Basil Rathbone is synonymous with Sherlock Holmes.
He played the Victorian sleuth in the fourteen Fox/Universal films of
the 1930s and '40s, as well as on stage and radio. For many people, he
is the Holmes.
Basil Rathbone grew to hate Sherlock Holmes.
The character placed restrictions on his career: before Holmes he was an
esteemed theatre actor, appearing in Broadway plays such as The
Captive and The Swan, the latter of which became his launchpad to
greater stardom. But he never, ever escaped his most famous role.
Basil Rathbone was not Sherlock Holmes.
In The Curse of Sherlock Holmes, celebrated biographer David Clayton
looks at the behind-the-camera life of a remarkable man who deserved so
much more than to be relegated to just one role.