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{{ | {{retitle|''Nosferatu'' (ship)}}{{you may|Vampire (mythology)|n1=vampires|Nosferatu (film)|n2= the black-and-white horror picture}} | ||
The '''''Nosferatu''''' was [[Sabalom Glitz]]'s ship. On [[Iceworld]], it was taken by [[Kane (Dragonfire)|Kane]] as a down payment for his gambling debts, and to force him to use the map to [[Dragonfire|the treasure]] of [[Svartos]]. During the emergency it was | |||
The '''''Nosferatu''''' was [[Sabalom Glitz]]'s ship. On [[Iceworld]], it was taken by [[Kane (Dragonfire)|Kane]] as a down payment for his gambling debts, and to force him to use the map to [[Dragonfire|the treasure]] of [[Svartos]]. During the emergency it was used to try to evacuate Iceworld, but it was rigged to explode, killing the refugees. | used to try to evacuate Iceworld, but it was rigged to explode, killing the refugees, barring [[Stellar]] and her [[Stellar's mother|mother]]. | ||
Glitz later took over Iceworld and renamed it the ''Nosferatu II'', intending to travel in it with his newly found ally [[Melanie Bush]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Dragonfire (TV story)|Dragonfire]]'') | Glitz later took over Iceworld and renamed it the ''Nosferatu II'', intending to travel in it with his newly found ally [[Melanie Bush]]. ([[TV]]: ''[[Dragonfire (TV story)|Dragonfire]]'') | ||
== Behind the scenes == | == Behind the scenes == | ||
* The word ''nosferatu'' is supposedly Romanian for vampire, as presented in [[Bram Stoker]]'s novel ''Dracula'' and its subsequent unauthorised 1922 adaptation entitled ''Nosferatu, A Symphony of Horror''. Its origin is debated (Stoker did not invent it), but it forms part of a motif of vampirism in ''Dragonfire'' writer [[Ian Briggs]]'s ''Doctor Who'' work. His subsequent story ''[[The Curse of Fenric]]'' featured more references to ''Dracula''. | * The word ''nosferatu'' is supposedly Romanian for vampire, as presented in [[Bram Stoker]]'s novel ''Dracula'' and its subsequent unauthorised 1922 adaptation entitled ''[[Nosferatu (film)|Nosferatu, A Symphony of Horror]]''. Its origin is debated (Stoker did not invent it), but it forms part of a motif of vampirism in ''Dragonfire'' writer [[Ian Briggs]]'s ''Doctor Who'' work. His subsequent story ''[[The Curse of Fenric (TV story)|The Curse of Fenric]]'' featured more references to ''Dracula''. | ||
[[Category:Individual spacecraft]] | [[Category:Individual spacecraft]] |
Latest revision as of 15:03, 22 April 2024
- You may be looking for vampires or the black-and-white horror picture.
The Nosferatu was Sabalom Glitz's ship. On Iceworld, it was taken by Kane as a down payment for his gambling debts, and to force him to use the map to the treasure of Svartos. During the emergency it was used to try to evacuate Iceworld, but it was rigged to explode, killing the refugees, barring Stellar and her mother.
Glitz later took over Iceworld and renamed it the Nosferatu II, intending to travel in it with his newly found ally Melanie Bush. (TV: Dragonfire)
Behind the scenes[[edit] | [edit source]]
- The word nosferatu is supposedly Romanian for vampire, as presented in Bram Stoker's novel Dracula and its subsequent unauthorised 1922 adaptation entitled Nosferatu, A Symphony of Horror. Its origin is debated (Stoker did not invent it), but it forms part of a motif of vampirism in Dragonfire writer Ian Briggs's Doctor Who work. His subsequent story The Curse of Fenric featured more references to Dracula.