Jago in Love (audio story): Difference between revisions

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|number          = 4.1
|number          = 4.1
|main character  = [[Henry Gordon Jago|Jago]], [[George Litefoot|Litefoot]], [[Leela]]
|main character  = [[Henry Gordon Jago|Jago]], [[George Litefoot|Litefoot]], [[Leela]]
|featuring      = [[Ellie Higson]], [[Percival Quick|Quick]], [[Sixth Doctor|Claudius Dark]]
|featuring      = Ellie Higson
|featuring2      = Percival Quick|Quick
|featuring3      = Claudius Dark
|enemy          = [[Kempston]], [[Hardwick]]
|enemy          = [[Kempston]], [[Hardwick]]
|setting        = [[London]] and [[Brighton]], the [[1890s]]
|setting        = [[London]] and [[Brighton]], the [[1890s]]

Revision as of 03:42, 19 June 2017

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Jago in Love is the thirteenth Big Finish Productions audio drama in the Jago & Litefoot series and the first episode of series 4.

Publisher's summary

Escaping the shadowy presence of the mysterious Professor Claudius Dark, Jago, Litefoot and Leela take a holiday in Brighton. There, Jago meets and falls for music hall singer Abigail Woburn, a relationship that threatens to split the infernal investigators apart, as dark forces gather on the beach...

Plot

to be added

Cast

References

  • Leela tells Jago and Litefoot that she is "obliged" to stay in the 1890s.
  • Jago first met Gypsy Nancy Lee while he was the proprietor of the Palace Theatre in the 1880s.
  • Litefoot tells Leela that Queen Victoria apparently hated staying in the Royal Pavilion in Brighton as she felt exposed to the public gaze. She therefore decided to sell the royal residence to Brighton for £53,000.
  • Abigail Woburn wears a "theatrical" wig as she suffers from alopecia areata.
  • Jago refers to the serialised adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr John Watson by Arthur Conan Doyle featured in The Strand magazine. He believes that he and Litefoot are the inspiration for the characters.
  • Both of Jago's parents are dead. His mother claimed that he "had all the grace of a bull in a china shop."
  • Both George Nevil and his fiancée Mary Elizabeth Reilly were killed in a freak snowstorm in Brighton on 14 August 1887.

Story notes

  • The first scene is a reprise of the final scene of the audio story Chronoclasm.
  • The music hall song "Poor Little Dolly" was originally featured in the Sapphire & Steel audio drama Water Like a Stone, likewise written by Nigel Fairs.

Continuity

External links