Satirical Novels Listed on Interactive Rating Site

The interactive rating site Ranker has started a list of the best satirical novels. So far, there are four of Waugh’s novels on the list: Decline and Fall, The Loved One, Scoop and A Handful of Dust (in descending order of rank) . There are about 50 novels on the list, although more may be added. The two top ranked novels are currently George Orwell’s Animal Farm and Joseph Heller’s Catch-22. Decline and Fall was ranked #18 when last checked, but the list is dynamic as people register their votes. Anyone may indicate their preferences or add a book to the list.

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Waugh Included in Catholic Book List

The editor of a nondenominational Christian online news site, The Christian Review, has compiled a list of what he considers the best 100 Catholic novels. These include novels published between 1827 and 2011 and are listed chronologically. The somewhat subjective criteria for inclusion are that the novel must be considered by the editor to be “worth reading” and express explicit Roman Catholic themes and perspectives. It need not have been written by a Roman Catholic.

Two of Waugh’s works are included in the list: Brideshead Revisited and Helena. Georges Bernanos is the most listed novelist with five. Graham Greene may be the most listed of Waugh’s generation with 4 books. Two younger writers whose works Waugh promoted, J.F. Powers and Muriel Spark, each have two books on the list, and David Lodge, the Honorary President of the Evelyn Waugh Society has one.  

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Brideshead Reviewed in Oxford (More)

The Oxford Mail and other local papers have carried a report welcoming the stage adaptation of Brideshead Revisited back to its academic home. The report is accompanied by photos of members of the cast and crew in the dining hall of Hertford College where Waugh lived as an undergraduate. It concludes:

Company director Mark Shayle said: “We have had a fantastic time touring this new stage version of Brideshead Revisited and are delighted to be performing in Oxford, where the novelist himself, Evelyn Waugh, attended Hertford College. “It’s amazing to perform this show in the city that inspired it.”

Meanwhile, two bloggers have reviewed this week’s the performances at the Oxford Playhouse. One, blogging as Easy Retirement, attended on the night the performance was interrupted by a thunderstorm which cut off electric power for 10 minutes. According to this reviewer:

This was the most exciting part of the evening. Award winning playwright Bryony Lavery has tried to rush through a novel that was far more attuned to the leisurely pace of the brilliant 1980’s TV series. I found most of the production to be very disjointed as we race from scene to scene. I didn’t mind the ultra modern set, but it’s use only made the pace even more frantic…There is definitely a play to be made from this classic novel, but this wasn’t it.

The other blogger (Agent Catfish) was more positive:

Mummy issues were explored; insecurities were shared; artistic creativity included; the impact of war; but most fascinatingly for me, maybe as I didn’t get it or understand it the first time, the influence of religion, specifically Catholicism, can have on one’s life, not just in terms of the choices you make but the guilt you carry…

The casting is also very good, ‘Julia’ is guarded but loving; ‘Lady Marchmain’ detestable and thankfully not my mother; ‘Sebastian’ you just want to cuddle and remove him from the situation; and ‘Charles’, although hardly off stage, manages to present and inhabit a character whom is reversed, frustrated and a true friend, in the most believable way possible.

And the adaptation – picks up on the essentials. The memories are explored, a variety of places are visited, and time moves back and forth, without you ever being confused or feeling ‘You know what this doesn’t work’, because it does work. Lavery has taken a much loved book, TV series and movie, and turned it into a thoroughly enjoyable, thinking piece of live theatre.

 

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Waugh Mark-up of Unconditional Surrender for Sale

Sotheby’s has announced the auction of Waugh’s marked-up copy of the uncorrected proof of his last novel, Unconditional Surrender. This is the third volume of his War Trilogy which was subsequently published as Sword of Honour with further edits. This mark-up is to be sold together with a presentation copy to Graham Greene of the published version. How the two books came together is not explained, but they are described as being sold “together in collector’s folding red morocco box.” The provenance is described as coming from a 2001 Christie’s sale by Roger Rechler but it is not clear whether that refers to both items nor does it identify the buyer in that transaction.

The Sotheby’s catalogue briefly describes Waugh’s edits: 

Waugh’s extensive emendations and alterations to the proof copy were all reflected in the published first edition, including an additional paragraph to be inserted on the penultimate page, written out by Waugh on the final page of the proof, and the renaming of Jack Spruce (the editor of a war-time magazine with a distinct resemblance to Cyril Connolly) to ‘Everard’ in blue ink throughout.

Alas, there is no photo of the “additional paragraph” on the penultimate page, but that could be worked out by anyone possessing an uncorrected proof. The auction will be in London on 12 July 2016, and these books are Lot 204. Estimated sale price £6000-8000. Other Waugh presentation copies as well as collections of his books will be sold on the same day. See Lots 195-203, 205.

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New Waugh Biography Reviewed

Philip Eade’s new biography, Evelyn Waugh: A Life Revisited, will be published next month in the U.K. The U.S. edition is scheduled for release in October. In what may be the first review to appear on the internet, Richard Davenport-Hines has written about it in the latest edition of The Oldie. Here are some excerpts:

As selling-points Eade makes two correctives to previous biographers. Waugh was neither the military bungler nor the crashing snob whom his detractors portray. He never skulked from his birth in a cul-de-sac near London’s Finchley Road, his baptism in Kilburn and upbringing in Golder’s Green. Although he chronicled both aristocratic self-indulgence and what he called ‘the sharp instinct for self-preservation that passes for wisdom among the rich’, he did so contemptuously. He was incapable of the servility that is the prerequisite of a snob…

Eade seems scared by his ferocious subject. He is too sunny a character to understand Waugh’s sombre moods. The modest tone of his book is enlivened when he quotes from Waugh’s arrogant but often hilarious letters, which make one long for a collected edition of his correspondence. Eade’s prose is slackly colloquial and syntactically wonky. He repeatedly uses a comma instead of a full stop at the end of a serviceable sentence, tacks on the word ‘however’ and conjoins a second sentence regardless of the meaning. There are sentences eleven lines long swerving through matchbox-collecting, alcoholism, teddy bears and the male beauty of a Giotto angel. This suggests a harassed author who has not taken breath before assembling his copious material.

 

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Brideshead Reviewed in Oxford

The traveling company performance of the stage adaptation of Brideshead Revisited opened earlier this week at the Oxford Playhouse where it is enjoying a one-week run. It is reviewed by John Charlton in Oxford Today, the online service of a group of “hyperlocal” Oxford-area newspapers. He found the play:

a stunning success on its opening night at the Oxford Playhouse last night (Tuesday June 14). A wonderful cast produced a mesmerising interpretation of the classic novel with strong lead performances from Brian Ferguson, Christopher Simpson and Rosie Hilal…The quality of all the cast was excellent and special mention must be given to Shuna Snow who played three male characters with style and great humour. The stage sets, lighting and music were also hugely impressive and the constant and quick changes really added to the performance.

The play continues through Saturday in Oxford before returning to the Theatre Royal, York,  where it opens next Tuesday 21 June for another one-week run before moving on to London where it will be performed in suburban Richmond-on-Thames at the Richmond Theatre from 29 June-2 July.

In an earlier story, the Oxford Times interviewed Kiran Sonia Sawar who plays the role of Cordelia in the stage production. She graduated from the Oxford School of Drama and previously appeared in a pantomime at the Playhouse. After talking about her career, she had this to say about the Brideshead production:

…it’s a dream to be cast in such a classic piece. There are … many risks … because this is a really stripped back version, devised and created by the ensemble, so it’s clear, concise, detailed story-telling without too many other distractions.

 

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Swiss Publisher Completes Reprints of Waugh Fiction

The Swiss publisher Diogenes Verlag has completed the republication in German of all of Waugh’s fiction (including collected stories). The project was brought to conclusion in March to mark the 50th anniversary of Waugh’s death. It began in 2013 with Brideshead Revisited (Wiedersehen mit Brideshead) and ends, appropriately, with Sword of Honour (Ohne Furcht und Tadelliterally “Without Fear and without Reproach.”) This last volume includes a translation of Waugh’s 1964 preface, explaining the recension of his War Trilogy, that was missing from the original German version published in 1981. The text of the novel is the original translation by Werner Perterich.  A review of the novel by the German Press Agency (dpa) has appeared in German newspapers, including the Muenstersche ZeitungThe review ranks the book with Brideshead, The Loved One and Handful of Dust. Here’s the conclusion (edited Google Translate version; comments or corrections would be appreciated):

It is the wonderful mix of British and black humor that makes the book both serious and entertaining. In literature, as in art generally, it is nothing new to come across the horrors of war expressed satirically. In Waugh it happens more casually that  Crouchback’s participation in the war with noble objectives has the opposite effect.

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Waugh Quoted in Review of Tate Exhibit

The London Magazine’s review of the Tate Britain exhibit “Painting with Light” opens with a quote from Evelyn Waugh:

There is a scene in Evelyn Waugh’s Brideshead Revisited in which the odious Boy Mulcaster interrogates Charles Ryder, painter and protagonist, as to why he paints pictures. Why, Mulcaster asks, doesn’t Charles simply go out and buy a camera? Charles replies: ‘a camera is a mechanical device which records a moment in time, but not what that moment means or the emotions that it evokes […] whereas, a painting, however imperfect it may be, is an expression of feeling, an expression of love: not just a copy of something.’ This juxtaposition might be said to persist today: we feel that paintings are fictive, imperfect impressions, whereas the camera documents, and never lies…One of the many triumphs of the exhibition ‘Painting With Light’ is that it clearly tells the story of the early negotiation of this relationship between photography, painting, truth, and deception. Early photographs, from the Victorian and Edwardian era, are set alongside contemporaneous paintings.

The exhibit at the Tate Britain on Millbank continues through 25th September. Robert Hawkins concludes his review with another allusion to Waugh’s novel:

This exhibition argues for a greater appreciation of an undervalued era of photography… Freed from their usual hanging alongside Old Master paintings, and set against contemporary photographs, the Pre-Raphaelite paintings seem more thoroughly modern than usual. And the photographs emerge not as subservient to paintings, but as wrought, intricately constructed, magical things. So Charles Ryder is proved wrong, and Mulcaster right: a photograph is not just a copy of something. In fact, this could hardly be further from the truth.

 

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BBC Announces Casting for Decline and Fall

The BBC Media Centre has announced final casting arrangements for its upcoming series Decline and Fall, based on Waugh’s first novel, in a release dated today. This confirms the selection of Jack Whitehall to play Paul Pennyfeather and Eva Longoria, Margot Beste-Chetwynde. See earlier post. The BBC also announces the casting of David Suchet as Dr. Fagan and Douglas Hodge as Capt. Grimes. Suchet is best known for his portrayal as Hercule Poirot in ITV’s long running series based on Agatha Christie’s books. Hodge has played in various stage, film and TV roles, most recently as Rex Mayhew, one of the MI6 good guys in the BBC dramatization of John Le Carre’s  The Night Manager. Hodge will have a hard act to follow in the portrayal of Grimes by Leo McKern in the 1960’s film version of the novel. McKern’s performance was the only memorable element of that production. He went on to greater fame in the role of Rumpole of the Bailey.

The BBC Media Centre’s release also included these statements from those involved in the production:

Of his casting as Paul Pennyfeather, Jack Whitehall says: “I am extremely pleased to be a part of this amazing adaptation by James Wood. I’ve been a fan of this book since I read it as a teenager, and I just hope that I can do it justice.”

Shane Allen, Controller of BBC Comedy Commissioning, says: “One of the greatest comic novels of all time, this satirical masterpiece is long overdue a television debut. Waugh deploys comedy and tragedy to point up prevailing institutional corruption and the dehumanising consequences of elitism, very timely and apposite for today. James has done a terrific job of getting to the core of it, and the writing has attracted a fantastic cast.”

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Argentine Press Notes Waugh Anniversary and Complete Works

The Buenos Aires Herald carries an article by Felicitas Casillo marking the 50th anniversary of Waugh’s death and explaining the project that will publish the Complete Works of Waugh. The article begins with a summary of Waugh’s achievement as a writer:

One of the most notable features of Waugh’s identity was his sense of humour; sometimes acid, sometimes tenderly childlike, an elegant form that tends to assume the boldest criticism. In many aspects he was a true rebel; a Catholic in an Anglican country, he harshly criticized British society during the first half of the last century…Waugh’s protagonists are closer to suffering rather than corruption. They often suggest uncomfortable and surprising spiritual pursuits in a society where even transgression had taken the form of cliché. Deep down, his characters, like Julia and Sebastian Flyte, in his famous novel Brideshead Revisited (1945), are fragile and wounded. It’s not guilt or evilness that drives their actions, but the radical pursuit of a greater good that would overcome even their own misery.

There is also an interview with Martin Stannard about the Complete Works Project. Here’s an excerpt:

The edition comprises 43 volumes, including all of Waugh’s writings: novels, short fiction, essays, articles, reviews, diaries and letters. 85 percent of his correspondence is still unpublished…The Complete Works project was initiated by Alexander Waugh, Waugh’s grandson, who curates the Evelyn Waugh Archive at his home in Somerset. I’ve worked on this idea with him and Oxford University Press (OUP), the publisher. We aim to publish everything we can find, the unexpurgated diaries, all his artwork and a new bibliography. I am the Principal Investigator for the Arts and Humanities Research Council funding, so the project is based at the University of Leicester…This project represents the biggest single contribution to Waugh studies, and is probably the largest scholarly edition of a modern author. We include cutting-edge digital humanities technology. We also have a dedicated website which allows all our twenty-three editors to share and search archived data, and invites members of the public to contribute their knowledge.

 

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