Alexander Waugh to Chair Panel at Literary Leicester Festival

A panel has been announced for the Literary Leicester Festival on the subject “Remembering Alexander Chancellor (1940-2017).” He was editor and contributor to several journals, including most notably The Spectator. The panel will he chaired by Alexander Waugh, his son-in-law and Evelyn Waugh’s grandson. The panelists will include journalists Ferdinand Mount, Craig Brown, and Geoffrey Wheatcroft and TV presenter Anne Robinson. According to an announcement in The Oldie it will consider the theme: “Editors are variously admired, hated, respected or held in contempt for their incompetence while being well-liked for their ability to buy rounds at the pub.”

The panel is scheduled to convene on Wednesday 15 November from 4-5:30pm. Entry is free and bookings may be made at this link. Thanks to Milena Borden for sending us this information.

UPDATE (17 November 2017): This report on the panel appears in The Oldie’s newsletter for today:

Ferdy described Alexander [Chancellor] with his cigarette in one hand and the metaphorical blue pencil in the other – often in a plume of his own smoke. They talked about his laid-back greatness and his contradictory nature, charming and brilliant; yet with a simmering streak of anarchism; as reflected by his regular recounting of his back-to-back sackings (never from The Oldie). Anne Robinson remembered that he even managed to charm the Guardian readership, despite occasional references to his privileged Eton schooling and Italian holiday home.

 

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Boris Johnson Wins “Pennyfeather Prize”

Michael Deacon writing in the Daily Telegraph reports on Boris Johnson’s overblown responses to parliamentary questions:

Virtually his every answer was a speech, lasting two, three, four minutes…Whether the committee found Mr Johnson’s views enlightening, I couldn’t say. But as he powered remorselessly on, I found myself recalling the scene in Evelyn Waugh’s Decline and Fall, in which beleaguered schoolmaster [Paul Pennyfeather] attempts to set his unruly class to work by offering “a prize of half a crown for the longest essay, irrespective of any possible merit”. In that class, one suspects, Mr Johnson would have made a mint.

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Waughs Feature in Spectator Strip Cartoon

Evelyn Waugh and his son Auberon feature in this week’s strip cartoon in the Spectator’s “Title Stories” column. The cartoon is by Gary Dexter and is entitled “Writers’ Letters: Evelyn Waugh on Auberon Waugh.” The first panel shows an accurate representation of Waugh writing a letter. The strip takes as its subject a letter Waugh wrote on 11 February 1956 to Brian Franks, Managing Director of the Hyde Park Hotel and opens “My boy, aged 16, is very restless at school. He has not been sacked and he passes his various exams with credit but he is anxious to get away from school” (Letters, p. 463). In succeeding panels it explains that Auberon is interested in the hotel trade and concludes “He is taller and bettered mannered than his father. Do you think there is an opening for him?” That final panel has an exaggerated picture of thin, red-headed son hugely exceeding his pudgy father in height. The second panel, which shows a schoolboy crucified in a school yard, has a drawing of a building in the background that looks rather more like Eton than Downside, but it is a cartoon after all.

Elsewhere in the Spectator, the lead book review is by Alexander Waugh in which he considers a book by Reza Aslan entitled God, described as:

… a brief and lively history of the development of the God-like type over 12 millennia. Aslan writes in clear, concise and attractive English. He is intelligent and has an uncommon ability both to marshal and contextualise seemingly random facts, and is skilful at condensing complex ideas into short, effortless paragraphs. But despite his claims to high scholarship, he is at heart a popular historian. Even his end-notes are fun.

Although not mentioned, Alexander previously wrote a book of the same title and similar subject matter.

Finally, there is also an essay by Theo Hobson (“Martin Luther’s genius was to teach us that feeble faith is enough”) in which Evelyn Waugh is compared to Martin Luther. This is in particular connection with Waugh’s explanation to Edith Sitwell and Nancy Mitford that without his religion he would be an even worse person than he was.

UPDATE (3 November 2017): The two final paragraphs were added.

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Shakespeare’s Grave: Contrary Voices

In a previous post, we reported the conclusions of Alexander Waugh, Evelyn’s grandson, that William Shakespeare was buried in Westminster Abbey, not Holy Trinity Church, Stratford. It is not surprising that the Stratford-upon-Avon Herald has published differing views:

THE Shakespeare Birthplace Trust and Holy Trinity Church have dismissed new suggestions that William Shakespeare is not buried in Stratford-upon-Avon. Paul Edmondson, the trust’s head of research and knowledge, said the claims by Alexander Waugh in two national newspapers as “fantasy”. The Reverend Patrick Taylor, vicar of Holy Trinity, said it was “an historical fact” that Shakespeare was buried there.

Edmondson further comments that Alexander “isn’t the grandson of the fiction writer and satirist Evelyn Waugh for nothing.”

Another contrary voice is raised in the “Prufrock” column of the Weekly Standard written by Micah Mattix. This is in a story entitled “Uncle Waugh is Talking about Shakespeare Again.” After a satirical and dismissive restatement of Alexander’s argument, the column concludes:

Mr. Waugh also said that he has identified the exact date of the second coming of Christ using the Shroud of Turin and a fragment of St. Peter’s femur. Details to follow.

UPDATE (7 November 2017): The lecture given by Alexander Waugh on 29 October at the Globe Theatre was sponsored by the Shakespearean Authorship Trust and is now available on YouTube. This relates to the burial place of William Shakespeare.

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Sheed and Ward and Waugh

The Catholic Register, based in Toronto, has published a background story on Frank Sheed, who was a founder of the publishing house Sheed and Ward, among whose authors was Evelyn Waugh. The story begins:

Born in Australia in 1897, Frank Sheed’s father was a Scottish Presbyterian, his mother an Irish Catholic. Fortunately for the Church, and for English literature, his mother won out and, at 16, Frank declared himself Catholic and never looked back. Sheed’s passion was Catholic polemics — or apologetics as it was then called — and he devoted himself to this pursuit from his late teens until his death at the age of 85. He specialized in conducting street missions on behalf of an organization called the Catholic Evidence Guild. Through the Guild he met another platform firebrand, Maisie Ward, who, Sheed insists, was more eloquent and convincing than he was. They met in 1924, married in 1926, and later that same year founded Sheed and Ward, a publishing house that over the next half century published the leading lights of Catholicism: writers like G.K. Chesterton, Hilaire Belloc, Evelyn Waugh, Christopher Dawson and Ronald Knox.

According to Wikipedia, Sheed and Ward moved their headquarters from London to New York in 1933, which is probably how they came to have published the first US edition of Waugh’s Edmund Campion in 1935. According to Waugh’s Bibliography (ed. RM Davis, et al.) that edition was marked “Printed in Great Britain” and collates with the Longmans UK first edition. Frank and Maisie’s son Wilfred Sheed (1930-2011) made something of a name for himself as a writer of satirical novels and memoirs as well as books on popular music and baseball.

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BBC Radio 4 Features Anthony Powell Biography

Hilary Spurling’s new biography of Anthony Powell, novelist and contemporary of Evelyn Waugh (see previous posts), recently featured as the Book of the Week on BBC Radio 4. It can be accessed worldwide on BBC iPlayer, and all of the five episodes are now available. Milena Borden reports that the program and book were mentioned (along with the friendship of Powell and Waugh) this morning on the Today program, also on BBC Radio 4 (1:30:50), and the program has been reviewed in The Times, prominently mentioning the connection between Powell and Evelyn Waugh:

Radio choice, by Catherine Nixey

Anthony Powell: Dancing to the Music of Time
Radio 4, 1.45pm

He has not weathered well, Anthony Powell. His contemporaries — Evelyn Waugh, Graham Greene et al — still sell by the barrel-load. But Powell has been lumbered with the reputation of a chilly aristo. Which, given that people still read Waugh (perhaps the iciest chronicler of all and a man for whom Greene’s comment about writers needing a splinter of ice in their hearts might have been invented), seems a bit tough. In her biography of him, Hilary Spurling has a bit of a shot at rehabilitation. Because for one thing, he wasn’t a toff at all. He was a bit weedy, not that wealthy and had a tough time of it at Eton (although he was, one should note, at Eton nonetheless. Not exactly a hedge school). Spurling looks at the events that inspired him. Read by Hattie Morahan.

UPDATE: More detail regarding the trailer on the Today program was inserted. Thanks again to Milena Borden.

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Muriel Spark Centenary to be Observed Next Year

Next year on 1st February will be the centenary of novelist Muriel Spark’s birth. The papers are beginning to build up publicity for the event. Last week The National (Scotland) and The Times both ran articles mentioning the centenary. Both articles also mention the support given Spark’s early work by Evelyn Waugh and Graham Greene. Perhaps it is not a coincidence that she, like them, was a convert to Roman Catholicism. They each wrote positive reviews of Spark’s first novel The Comforters (1957) which was published when she was 39. Waugh’s review was in the Spectator and is collected in his Essays, Articles and Reviews. Waugh later reviewed her novels Voices at Play (1961), also in the Spectator, and The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (1962) in Cosmopolitan. Miss Brodie was probably her most popular work and was made into both a film and TV series.

A Scottish publishing company Polygon has announced the republication of all her novels in a special centenary edition with introductions by leading writers such as William Boyd, Alexander McCall Smith, and Alan Massie. The first batch of four will be issued next month. A memoir by writer and critic Alan Taylor entitled Appointment in Arezzo has also been published. BBC Four and BBC Scotland will produce a TV documentary, and a series on BBC Radio 3 will feature fellow authors remembering her career. There will be a three-day centenary symposium convened at the University of Glasgow from 31 January-2 February 2018. Details are available here. An exhibition on the theme “The International Style of Muriel Spark” opens at the National Library of Scotland on 8 December and continues through 13 May 2018. It should be noted that her official biography was written by Martin Stannard who also wrote the two-volume biography of Evelyn Waugh, the most comprehensive to date, and is co-editor of his Complete Works.

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Lady Burghclere’s Maid

The Mail on Sunday has published extracts from letters relating to the break-up of Evelyn Waugh’s first marriage. These letters were written by Ethel North to a friend of hers (Elsie Merrall) over a a period of years (1919-33) during which Ethel was maid to the mother of Evelyn Gardner, Waugh’s first wife. They were discovered only recently by Elsie Merrall’s grand daughter, Melissa Lawrence, who plans to publish them. There are several names and titles associated with Evelyn Gardner’s mother who was born Winnifred Herbert, daughter of the Earl of Carnarvon. They lived at Highclere Castle near Newbury, Berkshire, which was the setting for the TV series Downton Abbey. Whether she was entitled to be referred to as Lady Winnifred isn’t stated, but as the daughter of an earl, she probably was. In the Mail’s article she is referred as Lady Burghclere and that is the name used by Waugh’s biographers. After her first husband died, she married Herbert Gardner, Baron Burghclere, entitling her to be called Winnifred Gardner or Lady Burghclere or (possibly) Lady or The Lady Winnifred Burghclere. They had four daughters, one of whom was Evelyn Gardner. At the time of Waugh’s marriage, Lady Burghclere was a widow but seems to have preferred to use her married name and title.

Ethel North first mentions Waugh shortly after his marriage:

Writing in August 1928 of the marriage of the youngest daughter of her mistress, Lady Burghclere, to Evelyn Waugh, one of the 20th Century’s greatest prose stylists, Ethel said: ‘As far as we can judge [he is] a very unsatisfactory young man whose only living is an occasional book. Time alone will show, of course.’

The Waughs’ marriage took place secretly in June 1928 but it apparently had become known to Lady Burghclere as early as August. The only other mention of Waugh comes in a letter written after the marriage had failed:

The couple had four daughters whom Ethel found ‘moody’ and ‘selfish’. The youngest, Lady Evelyn, left Evelyn Waugh (they were known to their friends as He-Evelyn and She-Evelyn) after less than a year of marriage. Ethel, writing in August 1929, said it caused Lady Burghclere great concern. ‘Wicked Miss E left her husband a fortnight ago to go off with another young man, worse off than her husband
 These girls were never meant for marriage.’

That may be the first published mention of the family’s assessment of John Heygate who became Evelyn Gardner’s second husband. For more information on Lady Burghclere and Ethel North, see this link.

At the risk of informational overload, it may be worth mentioning that Waugh’s second wife, born Laura Herbert, was the daughter of Lady Burghclere’s half brother, Aubrey Herbert.  She and Evelyn Gardner were cousins (or would that be half cousins?)

UPDATE (20 October 2017): The discussion of the possbile titles applicable to Lady Burghclere has been modified but the last alternative is still in some doubt. Her daughter Evelyn, as daughter of a baron, would have been entitled to use  “The Honourable” before her name and (possibly) “The Lady Evelyn Waugh” after her marriage but, again, the latter alternative is offered subject to some considerable doubt, particularly given the further confusion caused by sharing the same Christian name as her husband. The reference to her in the Mail’s story as simply “Lady Evelyn” (without a “The” preceding), according to my researches, may not be quite correct. Use of these titles is a minefield better avoided where at all possible.  It may help explain why Waugh’s biographers have chosen to refer to her as “She-Evelyn” rather than the less twee but possibly inaccurate Lady Evelyn as the Mail has done.

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University of Leicester Seeks Research Manager for CWW Project

The University of Leicester has advertised for applicants to fill its position of Research Project Officer for its ongoing project to edit and publish (through OUP) the Complete Works of Evelyn Waugh. This is a part time position (approx. 20 hrs per week) paying £27,285 to £31,604. The fixed term contract will be for a period ending 31 December 2018. The deadline for applications is 20th November 2017. For details, see this link. Additional information is available here.

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Evelyn Waugh’s Birthday 28 October 2003

Today is the 114th anniversary of Evelyn Waugh’s birthday. This has been announced in several news sites that track this sort of thing. Perhaps not coincidently, the Guardian has chosen this date to report that Waugh’s grandson, Alexander, will announce tomorrow (Sunday) at a conference in the Globe Theatre, Southwark, that he has decoded a notation in an early edition of Shakespeare that identifies the poet’s burial place as Westminster Abbey, not Holy Trinity Church in Stratford-on-Avon. According to the Guardian:

Waugh said he would show hidden geometries, grid patterns and other clues which reveal that Shakespeare’s final resting place is underneath his 1740 monument in Poets’ Corner at Westminster Abbey and that they spell out the words “Edward de Vere lies here”. He said he had “finally decoded the mysterious dedication” to the sonnets. “Stratfordians and anti-Stratfordians have said that this dedication page must be encrypted, because it doesn’t seem to make any sense. It’s got those funny dots all over the place and there’s something very weird about it. I’ve finally cracked it….”

A similar story, datelined yesterday, appears in the Daily Mail’s online edition, apparently scooping the Guardian.

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