The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind

The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind
Chiwetel Ejiofor and Maxwell Simba.

Chiwetel Ejiofor directed and starred in his 2019 film The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind and wrote the adaptation of William Kamkwamba & Bryan Mealer’s tale, which was based on a true story. For his role he learnt Chichewa, the local Bantu language of Malawi.

As with the Sherlock drawing, this is from a photograph in this week’s Radio Times.

Irregular Holmes

Holmes

“A sandwich and a cup of coffee, and then off to violin-land, where all is sweetness and delicacy and harmony.” 

Arthur Conan Doyle, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes

Henry Lloyd-Hughes‘ Sherlock Holmes in Tom Bidwell’s The Irregulars, appears to have indulged in stronger stimulants than ‘a sandwich and a cup of coffee’ on his journey to ‘violin-land’.

My thanks again to the Netflix team, including costume designer Edward K. Gibbon for the ruffled, threadbare portrait in this week’s Radio Times. The magazine is stuffed with beautifully turned-out, well-scrubbed celebrities, but obviously Holmes after an overdose of his seven-per-cent solution is more appealing to draw with my Lamy Vista and De Atramentis Document Ink.

Lady Kathleen Pilkington

Lady Kathleen

We’re getting towards the end of Women in History month but I couldn’t miss out Lady Kathleen Pilkington of Chevet Hall. A visitor in 1913 described her as ‘a fearless rider’ with the Badsworth Hunt and ‘a splendid rifle shot’.

She is fond of racing and is specially devoted to birds and her collection of foreign birds is one of the best in England.”

Charlton Jemmett-Browne, The French Bulldog, USA, September 1913

Lady Kathleen Mary Alexina Milborne-Swinnerton-Pilkington (Cuffe) (1872-1938), appeals to me as a character to draw because she spans the era of Sherlock Holmes – she’d be the plucky young gel who Doctor Watson would fall for – right through to the Golden Age of Detective Fiction when, with her champion French Bulldog, Chevet Punch, she’d be the formidable matriarch in an Agatha Christie country house party murder mystery.

I’m grateful to the Wakefield Historical Appreciation Site (WHAS) on Facebook: thanks to Keith Wainwright for posting the photograph of the Pilkington family in 1906, about to set out on a bicycle ride around the Chevet Estate. Lady K. is wearing her hunting pink complete with top hat!

Chevet Punch & Daisy

French Bulldogs
MINIATURE BULLDOGS
“Champion Chevet Punch” & “Chevet Daisy”
Owned by Lady Kathleen Pilkington
Painting by Maud Earl, 1910

Lady K. was so renowned for her Champion French Bulldogs (and who could resist Chevet Punch and Chevet Daisy?!) that American short story writer and poet Bret Harte once requested a puppy from her in verse:

"Which I have a small favour to ask you,
 ⁠As concerns a bull-pup, and the same,—
 If the duty would not overtask you,—
 ⁠You would please to procure for me, game;
 And send her express to the Flat, Miss,—
 ⁠For they say York is famed for the breed,
 Which, though words of deceit may be that, Miss,
 ⁠I'll trust to your taste Miss, indeed."

Bret’s ‘Flat’ was at 72/74 Lancaster Gate, Bayswater, so the bull-pup was going to a good home: Kensington Gardens is just five minutes walk away.