Record

RepositorySpecial Collections Archives (GB 0029)
Ref NoEUL MS 391
Date1955-2011
LevelCollection
Extent1 file
TitleGeorge Wilson Knight's letters to Bobby Brown about 'The Last of the Incas'
Creator NameKnight; George Richard Wilson (1897-1984); writer
Wolfit; Donald, (1902-1968), British actor
Taborski; Boleslaw (1927-2010); Polish broadcaster
Jacobi; Derek (1938-); British actor
DescriptionPapers mainly relating to Bobby Brown's production of the play 'The Last of the Incas' at Leyton Leytonstone County High School in 1955, including actor Derek Jacobi in the role of De Soto. The play, written by George Wilson Knight, was first presented at the Sheffield Little Theatre, by Arnold Freeman, Sheffield Educational Settlement in 1954.

The collection includes letters by George Wilson Knight and congratulations letters by other people to Bobby Brown; a programme; photographs; an article by George Wilson Knight about his own play 'The Last of the Incas' and a copy of the memorial for Bobby Brown's funeral with Derek Jacobi's tribute.
AdminHistoryBobby George Brown, (1923-2011), was an English teacher at Leyton County High School. He produced and directed many of the school productions including 'The Last of the Incas', a play by G Wilson Knight, in December 1955. Bobby Brown also encouraged one of his students, actor Derek Jacobi to take on a school production of 'Hamlet' that was particularly acclaimed by the critics at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, 1957.
Bobby Brown subsequently worked for the British Film Institute.
George Richard Wilson Knight (1897-1984), Professor of English Literature, was the youngest son of George Knight and Caroline Louisa Jackson, and the younger brother of Jackson Knight. He was educated at Dulwich College and St. Edmund Hall Oxford. He served as a despatch rider in the Middle East during the Great War, and in peace time became a teacher of English. Short spells teaching at Hawtreys (1923-1925), Dean Close School (1925-1931), University of Toronto (1931-1940), and Stowe (1941-1946) were followed by his appointment as Reader in English Literature at Leeds University in 1946. From 1956 he was Professor of English Literature at Leeds, retiring in 1962. His publications, beginning with 'Myth and Miracle' (1929) and the 'Wheel of Fire' (1930) number more than thirty. He produced and acted in a number of theatrical performances, especially Shakespearian, on both sides of the Atlantic. He received an Honorary DLitt from Exeter in 1968. His biography of his brother, based in part on the family's papers represented in this collection, was published in 1975. He retired to Exeter, living in his brother's house just off the university campus, until his death in 1984.
LanguageEnglish
AccessStatusOpen
Access ConditionsUsual EUL arrangements apply.
Finding AidsCatalogued
Management GroupPerforming arts papers
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