Sherlock Holmes , at
Conan Doyle's birthplace in
Edinburgh Arguably the most famous example in fiction,
Arthur Conan Doyle's famous
detective Sherlock Holmes is often associated with the Inverness cape. Holmes's distinctive look, which was usually complemented with a
deerstalker cap and a
calabash pipe, is a composite of images, originally credited to a series of illustrators including
David Henry Friston and
Sidney Paget. But as adapted to the stage by the actor-playwright
William Gillette, Holmes did not wear a cape-coat at all, and the origin of the calabash pipe is something of a mystery, although it might have had something to do with Gillette's introduction of a full-bend briar pipe for his performances. Paget had depicted Holmes as smoking straight pipes, exclusively. Friston, who illustrated the first published Sherlock Holmes novel of
A Study in Scarlet, portrayed the character in a deerstalker-like hat and an elongated trench coat. Be that as it might, the cape-coat, the deerstalker, and the calabash pipe were already associated with Holmes by the 1930s, chiefly in the United States, but the image became definitive with the first two films in which
Basil Rathbone appeared on-screen as Holmes, produced for
20th Century Fox in 1939.
Other media August Derleth's
Solar Pons, essentially Sherlock Holmes with a different name and living in
Praed Street in the 1920s, also wears an Inverness. Inverness capes are worn by characters in many
Western and
Spaghetti Western films, such as
Lee Van Cleef's character in
For a Few Dollars More and
Gianni Garko in the
Sartana series. In the 1970s of the long-running series
Doctor Who, the
Third Doctor (
Jon Pertwee), frequently wore an Inverness cape over his
dandy suits. Pertwee took credit for the Doctor's Edwardian appearance himself, having taken an Inverness cape from his own grandfather's wardrobe to complete the costume. The
vampire Barnabas Collins (as portrayed by actor
Jonathan Frid) wore an Inverness cape on the 1966 cult classic Gothic soap opera
Dark Shadows. The Inverness cape made a reappearance in the 2012
Tim Burton film remake,
Dark Shadows (film). Costume designer
Collen Atwood took inspiration from the original series, but "didn't want to do a boring black coat," so opted to update the costume with a "bottle-green fabric." The 2001 film adaptation of the
absurdist play
Waiting for Godot has landlord
Pozzo (played by
Alan Stanford) wearing an Inverness cape, symbolising the
Protestant Ascendancy landlords of Ireland. Popular
urban fantasy hero
Harry Dresden of
The Dresden Files by
Jim Butcher replaced his trademark
duster with an Inverness coat in
Cold Days, the 14th book of the series.
Steampunk fashion has revived the wearing of the Inverness cape to a limited extent. == See also ==