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Events

2024 Calendar
                           
Sunday 16th March 2025           Sherlock Holmes Close Up Zoom Act With Micah Cover    

Sunday 8th June 2025                Sherlock Holmes and the Baron of Wimbledon by Orlando Pearson (via Zoom)

                
Further 2025 meetings will be announced soon.          

*Prospective members are welcome to attend a meeting as a visitor. Contact the Captain - details on the Contact Us page.*


 

 Ship's Logs

All our online meetings  (starting 2021) are available on The Passengers YouTube channel.

Minutes of recent Passengers meetings:



Sherlock Holmes and the Baron Of Wimbledon

8th June 2025 via Zoom

The meeting began promptly at 2pm with eight attendees Zooming in from Australia, the U.K. and New Zealand. The Captain welcomed guest presenter Orlando Pearson, joining at the unfriendly hour of 5:00am.

In media news:

Canonical Anniversaries for June.

Show & Tell

Leigh Blackmore had acquired two books by David Stuart Davies along with the Mammoth Book Of Sherlock Holmes Abroad edited by Simon Clark. He had also been watching the Lucy Worsley series Killing Sherlock.

Next in the meeting, Quartermaster Rosane McNamara spoke about her trip to India with the Sherlock Holmes Society of London, accompanied by a series of photos showing highlights from her ‘hiatus’. The group travelled to Calcutta, Lucknow, Agra (famous to Sherlockians  from The Sign of Four), the Taj Mahal, Delhi, and Shimla. There were plenty of opportunities for both sight seeing and dressing in Victorian costume. The group even performed an original Sherlock Holmes radio play written by Peter Horrocks.

The Captain next announced the winner of the 2024 Montpellier Award for the best article in The Passengers’ Log from that year, as voted by society members. From four excellent nominees, the winning article is Construct of the Stranger - One Further Revelation by Ross Philpott, from the January 2024 Log. Congratulations to Ross. There will be a full report in the next edition of The Log.

The meeting concluded with the main presentation, introduced by Orland Pearson. Orlando is an author and playwright, currently up to volume 9 of his Redacted Sherlock Holmes series. Orland presented his play The Baron Of Wimbledon, which he adapted from a story written in 2020, and first recorded and ‘Zoomcast’ during Covid lockdown. It has now been seen across twelve countries It was based on the story of Gottfied Von Cramm, a real tennis player from the 1930s, who was also the first German sportsman to play outside Germany after World War II. Orlando described how he came to write the story and adapt it for performance. The play (available on You Tube) was well received the Passengers and Orland took questions afterwards, also speaking about the latest volume of The Redacted Sherlock Holmes and also his other Mycroftian series – Adventures In Statecraft.

The assembled Zoom attendees departed at 3:15pm. A recording of the meeting will be made available on YouTube on the Passengers’ channel.



Sherlock Holmes Close Up Zoom Act

16th March 2025 via Zoom

The meeting began promptly at 2pm with ten attendees Zooming in from various time zones.

In media news:

Canonical Anniversaries:

In the Show & Tell section of the meeting, Leigh Blackmore showed his latest book purchases including The Secret Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, an anthology by Gary Lovisi, with cover art by a friend of Leigh’s. Leigh also had some Solar Pons pastiches.

Rosane McNamara has been on a trip to India with the Sherlock Holmes Society of London – look out for a write up of her adventures in the next Passengers’ Log.

The main part of the meeting commenced with a warm welcome to presenter Micah Cover from California. Micah is a professional magician and performer, playwright, and author who has performed for Hollywood celebrities and on a number of television shows, including Penn and Teller: Fool Us (available on YouTube). Micah believes he’s the only magician in the world to perform a Sherlock Holmes themed magic show. Micah performed a number of tricks for the assembled Passengers over Zoom, involving the attendees in various acts of mentalism and card tricks with a Sherlockian theme, even thwarting concerted efforts to mess with his act. More information on Micah and his tricks can be found on his website.

The assembled Zoom attendees departed at 2:55pm. A recording of the meeting can be found on YouTube. Thanks as always to Doug Elliott for editing the video.


Phosphorus and the Making Of a Hellhound

1st December 2024 via Zoom

Nine Passengers attended the final meeting for 2024, Zooming in from Australia, New Zealand and the USA. A particular welcome was extended to the committed people joining from unfriendly time zones, including presenter Matthew Hall.

Originally from Sydney, Matt has lived and worked in the US for many years, and is very active in Sherlockian circles there. He is an avid collector and contributes regularly to The Passengers’ Log.

The Navigator reminded Passengers that there will not be an end of year issue of the Log this year, due to various extenuating circumstances affecting the editorial team. Instead, there will be a double issue early in 2025. This hopefully gives more time for people to put fingers to keyboard across the holiday period and contribute an article.

The Captain had various items of news for the attendees.

Media News

Anniversaries From Around the Date of  the Meeting

In the ‘Show and Tell’ section of the meeting, Paul Jenkins described the five weeks he spent in London, including a visit to the Baker Street museum where he purchased a Sherlockian themed bowtie which he was sporting at the meeting. He also met with Steve Emecz from MX Publishing about a potential book involving a true crime in Sydney in the 1890s, which Paul will be continuing to work on. Matt Hall showed the book Holmes Away From Home which was from a State Library of Victoria exhibition in 1987-8. Matt is on a mission to collect Australian Sherlockian ephemera, and also has a rarer version of the same book (from a limited run of fifty) including an etching. Leigh Blackmore had picked up some Conan Doyle biographies The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes written by John Dicksoon Carr in the 1940s, and Conan Doyle by Pierre Nordon (1966). He also had the anthology The Mammoth Book of Sherlock Holmes Abroad (2005).

Matt Hall then began his presentation: ‘Phosphorus in The Hound of the Baskervilles’. In his professional life Matt is a scientist, with Sherlock Holmes and genealogy as side interests. He originally presented this talk at the ‘Sherlock Holmes at Fifty’ conference and as a published article in The Baker Street Journal.

In his examination of whether phosphorus could have been used to make the Hound glow, Matt began by discussing how existing literature on the topic focussed on how phosphorus was problematic due to its toxicity. Matt then explained the various types and properties of phosphorus and how its glow was discovered. He went on to describe why rubbing phosphorus on a living being to create a glow was not actually poisonous and gave the historic background of ‘ghost hoaxing’ in the Victorian era where people did exactly that – including documented cases in Australia, and made the case that Conan Doyle would very likely have been aware of this. Matt finished be reiterating that phosphorus was only toxic if ingested, not if spread thinly on skin or, in the case of the Hound, fur. The attending Passengers followed up with various questions and comment including adding use of phosphorus by magicians and various related chemical interactions.

The meeting ended with a big thank you to Matt for his very interesting and informative presentation.

A recording of the meeting is available on YouTube.



                                                                    Sherlock Holmes: Memories of Murder




22nd September 2024 via Zoom


Ten Passengers gathered virtually for the September meeting. The Captain extended a particular welcome to those joining at unfriendly hours due to their time zones.

The Captain drew attention to the 2024 Baker Street Irregulars Trust lecture given early on the morning of the meeting (Sydney time) by Passenger Mattias Bostrom from Sweden. Mattias had looked at thousands of newspaper mentions of the Baker Street Irregulars to shed light on the impact of the BSI over its ninety year existence. One item he highlighted was from Sydney’s Daily Telegraph of 16th November 1946 in which Jon Holiday sought out other enthusiasts to form what he called “a Holmes study circle”.  This led to the founding of The Red-Headed League, Australia’s first Sherlockian society, which Passengers may remember only lasted for one meeting.

Media News

·         The Watson TV series, starring American actor Morris Chestnut, continues its production with filming taking place in Vancouver, Canada and Pittsburgh, USA, where the show is set.  It’s currently planned to screen on the CBS network in the US in January 2025.

·         Sherlock & Daughter, with UK actor David Thewlis in the lead role, and Blu Hunt as the American daughter is an  eight episode TV series planned to screen sometime in 2025. It was filmed in Dublin and in the Irish countryside. Since our last meeting Dr Watson has been added to the cast and will be played by American actor Sean Duggan.  It is due to screen in Australia on SBS.

·         The status of the third Enola Holmes movie has been updated with news that filming is planned to get underway in early 2025.

·         Young Sherlock is an  eight episode TV series which commenced filming in the UK in July. Starring 26-year old Hero Fiennes Tiffin as Holmes, the cast also includes his uncle Joseph Fiennes, who play his father, and Colin Firth who plays an aristocrat. It is set to be shown on Amazon Prime, with no release date yet.

Anniversaries Around the Date of The Meeting

The meeting continued with a presentation by Declan Seefield, the producer, director and one  of the cast of a new short film made in Brisbane: Sherlock Holmes: Memories of Murder. Available on YouTube, this twenty minute piece is shot in the film noir style and in the plot “Sherlock Holmes is forced to confront his age and health conditions as he struggles to solve the murder of a fellow detective.” It stars John McCaffrey at Sherlock Holmes, Blake Edgerton as Dr Watson, and David Fitton as Inspector Lestrade. Holmes & Watson are seen in traditional Victorian outfits but the story is set in the present day (Holmes drives a Mazda MX5 in case anyone was wondering…).

Declan took questions after the presentation and also told the group more about the making of the film, delving in particular into the themes of the film (health & legacy) and the inspiration of various feature films (e.g. Knives Out, Shutter Island, The Sixth Sense, The Prestige, The Dark Knight, Thor: Love & Thunder). He also revealed the minimal equipment he used in production. It was filmed using cinematic mode on an iPhone, with a gimble and light set to achieve a better quality image. The total cost of production was $1,500 including cost of the existing phone (so more like $200 taking that into account). Declan also went into the writing process in detail including the conflicts he placed on the characters, the plot arc, and how he filled out the story with more details and dialogue. The production took Decland two years and four months to complete  from the idea through to its release on YouTube. The filming itself only took four days, the rest was writing, pre and post production. Six hours of video was whittled down to twenty minutes in the editing process. The film also had a small cinema release in Brisbane and it has been entered into several film festivals.

Anyone wanting to watch this short film can find it on YouTube  here

The meeting was recorded and is available to view on the Passengers’ YouTube channel. Please note the instructions in the description under the viewer describing how to return to the meeting video after watching the film, including timecodes to shortcut to each part of the video.