Scrooge, trepidation on his face as he clutches his night-gown and holds out his candle to investigate that strange, foreboding clanking noise ...
The Scrooge artwork (which can also be used for A Christmas Carol) is available for licensing to theatre companies and their designers to incorporate into publicity material (posters, leaflets, playbills, programmes, tickets etc.).
Please contact me if you would like to license this artwork or require any help or further information.
These hi-res poster templates are available for you to add your own details to, or I can layout the poster or customise the design for you. All are also available without any title lettering if you'd prefer your own style. See the prices page for more information.
If you license the Scrooge artwork then you can also use these supplementary bits within the same license fee - great for additional poster graphics or for use as filler art in your programme. They include the Scrooge silhouette, the ghost of Christmas Future, a haunted candlestick, a version of the ghost of Christmas Past, and a Jacob Marley doorknocker.
Images can be supplied in a variety of formats and sizes, including high-resolution JPG, TIFF, PSD, PNG or PDF.
Learn more about formats here.
A Christmas Carol was written by Charles Dickens and first saw publication in December 1843, stamping itself into history and becoming an instant favourite, never since out of print, and irrevocably tied to the season it both celebrated and moralised. It tells the story of the miserly Ebenezer Scrooge, whose selfish and greedy ways are changed after he is visited by three ghosts one Christmas Eve. Theatre adaptations have been almost countless, starting with Dickens' own public readings and including musicals, dramatisations and one-man shows. It has also enjoyed a long association with the silver screen, the earliest surviving film being from 1901, and other notable versions including Scrooge starring Alastair Sim (1951) and The Muppet Christmas Carol featuring Kermit the Frog and Michael Caine (1992).