Black Butler Jack The Ripper
Black Butler Jack The Ripper Episode
The official website for Musical Kuroshitsuji ―Chi ni Moeru Licorice― (Musical Black Butler: Licorice that Burns in the Ground), the third musical adaptation of Yana Toboso's supernatural manga Black Butler, launched on Saturday. The musical will adapt the manga's Jack the Ripper arc and run in Tokyo's Roppongi Blue Theater from September 5 to September 23. The musical will then run in Osaka's Umeda Arts Theater in the Theater Drama City hall from October 2 to October 5.
Nov 17, 2017 50+ videos Play all Mix - Black Butler Abridged: Episodes 2-5 Jack the Ripper Arc YouTube Black Butler - Ciel in Wonderland Part 1 - Duration: 25:49. Alex 315,879 views.
- Understanding Victorian Morality and the Occult Undertones in Black Butler (2008) Ciel and Sebastian from Black Butler. Disclaimer: This study is in reference to the anime version of Black Butler. A friend of mine wanted me to watch the anime version of Black Butler since according to her own words, “It is bloody good.” Cranking up my.
- Read Jack the Ripper from the story A Trip Back in Time (Black Butler X Modern!reader) by ChemicalGalaxy (ChemicalWrites) with 4,983 reads. Blackbutler, reader.
- BLACK BUTLER: The Tale of Jack the Ripper by 3DF Productions Picture from the anime introduction, A-1 Pictures 3DF is proud to present the 2nd installment in our BLACK BUTLER fan-audio series, BLACK BUTLER: The Tale of Jack the Ripper. Based on the anime by A-1 Pictures and the manga by Yana Toboso.
An example of how Black Butler changed a detail from the Jack the Ripper cases is what organs were removed in the victims. In Black Butler, Angelina only removed the womb; the real cases had various parts taken out such as the intestines. Both however, had very specifically taken out organs and had done so with skill. Black Butler- Jack the Ripper conflict involving Ciel Phantomhive and his butler, Sebastian Michaelis, investigating the case of A serial murderer by the name of Jack the Ripper, who repeatedly sought after prostitutes. The Princess Of Souls Sebastian Michaelis x Reader His Butler, Jack The Ripper Case. Ciel's P.O.V. Involved in medicine, tied to secret societies of black magic, lacking witnesses for the nights the bodies were found.
The 24-year-old singer Yūya Matsushita will reprise his role as Sebastian Michaelis, while 13-year-old actor Nayuta Fukuzaki (Tonbi live-action television series) will star as Ciel Phantomhive. Former Takarazuka Revue all-female acting troupe member Akane Liv will play Madam Red, and Prince of Tennis musical performer Motohiro Ōta will play Charles Grey. Sengoku Basara stage play actor Yūsuke Hirose will play Charles Phipps. D☆DATE pop music unit member and actor Hirofumi Araki will debut in the musical. Yuka Terasaki will take over Saki Matsuda's role as Mey-Rin.
Returning cast members include:
Takeuya Uehara as Grell Sutcliff
Yoshihide Sasaki as Viscount Druitt
Teruma as William T. Spears
Noboru Washio as Baldroy
Takuya Kawaharada as Finnian
Shun Takagi as Fred Aberline
Takeshi Terayama as Sharp Hanks
Shūhei Izumi as Undertaker
Nobuhiro Mōri (Kamen Rider Gaim) is directing off scripts by Yoshiko Iseki (Hunter X Hunter's Pakunoda).
Tickets for the Tokyo performances will cost 8,500 yen (about US$83) and go on sale on July 29. Tickets for the Osaka performances will cost 8,800 yen (US$86) and go on sale on August 3.
Sono Shitsuji, Yūkō (That Butler, Friendship), the first Black Butler musical, ran in Tokyo in 2009. The second musical, Musical Kuroshitsuji- The Most Beautiful DEATH in The World- Sen no Tamashii to Ochita Shinigami (Musical Black Butler: The Most Beautiful Death in The World – A Thousand Souls and The Fallen Grim Reaper) debuted in 2010 and had a second run in Tokyo in May 2013 and in Osaka in June 2013.
The original manga revolves around a noble English boy named Ciel Phantomhive and Sebastian Michaels, Ciel's butler who is more than he seems. The manga already inspired a television anime series in 2008, a television anime sequel in 2010, several original video anime, and a live-action film. The manga is also inspiring the Black Butler: Book of Circus television series that will premiere on July 10.
Source: Comic Natalie
Image © 2014 Yana Toboso/Musical Kuroshitsuji Project
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An 1885 illustration of Abberline | |
Born | 8 January 1843 Blandford Forum, Dorset |
---|---|
Died | 10 December 1929 (aged 86) |
Spouse(s) | Martha Mackness (m. March 1868-May 1868; her death) Emma Beament (m.1876) |
Police career | |
Rank | Chief Inspector for the LondonMetropolitan Police |
Frederick George Abberline (8 January 1843 – 10 December 1929) was a British Chief Inspector for the London Metropolitan Police. He is best known for being a prominent police figure in the investigation into the Jack the Ripperserial killer murders of 1888.
Early life[edit]
Black Butler Grell Sutcliff
Born in Blandford Forum, Dorset, Frederick Abberline was the youngest son of Edward Abberline, a saddlemaker, sheriff's officer and clerk of the market, minor local government positions; and his wife Hannah (née Chinn). Edward Abberline died in 1849, and his widow opened a small shop and brought up her four children, Emily, Harriett, Edward and Frederick, alone.
Police career[edit]
Frederick was a clockmaker until he left home to go to London, where he enlisted in the Metropolitan Police on 5 January 1863, being appointed to N Division (Islington) with the Warrant Number 43519. PC Abberline so impressed his superiors that they promoted him to Sergeant two years later on 19 August 1865. On his promotion he moved to Y Division (Highgate). Throughout 1867 he investigated Fenian activities as a plain clothes officer.[1] He was promoted to Inspector on 10 March 1873, and three days later, on 13 March transferred to H Division in Whitechapel. On 8 April 1878 Abberline was appointed Local Inspector in charge of H Division's CID.
On 26 February 1887 Abberline transferred to A Division (Whitehall), and then moved to CO Division (Central Office) at Scotland Yard on 19 November 1887, being promoted to Inspector First-Class on 9 February 1888 and to Chief Inspector on 22 December 1890. Following the murder of Mary Ann Nichols on 31 August 1888, Abberline was seconded back to Whitechapel due to his extensive experience in the area. He was placed in charge of the various detectives investigating the Ripper murders. Chief Inspector Walter Dew, then a detective constable in Whitechapel's H Division in 1888, knew Abberline and, while describing him as sounding and looking like a bank manager, also stated that his knowledge of the area made him one of the most important members of the Whitechapel murder investigation team.[2]
Among the many suspects in the case, Abberline's primary suspect was Severin Antoniovich Klosowski, aka George Chapman. That theory was reiterated decades later by Robert Milne, MFSSoc, FFS, FA IA-IP, who had recently retired from the Metropolitan Police Directorate of Forensic Services. He presented a paper about the case to the International Association for Identification Conference in 2011 and to the Chartered Society of Forensic Sciences in 2014, suggesting Chapman as the most likely Ripper. Based on his expertise, review of investigation documents, and the use of geographical profiling software, he was convinced that the killer lived in the area of the murders. Chapman fit that bill accurately. Milne also pointed out that Chapman 'a now known serial poisoner of women' .. 'would go out carrying a small bag, not coming home until 4:30 a.m.', according to his estranged wife. In his 2014 paper, Milne also discussed a 1902 murder victim (1901 according to some sources), Mary Ann Austin, who had described a client before her death. According to Milne, 'a Russian 5ft 7 inches tall with a black moustache [who] visited Mary and in the course of having sex stabbed her and tried to cut out her uterus'.[3][4] (Austin died of ten wounds to her abdomen, inflicted at Annie Chapman's former home, Crossingham's Lodging House, at 35, Dorset Street.)[5]
Among Abberline's theories about the murders, one suggested that the crimes could have been perpetrated by a female killer.[6]
Abberline was subsequently involved in the investigation of the Cleveland Street scandal in 1889. This case left him disenchanted with police work, convinced that there had been cover-ups by his superiors; if so, this was because, during the investigation, some sources claimed that Queen Victoria's grandson had been a frequent visitor to the homosexual brothel on Cleveland Street. That was Abberline's last major case. [7]

Chief Inspector Abberline retired from the police on 8 February 1892, having received 84 commendations and awards.[8]
Personal life[edit]
Abberline was married twice: once in March 1868 to 25-year-old Martha Mackness, the daughter of a labourer, from Elton, Northamptonshire; she died of tuberculosis two months after the marriage. On 17 December 1876 Abberline married 32-year-old Emma Beament, the daughter of a merchant, from Hoxton New Town, Shoreditch. The marriage lasted until Frederick’s death over 50 years later. They had no children.
On his retirement from the Metropolitan Police, he returned to Bournemouth and was hired by the Pinkerton Detective Agency in 1904 Initially, he worked in casinos in Monte Carlo to find customers who were cheating. He then returned to England and continued working for the agency, until another retirement in 1904. He then bought a home, 'Estcourt', 195 Holdenhurst Road, Springbourne, Bournemouth.[9][10]
Abberline died on 10 December 1929, aged 86, just under three months before his wife Emma,[11] and was buried in Bournemouth at Wimborne Road Cemetery. A blue plaque commemorating Abberline was unveiled at 195 Holdenhurst Road (now divided into flats) on 29 September 2001.[12] In 2007, following a campaign for Abberline's unmarked grave to be recognised, and with the approval of his surviving relatives, a black granite headstone, inscribed and donated by a local stonemason, was erected on the grave where Abberline and Emma are buried.[13]
In film and fiction[edit]
Several fictional retellings of the events surrounding the Jack the Ripper murders have cast Abberline in a lead role. The suggestion is often but erroneously made for the sake of drama that Abberline was unmarried and formed an attachment to one of the women connected to the events. The two most popular film depictions have also cast him as an addict, for which there is no known historical basis.
- Abberline was played by Michael Caine in the 1988 television miniseries Jack the Ripper.[16] In this, the character was an aging alcoholic whose quest to solve the murders gives him the strength to give up drinking.[17]
- A fictionalized Abberline was featured as the protagonist of Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell's graphic novelFrom Hell (1991–1999), and was subsequently portrayed by Johnny Depp in the very liberal film adaptation of that work (2001). The graphic novel paints him as a sulky but sympathetic policeman, different from his peers only in his moralism and being overweight, and takes pains to include little-known details of his life such as his involvement with the Pinkerton National Detective Agency. The film's version of Abberline was portrayed as an intelligent young detective who is ahead of his time in his deductive techniques. He is also portrayed as being clairvoyant, allowing the filmmakers to ascribe to Abberline the contributions of spiritualist and psychic Robert James Lees, thus combining the two into one character and simplifying the graphic novel's narrative. Although Abberline is addicted to opium and drinks absinthe, he is a decent man who ultimately goes on a crusade against very powerful governmental and upper-class figures to stop the grotesque murders of Jack the Ripper. In the film, Abberline dies of an overdose in his late 30s; in reality, he died of natural causes aged 86.
- Abberline was played by Gordon Christie in the 1973 television miniseries Jack the Ripper.
- In 'The Ripper', an episode of the television series The Collector, Abberline was played by Robert Wisden.
- Abberline appears as a character in the anime series Black Butler named 'Fred Abberline'. While he is still involved in the Jack the Ripper case, this portrayal deviates heavily from the truth, not only by altering his family history (not married but engaged and with a twin brother), but also by placing his death sometime in 1889. However, the manga version of the story (and also the musicals) depicts him like a young enthusiastic and naive Scotland Yard agent who will become the successor of Lord Randall, the actual leader of Scotland Yard.
- Abberline, renamed Francis Aberline, appears as a major character in The Wolfman, played by Hugo Weaving.[18]
- In the Fantasy Flight Games board game, Letters from Whitechapel (2011), Frederick Abberline features as a playable policeman - in which he has a corresponding portrait (under the name 'Frederich Abberline'). His colour scheme is red. Abberline even gains a unique set of traits in the Dear Boss expansion (2017).
- In BBC One's Ripper Street (2012), Abberline is played by Clive Russell.[19][20]
- In the 2015 video game Assassin's Creed Syndicate, set in 1868, a young Abberline is featured as a supporting character, helping the protagonists, Evie and Jacob Frye, capture various Templar criminals throughout London and foil a plot to assassinate Queen Victoria by main antagonist, Crawford Starrick. Additionally, in the DLC named 'Jack the Ripper', set in 1888, Evie Frye helps Abberline solve a set of brutal murders committed by the infamous maniac to find her brother, Jacob.
- In the seventh series of the 'Jago and Litefoot' science-fiction audio plays produced by Big Finish, Abberline appears as a character portrayed by Adrian Rawlins. In this story, Abberline is portrayed as having secretly captured 'Jack The Ripper', and recruits the title characters to help him in quietly recapturing the murderer after his escape.
References[edit]
- ^The Jack the Ripper A to Z by Paul Begg, Martin Fido and Keith Skinner. Pub. by Headline Book Publishing Plc (1992) pg 5
- ^Dew, Walter 'I Caught Crippen' Blackie & Son Ltd (1938)
- ^https://www.csofs.org/write/MediaUploads/Publications/CSEye/CSEye_April_2014.pdf, The 'Jack the Ripper' murders – What have we learned?
- ^https://www.thestar.com/news/world/2011/09/20/was_a_polish_surgeon_the_real_jack_the_ripper.html, Was a Polish surgeon the real Jack the Ripper?, Toronto Star
- ^'Murder in Spitalfields'. The National Archives. Retrieved 29 July 2019.
- ^https://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/was-jack-the-ripper-a-woman-478597.html, Was Jack the Ripper a woman?
- ^https://books.google.ca/books?id=ANMTDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT212&dq=aberline+cleveland+st+scandal&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjGk5Wf8drjAhXTG80KHQaQC3gQ6AEILzAB#v=onepage&q=aberline%20cleveland%20st%20scandal&f=false, Abberline: The Man Who Hunted Jack the Ripper
- ^Begg, Fido and Skinner, pg5
- ^https://books.google.ca/books?id=ANMTDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT215&lpg=PT215&dq=police+abberline+retired&source=bl&ots=-FRhUCW0EZ&sig=ACfU3U2A9WGZvjHI8SBb7mnCUHMV7Y27yg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjQ5eTD39rjAhVQGs0KHdMDDisQ6AEwCXoECAkQAQ#v=onepage&q=police%20abberline%20retired&f=false, Abberline: The Man Who Hunted Jack the Ripper
- ^https://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4430416, Bournemouth - 195, Holdenhurst Road
- ^Thurgood, Peter (1 April 2013). Abberline: The Man Who Hunted Jack the Ripper. History Press. p. 1992. ISBN9780752492773.
- ^Ryder, Stephen P.; Johnno. Schachner, Thomas (ed.). 'Abberline Plaque'(PDF). Casebook: Jack the Ripper. pp. 1–9. Retrieved 31 August 2015.
- ^'Headstone for Ripper-hunt officer'. BBC News. BBC. 4 July 2007. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
- ^Ripper Notes #26, July 2006
- ^Jack the Ripper: Scotland Yard Investigates, released in October of 2006
- ^'Michael Caine in the film Jack the ripper playing the part of Inspector fred abberline'. Alamy. 1 September 1998. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
- ^Hill, Michael E. (16 October 1988). 'Michael Caine'. Washington Post. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
- ^Mendelson, Scott (16 April 2010). 'HuffPost Review: The Wolfman (2010)'. Huffington Post. Oath Inc. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
- ^Crouch, Hannah; Hill, Rose (July 24, 2017). 'Who's in the Ripper Street cast? Matthew Macfadyen, Jerome Flynn, MyAnna Buring and Adam Rothenberg and others'. The Sun. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
- ^Betiku, Fehintola (December 27, 2012). 'It will be gruesome this Christmas.. Matthew Macfadyen and Jerome Flynn in first official stills for Ripper Street'. Daily Mail. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
External links[edit]
- Frederick Abberline at Find a Grave