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'''Charles Hallam Elton Brookfield''' (1857–1913) was an actor, writer, and later censor of plays in the Lord Chamberlain's Office.
[[File:Charles Brookfield.jpg|thumb|Charles Brookfield]]'''Charles Brookfield''' (Charles Hallam Elton Brookfield, 1857–1913) was an actor, writer, and later censor of plays in the Lord Chamberlain's Office.


In 1895 he was involved in the prosecution of [[Oscar Wilde]], despite having a small part in Wilde's ''An Ideal Husband'' at the time. Brookfield "constituted himself private prosecutor in this case and raked Piccadilly to find witnesses against Oscar Wilde."<ref>[[Alkarim Jivani]], ''[[It's not unusual]]'', page 16, quoting a 1916 book by [[Frank Harris]]</ref>
In 1895 he was involved in the prosecution of [[Oscar Wilde]], despite having a small part in Wilde's ''An Ideal Husband'' at the time. Brookfield "constituted himself private prosecutor in this case and raked Piccadilly to find witnesses against Oscar Wilde."<ref>[[Alkarim Jivani]], ''[[It's not unusual]]'', page 16, quoting a 1916 book by [[Frank Harris]]</ref>
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[[Category:Actors]]
[[Category:Actors]]
[[Category:1857 births]] [[Category:1913 deaths]]

Revision as of 11:36, 6 February 2014

Charles Brookfield

Charles Brookfield (Charles Hallam Elton Brookfield, 1857–1913) was an actor, writer, and later censor of plays in the Lord Chamberlain's Office.

In 1895 he was involved in the prosecution of Oscar Wilde, despite having a small part in Wilde's An Ideal Husband at the time. Brookfield "constituted himself private prosecutor in this case and raked Piccadilly to find witnesses against Oscar Wilde."[1]

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References

<references>

  1. Alkarim Jivani, It's not unusual, page 16, quoting a 1916 book by Frank Harris