John Osborne

John Osborne

by JohnHeilpern (Author)

Synopsis

John Osborne (1929-1994), unapologetic rebel and original Angry Young Man, defined England in many controversial ways. As iconoclastic as Shaw or Wilde, he 'blow-torched his way into our lives', changing the face of modern British theatre in 1956, with Look Back in Anger . An actor turned playwright, there was about him the public showmanship of his own tragic invention, Archie Rice in The Entertainer . But, Osborne hid his anguished nature and immobilizing depressions from the outside world in his secret notebooks. This startlingly candid, authorized but intimate and informal biography is the first to have access to these sensational notebooks and private letters. Osborne was born in rented rooms in Fulham, in 1929, to a tubercular father and a barmaid mother. An ailing child, he learned to box and was expelled from school for hitting his headmaster. At fifteen, he began as a lowly journalist for Gas World and fled to join a repertory theatre company, where he learned not only the craft that would change his life and revolutionize British theatre, but also how to reinvent himself...Five times married, to actresses Pamela Lane, Mary Ure and Jill Bennett, and critics Penelope Gilliatt and Helen Dawson (he was supposed to have hated critics), his private life generated its own tumult and drama, farce and pathos. This impeccably researched biography includes personal interviews with scores of friends and enemies, among them a bombshell of a confession from Osborne's alleged male lover, and the first public comments from Osborne's estranged daughter, treated by her father with Lear-like madness. Heilpern, a theatre critic himself, defines Osborne's unique, contradictory genius, and shows beneath it the hopelessly romantic English melancholic, a defiant individualist neither of the right nor the left, an ogre with charm, a Roundhead and a Cavalier, a radical who hated change, an embattled patriot for certain threatened English values - its language, music, customs and even its prayers. John Osborne died on Christmas Eve, 1994. This is an essential, unorthodox, moving and extraordinarily frank portrait of the man, the playwright and his era.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 544
Edition: 1st Edition
Publisher: Chatto & Windus
Published: 04 May 2006

ISBN 10: 0701167807
ISBN 13: 9780701167806
Book Overview: Compelling, groundbreaking and full of startling revelations, a dazzling, definitive biography of the man who changed the face of British theatre, published to coincide with the 50th anniversary of the first performance of Look Back in Anger in May 1956.

Media Reviews
Miraculous. . . . A model of what a literary biography ought to be. . . . The Osborne who emerges from these pages is a character of almost Shakespearean dimensions, grand as Falstaff, volatile as Hamlet, mad as Lear. -- The Philadelphia Inquirer A terrific story. . . . An appealing, rollicking portrait. . . . The best literary biography I have read in a long time. --Harold Evans, The Wall Street Journal I cannot recall a biography that was so amusing and intense. . . . If there is going to be a better-written, more entertaining, or more sharply observed performance this year, I'll be mighty surprised. --Carl Rollyson, The New York Sun
Author Bio
After Oxford, JOHN HEILPERN wrote for the Observer before becoming a Times columnist in New York. He has worked with Peter Brook and Peter Hall and been nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for his drama criticism at the New York Observer.