Miss Gwilt in this last stage version is much less guilty than her namesake in the novel, or in the first dramatization. But it is not quite accurate to say, as Catherine Peters does, that ‘she is not implicated in the plots to sink Allan’s yacht and to murder him with poison gas’. Lydia is, albeit not always wholeheartedly, a clear accessory before the murder.
   As Collins records, Miss Gwilt was ‘put on for the first time at the Alexandra Theatre, Liverpool, 9 Dec 1875’ and thereafter ‘performed some hundreds of nights in England and in America’. It had its London opening in April 1876 at the Globe Theatre. It was not a critical success. The Athenaeum‘s review (22 April 1876) was scathing:
   So favourable a reception had, according to report, been awarded Miss Gwilt on its first production in Liverpool, a success in London had been discounted beforehand. The best laid plans o’ mice and managers ‘gang oft agley’… To the faults which ordinarily attend dramatized versions of novels, Miss Gwilt adds some shortcomings which are specially characteristic of the author. It is long-winded, involved, oppressive in atmosphere, and artificial in treatment.
   The reviewer liked Ada Cavendish, the actress who played Miss Gwilt, but thought the climactic murder wholly absurd.
   Notes
   1. For Collins’s theatrical activities with Dickens in the 1850s see Robert L. Brannan, Under the Management of Mr Charles Dickens (Ithaca: New York, 1966).
   2. Robinson, p. 195.
   3. Huntington Library, call mark HM 33787.
   4. Walter Dexter, ed., The Letters of Charles Dickens (London, 1938), III, p. 477.
   5. Huntington Library, call mark HM 33789.
   6. Robinson, p. 198.
   7. B. A. Brashear has studied the various dramatic versions of Armadale in his doctoral thesis, ‘Wilkie Collins: from novel to play’ (Case-Western Reserve University, 1972).
   A CHRONOLOGY OF WILKIE COLLINS'S LIFE
   1824
   8 January: Born at 11 New Cavendish Street, St Marylebone,
   London to William John Thomas Collins, RA (1788–1847), painter, and Harriet Collins, née Geddes (1790–1868)
   1826
   Family moves to Pond Street, Hampstead
   1828
   25 January: Brother, Charles Allston Collins, born (d.1873)
   1829
   Family moves to Hampstead Square
   1830
   Family moves to Porchester Terrace, Bayswater
   1835
   13 January: Attends Maida Hill Academy
   1836
   19 September–15 August 1838:Family visits France and Italy
   1838
   August: Family moves to 20 Avenue Road, Regents Park; attends
   Mr Cole's private boarding school, Highbury Place
   1840
   Summer: Family moves to 85 Oxford Terrace, Bayswater;
   December: leaves Mr Cole's school
   1841
   January: Apprenticed to Edmund Antrobus, tea merchant of the Strand
   1842
   June–July: Visits Scotland with his father
   1843
   August: First published fiction, ‘The Last Stage Coachman’, Illuminated Magazine
   1844
   Writes Iólani; Or Tahiti as it was, a Romance, which remains unpublished until 1999
   1845
   January: Submits Iólani to Chapman and Hall; is rejected in March
   1846
   17 May: Enters Lincoln's Inn to study law
   1847
   17 February: Death of father
   1848
   Summer: Family moves to 38 Blandford Square; November:
   first book, Memoirs of the Life of William Collins, Esq., RA, published
   by Chapman and Hall
   1849
   Exhibits a painting, The Smuggler's Retreat, at the Royal Academy
   Summer Exhibition
   1850
   26 February: First play, A Court Duel, an adaptation of J. P. Simon
   and Edmond Badon's Monsieur Lockroy, staged at the Soho Theatre,
   Dean Street; 27 February: first novel, Antonina; or the Fall of Rome,
   published by Richard Bentley; Summer: moves with mother to
   17 Hanover Terrace; July–August: walking tour of Cornwall with
   Henry Brandling, artist
   1851
   30 January: Rambles Beyond Railways, a travel book on Cornwall,
   published by Bentley; March: meets Charles Dickens; first
   contribution to Bentley's Miscellany, ‘The Twin Sisters’; 16 May:
   acts with Dickens in Edward Bulwer-Lytton's Not So Bad as We
   Seem; 27 September: first article for Edward Pigott's socialist
   newspaper, Leader; 21 November: called to the Bar; 17 December:
   Mr Wray's Cash-Box published by Bentley
   1852
   24 April: First contribution to Household Words, ‘A Terribly
   Strange Bed’; 16 November: Basil: A Story of Modern Life
   published by Bentley
   1853
   July–September: Stays with Dickens in Boulogne; October–
   December: tours Switzerland and Italy with Dickens and
   Augustus Egg
   1854
   Joins the Garrick Club; 6 June: Hide and Seek published by
   Bentley; July–August: stays with Dickens in Boulogne
   1855
   16 June: First play, The Lighthouse, performed at Tavistock House
   by Dickens's theatrical company; September: sails to Scilly Isles
   with Pigott
   1856
   February: First collection of short stories, After Dark, published
   by Smith, Elder; 1–29 March: A Rogue's Life serialized in Household
   Words; September: Moves to 2 Harley Place; October: becomes
   staff writer on Household Words
   1857
   3 January: The Dead Secret begins serialization in Household Words
   and (from 24 January) in Harper's Weekly; 6 January: The Frozen
   Deep performed at Tavistock House; June: The Dead Secret
   published in volume form by Bradbury and Evans; 10 August:
   The Lighthouse opens at the Olympic Theatre; September:
   tours Cumberland, Lancashire and Yorkshire with Dickens;
   3–31 October: they describe the trip in The Lazy Tour of Two
   Idle Apprentices, published in Household Words; December: collab
   orates with Dickens on ‘The Perils of Certain English
   Prisoners’
   1958
   First French translation, The Dead Secret; July–August: first visit
   to Broadstairs, Kent; September: resigns from the Garrick club,
   in protest at the expulsion of his friend Edmund Yates; 11
   October: The Red Vial is produced at the Olympic Theatre, and
   flops
   1859
   January–February: Lives with Mrs Caroline Graves at 124
   Albany Street; apart from one short interlude, they remain
   together until his death; May–December: lives at 2a Cavendish
   Square; October: The Queen of Hearts published by Hurst and
   Blackett; 26 November–25 August 1860: The Woman in White
   serialized in All the Year Round; December: moves to 12 Harley Street
   1860
   17 July: Charles Allston Collins marries Kate Dickens; August:
   The Woman in White published in volume form by Sampson
   Low; 22 August: opens bank account at Coutts
   1861
   January: Resigns from All the Year Round; 16 April: joins the
   Athenaeum club; August: visits Whitby, Yorkshire, with Caroline Graves
   1862
   15 March–17 January 1863: No Name serialized in All the Year
   Round; 31 December: published in volume form by Sampson Low
   1863
   August: Visits the Isle of Man with Caroline and her daughter,
   Harriet; November: a collecti 
					     					 			on of journalism, My Miscellanies,
   published by Sampson Low
   1864
   November–June 1866: Armadale serialized in the Cornhill
   Magazine, December: moves to 9 Melcombe Place, Dorset Square
   1865
   Chair of the Royal General Theatrical Fund
   1866
   May: Armadale published in volume form by Smith, Elder;
   October: visits Italy with Pigott; 27 October: The Frozen Deep
   opens at the Olympic Theatre
   1867
   September: Moves to 90 Gloucester Place; December: collaborates
   with Dickens on short story ‘No Thoroughfare’; 24
   December: theatrical adaptation produced, Adelphi Theatre
   1868
   Finds lodgings for Martha Rudd, his second mistress, at 33
   Bolsover Street, Portland Place; she uses the name ‘Mrs
   Dawson’; 4 January–8 August: The Moonstone serialized in All
   the Year Round; 19 March: his mother dies; July: The Moonstone
   published in volume form by Tinsley Brothers; 29 October:
   witnesses the marriage of Caroline Graves to Joseph Charles Clow
   1869
   29 March: Black and White, written in collaboration with the
   actor Charles Fechter, opens at the Adelphi Theatre; 4 July:
   daughter, Marian Dawson, born to Collins and Martha Rudd;
   20 November–30 July 1870: Man and Wife serialized in Cassell's Magazine
   1870
   June: Man and Wife published in volume form by F. S. Ellis; 9
   June: Death of Dickens
   1871
   April: Caroline Graves returns to live with Collins in Gloucester
   Place; 14 May: second daughter, Harriet Constance Dawson,
   born to Collins and Martha Rudd at 33 Bolsover Street; 9 October:
   The Woman in White opens at the Olympic; 2 September–24
   February 1872: Poor Miss Finch serialized in Cassell's Magazine
   1872
   26 January: Poor Miss Finch published in volume form by
   Bentley; October–July 1873: The New Magdalen serialized in
   Temple Bar
   1873
   17 January: Miss or Mrs? And Other Stories published by Bentley;
   22 February: Man and Wife opens at the Prince of Wales Theatre;
   9 April: Charles Allston Collins dies; 17 May: The New Magdalen
   published in volume form by Bentley; 19 May: stage version of
   The New Magalen opens at the Olympic; 25 September: arrives
   in New York for reading tour of America; 10 November: The
   New Magdalen opens in New York
   1874
   Martha Rudd moves to 10 Taunton Place, Regents Park; 7 March:
   Collins leaves Boston for England; 26 September–13 March 1875:
   The Law and the Lady serialized in the Graphic; 2 November: The
   Frozen Deep and Other Stories published by Bentley; 25 December:
   son, William Charles Collins Dawson, born to Collins and Martha
   Rudd at Taunton Place
   1875
   Copyright for Collins’s work acquired by Chatto and Windus,
   who remain his publishers until his death; February: The Law
   and the Lady published in volume form by Chatto and Windus
   1876
   January–September: The Two Destinies serialized in Temple Bar;
   15 April: Miss Gwilt, a dramatic version of Armadale, opens at
   the Globe Theatre; August: The Two Destinies published in
   volume form
   1877
   29 August: The Dead Secret opens at the Lyceum Theatre; 17
   September: The Moonstone opens at the Olympic Theatre;
   December ‘My Lady's Money’ published in the Illustrated London News
   1878
   June–November: The Haunted Hotel published in Belgravia
   Magazine; published in volume form in November
   1879
   1 January–23 July: The Fallen Leaves – First Series serialized in
   World; 7 April: A Rogue's Life published in volume form; July:
   The Fallen Leaves – First Series published in volume form; 13
   September–30 January 1880: Jezebel's Daughter serialized in the
   Bolton Weekly Times and other regional newspapers owned by
   William Tillotson
   1880
   March: Jezebel's Daughter published in volume form; 2
   October–26 March 1881: The Black Robe serialized in the Sheffield
   and Rotheram Independentand other Tillotson titles
   1881
   April: The Black Robe published in volume form; December:
   A. P. Watt becomes Collins's literary agent
   1882
   22 July–13 January 1883: Heart and Science serialized in the
   Manchester Weekly Times and other regional newspapers;
   August–June 1883: Heart and Science serialized in Belgravia
   Magazine
   1883
   April: Heart and Science published in volume form; 9 June: Rank
   and Richesopens at the Adelphi Theatre, and is a failure; 15
   December–12 July 1884:‘I Say No’ serialized in the Glasgow
   Weekly Herald and other regional newspapers
   1884
   January–December: ‘I Say No’ serialized in London Society;
   October: ‘I Say No’published in volume form
   1885
   28 August: Tommie, Collins's dog, dies; 30 October: The Evil
   Genius performed once at the Vaudeville Theatre for copyright
   reasons; 11 December–30 April 1886: The Evil Genius serialized
   in the Leigh Journal and Times and other Tillotson titles
   1886
   September: The Evil Genius published in volume form; 15
   November: The Guilty River published in volume form
   1887
   May: River Novels, a collection of short stories, published in
   volume form
   1888
   February. Moves to 82 Wimpole Street with Caroline Graves;
   17 February–29 June: The Legacy of Cain serialized in the Leigh