Dracula writer Bram Stoker revealed as a humble minute taker for actor charity
Before publishing his vampire classic in 1897, the author was employed as a personal secretary at the Actors' Benevolent Fund
The imagination of Bram Stoker gave life to one of literature's most enduring terrors, Count Dracula. But the Irish-born writer's mind was not only full of flapping cloaks, dripping fangs and creaking coffins. Stoker, it can now be confirmed, also had a strong vein, or shall we say streak, of bureaucratic efficiency running through his personality.
Researchers working for the Actors' Benevolent Fund, the charity that supports actors and stage managers in need, have discovered that the minutes of its founding meeting, back in 1882, were taken by Stoker. It has now been confirmed that the handwriting matches documents held by the University of Bristol Theatre Collection, with images of the notes released this weekend.
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