmmakers’ refusal to acknowledge that they had borrowed the movie’s plot from her husband ...

  6. Stoker marries Florence Anne Lemon Balcombe in December of 1878. Interestingly enough, Wilde had seriously dated her short before and supposedly Mrs. Stoker was still in love with him throughout her marriage to Stoker. Wilde had said she had the most beautiful face of any woman and there was no ill will after they broke up, yet Wilde told a ...

  7. 26 de mai. de 2020 · On Tuesday, May 18th, 1897 (at 10:15 am), eight days before the release of his novel Dracula, the Lyceum Theatre, where Stoker himself was the business manager, performed a theatrical adaptation of the yet-unpublished novel that Stoker had written, himself. This play, Dracula: or the Un-Dead, was only performed once.