In the movie, there is such a detail: When Mina came out of the crowd, a sign appeared on the side of the road, which said "Sir Henry Owen Hamlet Hamlet"
This detail is a tribute to the original author, Bram Stoker. In reality, the Blue Heart Theatre is where Bram Stoker works. There's also the name Sir Henry Owen, Bram Stoker's boss and a real-life prototype for Dracula. In reality, the two met because of Hamlet. The original novel of "Four Hundred Years" is "Dracula" by Bram Stoker, who lived in the Victorian era.
Tell a sad story. This is a love story between two writers in nineteenth-century England. Bram Stoker met Sir Henry Owen, whom he regarded as the best in the world, elegant and charming. Two equally talented people fell in love at first sight. Bram Stoker abandoned his family and hometown, resigned and left for London with Sir Henry Owen. Both were exceptional people at the time. Stoke was a shy, shy, red-haired youth, while Sir Henry Owen was proud and flamboyant, desperate to make his dreams come true. According to Stoker's own words, "the soul hits the soul", "the only one in a lifetime, the soul spreads its wings", "together recording an affectionate era in which we fully understand each other". They have been together for more than two decades, dedicated to theatrical careers, Stoke is sharp and business-minded, Henry Owen is passionate and creative. They were a huge success. During this period, Stoker wrote a novel "Dracula", and Sir Henry Owen was actually the prototype of the literary image "Vampire Dracula". However, in the society at that time, they could not speak of love openly, but could only express their feelings in diaries and records, those symbols and metaphors, word games and riddles, and the obscure expressions in memoirs. "I stayed by his side all night, God bless him!", "Like any form of love", "Written his name a million times", "We are so inseparable that we are so inseparable". But they can't speak of love openly. As Stoke's vampire novel expresses, "can't walk in the sun". Later researchers, relying on these clues, restored the love of the two people bit by bit. Henry Irving had such a plan in his later years, he would retire after the tour, and after retirement, he lived in seclusion in the countryside to write his memoirs, but he died before the tour was over. Stoke fell into extreme sadness and his health was deteriorating (modern analysis suspects it was severe depression). The malice points to bringing Stoke to ruin. Stoke, who was left alone in the world, suffered several blows from serious illness, rumors, and financial difficulties. All the novels he wrote later were mixed with thoughts and love for Henry Owen. They were not buried together. Source: Personal Reminiscences of Henry Irving, Bram Stoker, Henry Irving in England and
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