4) All other business shall be left for the monthly meeting.
5) There shall be no monthly meeting.
* This means A. C. Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes—GG.
** This is not a misprint—GG.
* “It was agreed that the first health must always be drunk to ‘The Woman.’ Suggestions for succeeding sentiments, which will have their own overtones for all genuine Holmesians, were: ‘Mrs. Hudson,’ ‘Mycroft,’ ‘The Second Mrs. Watson,’ ‘The game is afoot!’ and The second most dangerous man in London.’”
EXHIBIT B
MANIFESTO
TO ALL TRUE LOVERS OF BAKER STREET AND MORE ESPECIALLY TO THOSE STYLING THEMSELVES ITS IRREGULARS GREETINGS
BE IT KNOWN THAT Metropolis Pictures has announced its intention of filming that episode of the Sacred Writings known as The Adventure of the Speckled Band.
THAT this is a worthy and laudable intention, particularly as the chronicler of the Master himself considered this episode especially adapted to dramatic form.
THAT the cast announced is no more unworthy of the Writings than mortals must inevitably be, with the exception of the late William Gillette.
BUT THAT the delicate and responsible task of transferring this adventure to the screen has been entrusted to the typewriter of Stephen Worth.
BE IT FURTHER KNOWN THAT this man Worth, hereinafter to be known as that rat, is the author of many stupid and illogical mystery novels of the type known as hard-boiled and is therefore to be considered as an apostate from the teachings of the Master.
THAT that rat was once himself a private detective, of the lowest divorce-evidence, strike-breaking type, and therefore feels himself to be an authority upon the art of detection.
THAT that rat’s personal life has been such as to bring disgrace upon the profession of crime and even upon the more tolerant profession of letters.
AND THAT that rat has many times expressed in public print his contempt for the exploits of Holmes and his desire “to show up that cocky bastard for what he is.”
BE IT THEREFORE RESOLVED THAT it is the duty of all true Holmesians to write, wire, or otherwise express their sentiments to the producer F. X. Weinberg, Metropolis Pictures, Los Angeles, California, demanding in the name of all honor and decency that Stephen Worth be purged from the task of adapting the Sacred Writings.
By the Sign of Four, the Five Orange Pips, the Dancing Men, and the Dog in the Night-time, we conjure you to do so.
THE BAKER STREET IRREGULARS
in session extraordinary
by Rufus Bottomley, M.D., Tantalus
METROPOLIS PICTURES
F. X. WEINBERG
Memo to PUBLICITY, ATTN. M. O’BREEN
Maureen, have you, for God’s sake, any ideas about Worth? I have Irregulars on my tail.
F. X.
Chapter 1
The main trouble, thought Maureen, is the ideas Worth has about me. It had not been a pleasant scene that morning. At the thought, she smoothed her dress as though to wipe off the touch of Stephen Worth’s hands. But personal revulsion and defense of one’s virtue shouldn’t interfere with handling publicity contacts, and F. X.’s memo sounded really worried. Dutifully she ran a comb through her short black hair, gave a moment’s perfunctory attention to her face, and went off down the corridor to Mr. Weinberg’s office.
That executive was crouched over a paper-strewn desk, shouting into a speaking apparatus. “So I don’t want to see any professor! I don’t care who he has letters from. One hundred and eleven insulting letters I have yet on my desk and I should talk to professors? He should live so long!
Maureen couldn’t resist it. “He says he wants to give you English lessons, Mr. Weinberg,” she said in Miss Blankenship’s squeaky voice.
“English lessons!” Mr. Weinberg bellowed into the apparatus. “I’m Hermann Bing maybe, or Mike Curtiz? English lessons he wants to give me! I—” Some instinct warned him to turn. He saw Maureen. Slowly the little executive’s gargoyle features went through a double take.
The Weinberg double takes are a Hollywood legend, as famous in their way as the corrosive wit of Dorothy Parker, the discomforting ribs of Vernon Crews, or the magnificent verbal creations of Samuel Goldwyn. Paul Jackson had once said that these retroactive reactions could be equaled only if Lubitsch were to direct Horton in slow motion. Such a triumph of the mobility of the human countenance is not easily to be described. The effect, however, for those unwise in theatrical argot, may be roughly compared to the appearance of a man with pixies in his brainpan slowly recalling what he said to the hostess last night.
“It’s you,” he pronounced, somewhat in the tones Selznick must have used when he saw Vivian Leigh’s test for Scarlett O’Hara. “You’re a smart girl, Maureen. You tell me what I should do.”
Maureen read the constitution, the manifesto, and the incredible series of missives which the latter had evoked. At last she shook her head sadly. “There’s nothing to do,” she said. “You’ve got to fire Worth.”
The thing on the desk buzzed. “Eleven thirty, Mr. Weinberg.”
Automatically the executive reached out for the water carafe and the packet of sodium bicarbonate. “Give me a reason,” he said.
She waved at the papers. “There’s a hundred and eleven reasons, if you counted right. Look at the names signed to those—Christopher Morley, Rufus Bottomley, Alexander Woollcott, Vincent Starrett, Harrison Ridgly, Elmer Davis, John O’Dab. Why you simply can’t afford to have these men against you, F. X. Take Woolcott alone. If he came out for a boycott on The Speckled Band, you’d never even get your investment back on it, let alone a cent of profit. I’m trying not to let my personal feelings about Worth influence me. Just from a business standpoint, you’ve got to get rid of him.”
The little man smiled. “You are a good girl, Maureen. You don’t yes me; no, you do better than that. You tell me what I wanted to be told. I was afraid maybe because I’ve been sore at Worth … But now I know I’m right. So tomorrow I get rid of Stephen Worth.”
“And just how do you propose to do that?”
Mr. Weinberg sprang from his bent-chromium chair and stiffened to his full five feet four inches of height. “Where did you come from, Worth?”
Even beside an ordinary man, Stephen Worth was a giant. Next to Mr. Weinberg he seemed nothing less than a titan. But he did not take advantage of his full height. He merely leaned heavily against the wall and answered in one syllable—a syllable which his publisher’s reader had been forced to strike out with dogged monotony from page after page of his hard-boiled detective stories.
The buzzer sounded. “He just pushed his way in, Mr. Weinberg,” Miss Blankenship’s voice squawked. “I tried to tell him you were busy, but he just went right on in. I’m terribly sorry, Mr. Weinberg, but—”
“That’s all right.” Mr. Weinberg switched off the apparatus and turned to glare at the writer.
But Stephen Worth’s eyes had lit on Maureen. “Hiya!” he said. “If it isn’t the darling of the publicity office—the little colleen that plays hard-to-get when a man makes a pass at her and then comes sneaking into the boss’ office.”
Maureen dexterously avoided his outstretched arm. “I was meaning to ask you, F. X. Can I bill the studio for a new bra? Damage incurred in the line of duty?”
Mr. Weinberg looked up at the ex-detective with such concentrated scorn that he seemed to be looking down into a measureless and fetid abyss. “Mr. Worth,” he announced, “you and Metropolis are through.”
Stephen Worth laughed softly to himself—a rumbling laugh of self-conscious virility. “I thought you’d say that, F. X. When do you want me to leave?”
“You can’t bluff me out of this,” Mr. Weinberg continued. “I’ll have you out of this studio if—” He cut himself short, and one of the Weinberg double takes began its slow progress across his face. “So when do I want you to leave?” he muttered. “When do I—? Today. This minute. Right away. As soon as possible.” He w
as almost choking with relief. “Now,” he added, to leave no doubt as to his meaning.
Stephen Worth dropped his heavy body solidly into the chromium chair meant only for little Mr. Weinberg. “Swell. You want me to leave, as you so succintly put it, now. All right. What happens then? First of all you’ve got to tell A. K. Now I owe that bastard four thousand dollars on the races and twenty-three hundred at roulette; he wants me around here, earning the studio’s good money, or he knows he’ll never see that sixty-three hundred again.”
“So I’ll answer for A. K.,” Mr. Weinberg spluttered. “If he wants his six thousand so bad, he should sue you.”
“Gambling debts aren’t recoverable—that’s one of those little points, F. X., that have made me the success I am. But what happens next? My agent comes to see you and calls your attention to several little clauses in my contract. You send him away with a bug in his ear, but he comes back. He comes back with a representative from the Screen Writers’ Guild. And now you’re beginning to get into real trouble. No, F. X., it isn’t any use grabbing for the bicarb. That won’t make you feel any better. You’ll have to just get used to seeing me around here—at any rate till I’ve finished The Speckled Band.”
Mr. Weinberg looked at the pile of Irregular messages on his desk. “All right. So I can’t throw you out. Such a Schlemiel I must keep on the payroll. All right. But I tell you this: you don’t adapt The Speckled Band. That property I turn over to somebody else. And you,” he concluded in tones of excommunication, “you will write Speed Harris and His Space Ship, in twelve breath-taking episodes.”
Worth snorted. “To put it briefly, F. X., like hell I will. Don’t bluster. I’ve got you over a barrel, my fine Semitic friend, and your pants are slipping inch by inch. Read my contract, and learn what dimwits you’ve got in your legal department. They let a honey slip by them that time. You can switch me off to Speed Harris if you want; but if you do, you’ll never produce The Speckled Band. I’ve got it in black and white—either I write that picture or nobody does.”
“To me all this should happen!” Mr. Weinberg moaned plaintively. “But why, Mr. Worth? What has Metropolis done to you?”
Stephen Worth grinned unpleasantly. “Polly hasn’t done a damned thing to me. It’s just that this is my chance to show them up.”
“Show who up?”
“These cockeyed pantywaist deductionists. These silly-frilly nancy-pantsy dabblers who think they can write about detectives. Solving murders oh! so cutely with a book on Indo-Arabian ceramics when they’d faint at the sight of a nosebleed. Holding hands in a ducky little daisy chain while they all murmur the sacred name of Sherlock Holmes. Sweet Christ, but they’re going to learn something in this picture, and they’re not going to like it.”
“So because you were once a detective, we should ruin Metropolis? Mr. Worth, couldn’t we—?”
Buzzer. “It’s that professor, Mr. Weinberg,” Miss Blankenship explained. “He says was that Stephen Worth he saw going into your office, because if it was he wants to come in, too. He says to tell you it’s about the Baker Street Irregulars, whatever that is.”
Worth guffawed. “A professor on my tail! That’s a sweet one.”
“Tell him I’m gone,” Mr. Weinberg snapped. “Tell him I strangled Worth in cold blood. Tell him I’m a fugitive from justice. Tell him—” Slowly a new comprehension began to replace his annoyance. “Did you say the Baker Street Irregulars?”
“I think that’s what he said, Mr Weinberg.”
“So tell him to come in. Tell him to come right in.”
While he had sardonically debated matters of contract, Stephen Worth had seemed almost sober. Now, as he jerked himself up from Mr. Weinberg’s beautiful chair, a heavy flush crossed his face, brutalizing the handsome irregularity of his features. Maureen shrank back into a corner; she had seen him like this before.
“Baker Street Irregulars,” Worth muttered with utmost loathing. “Baker Street Irregulars! …” His growl rose almost to a roar.
Then Professor Furness came in. He was not the elderly academician that Maureen had subconsciously expected, but a lean man of thirty, dressed in what was obviously his Good Blue Suit. Lean, in fact, was a flattering adjective—scrawny might be better. His collar fitted badly, and his nose seemed too thin to support the pince-nez which were poised as though ready for instant flight.
All these details Maureen took in at first glance. Then the picture was shattered by the terrific swing of Stephen Worth’s left.
Before Professor Furness could say a word, he lay stretched out cold on the polished, rugless floor of the office. Stephen Worth loomed above his carcass, swaying a little and rubbing his knuckles.
“See you in story conference, F. X.,” he said, and swung out of the room.
At once Maureen was beside the poor professor, applying first aid from F. X.’s water carafe, and thinking rapidly. “Hush,” she said at last, cutting across her employer’s dire groans and predictions. “There’s no danger of a suit. I’ll have a talk with the professor and turn on the old charm. Things have come to a pretty pass if a smart Irish girl can’t handle him.”
Mr. Weinberg brightened a little. “My mother was Irish,” he said wistfully, “but nobody ever believes me.”
“And it’s a good thing he came here,” she went on rapidly. “It gives me a bright idea. Look. If these Irregulars are so interested in Holmes that they’ll actually come here to Polly to protest …” Deftly she sketched out the plan.
Chapter 2
I
METROPOLIS PICTURES
June 26, 1939
Mr. Harrison Ridgly
Editor, Sirrah
New York, N. Y.
Dear Mr. Ridgly:
Your protest against the assignment of Stephen Worth to the script of The Speckled Band has been received and personally considered by me. Unfortunately, contractual arrangements, which I am sure you as an editor will understand, prevent me from altering this assignment; but I have hit upon an arrangement which will, I hope, satisfy you.
I am inviting you and a group of your associates among the Baker Street Irregulars to be my guests in Hollywood during the making of this picture. You will have complete advisory authority over all details of adaptation and be in a position to guarantee authenticity and fidelity.
I will not affront your devotion to the literature of Sherlock Holmes by offering you a salary as technical advisor. As I say, you shall be my personal guest, with all travel and living expenses cared for and a liberal drawing account for personal expenses.
I hope you can see your way clear from your editorial duties during this slack summer season to accept my offer and render this service to the memory of Sherlock Holmes by guaranteeing him a worthy immortality on the screen.
I take this opportunity of expressing the longfelt gratitude of Metropolis Pictures for the treatment which its products have received in the review columns of Sirrah. Even your adverse criticisms have stimulated us as a needed, if sometimes harsh, corrective.
Sincerely yours,
F. X. Weinberg
FXW/RS
SIRRAH
The magazine of male modernity
June 30, 1939
Mr. F. X. Weinberg
Metropolis Pictures
Los Angeles, California
Dear Mr. Weinberg:
Will a small black arm band, neat but not gaudy, be out of place in your select advisorial house party?
You could, of course, hardly know that your invitation reaches me so shortly after the death of my sister that it finds me hardly in the mood for critical sportiveness. Nevertheless, I am inclined to accept, if only because I hope that a change of scene may prove consoling.
It is perhaps as well that I am dictating this letter to one of my more efficiently prim stenographers. You are thus spared the rather ghastly stream-of-consciousness on Life, Death, Futility, and other such sophomoric capitalizations which are at present all too apt to pour forth from me at
the thought of what my eminent father calls “our shocking bereavement.”
In short, I have made up my mind in the course of this babbling dictation. I gladly accept your summons, if you are willing to number among the party the bright corpse which I must henceforth always carry with me. I owe a certain duty, I suppose, to the shade of Sherlock Holmes. Moreover, I am more than a little anxious, Mr. Weinberg, to see you execute a double take.
I have extended your longfelt gratitude for our treatment of Metropolis pictures to Harold Swathmore, our third-string reviewer. I am sure that it will keep him in a warm glow all through the next Kane Family opus.
Sincerely yours,
Harrison Ridgly III
HR/NP
Miss Purvis (known to the staff of Sirrah as “Impurvis” because she could take Harrison Ridgly’s dictation without blinking an eye) finished reading back the Weinberg letter and looked up from her notebook. “Do you want it sent just like that, Mr. Ridgly?” she asked.
Beside his neat and tasteful desk Harrison Ridgly stood tall and straight and dark. His lips barely stirred with speech, and not another muscle moved visibly in his body. “Yes,” he said, “just like that. It’s a stupid letter, committing me to a stupid action. You will send it as it is.”
Miss Purvis’ pencil lingered longingly over the sentence about the bright corpse, which could be so easily stricken out. “You’re sure, Mr. Ridgly?”
A muscle in his brown forehead flicked tautly. “Yes.”
“If you’d let me make it a little more formal—”
“Please!” The word burst out as though it were a curse. Its noise hung for a moment in the still room like smoke after an explosion.
Miss Purvis snapped the notebook shut. “Very well, Mr. Ridgly. Anything else?”
“Yes. Make arrangements with Fisher to take over my work while I am gone. He will disapprove strongly of my desertion, as he will doubtless term it, and resolve to do my job so well that the owners will consider giving it to him permanently. You may wish him luck from me.”
The Case of the Baker Street Irregulars Page 2