George MacDonald Fraser RIP - Britmovie - British Film Forum

Britmovie - British Film Forum Britmovie - British Film Forum Britmovie - British Film Forum
Home Page Register FAQ Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read

 »   Britmovie - British Film Forum » Cinema » Directors and Film Crew

Notices

Directors and Film Crew Debate the achievements of filmmakers and crew here.


Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 03-01-2008, 12:54 AM
  post #1
dremble wedge is very tired
Senior Member
 
dremble wedge's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Derbyshire
Posts: 2,649
Country:
iTrader: (0)
Default George MacDonald Fraser RIP

The screenwriter and novelist George MacDonald Fraser died on Wednesday 2 January at the age of 82.

Quite simply one of the greats...

The BBC's report is below:

Author of Flashman stories dies

The novelist George MacDonald Fraser, author of the Flashman adventure stories, has died aged 82, his publisher has said.

The popular books saw womanising anti-hero Sir Harry Flashman, fight his way around the British Empire.

MacDonald Fraser, who was appointed an OBE in 1999, also wrote the screenplay for James Bond film Octopussy.

The Carlisle-born journalist turned author, who lived on the Isle of Man, had fought cancer for several years.

He was married and had three children.

MacDonald Fraser served as a solder in Burma and India during World War II and later rose to be deputy editor of the Glasgow Herald newspaper.

He was still working there when the first Flashman book was published in 1969.

A further 11 followed, the last in 2005.

The inspiration for Sir Harry Flashman came from the 19th century novel, Tom Brown's Schooldays, where the character features as the cowardly bully who torments the hero, Tom.

MacDonald Fraser based his tales on the idea that Flashman's "memoirs" had been unearthed in an old trunk in a Leicestershire auction room.

Despite being a vain, cowardly rogue, as well as a racist and a sexist, the character managed to play a pivotal role in many of the 19th Century's most significant events, always emerging covered in glory.

As well as Octopussy in 1983, MacDonald Fraser wrote other screenplays including The Prince and The Pauper and The Three Musketeers.

Fellow author Kingsley Amis called him "a marvellous reporter and a first-rate historical novelist".

dremble wedge is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-01-2008, 08:32 AM
  post #2
Windthrop has no status.
Senior Member
 
Windthrop's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: North Yorks
Posts: 5,551
Country:
iTrader: (0)
Default

Here, here - he was one hell of a writer - Flashman etc but also for his screenplays. His book on his adventures in the film world The Light's On At Signpost is superb.

Thats the joke that killed the Music Hall !
Windthrop is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-01-2008, 09:33 AM
  post #3
Moor Larkin is passing the time
Senior Member
 
Moor Larkin's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: North West Frontier
Gender: Male
Posts: 1,678
Country:
iTrader: (0)
Default

Yes. He was good. I probably learned more 'history' reading all his footnotes in the Flashy books, than I ever learned at school.....

What a brilliant concept the idea of putting a fictitious character into real history was. Had it been done before to that extent I wonder.

[code]http://www.flickr.com/photos/29487363@N02/sets/72157606700675506/code]
Moor Larkin is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-01-2008, 09:41 AM
  post #4
batman is wondering where his next meal is coming from
Chief Member OBME
 
batman's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Norwich
Gender: Male
Posts: 19,444
Country:
iTrader: (13)
Default

My dad used to love the Flashman books. When my dad died I decided to read his collection ... he had great taste my dad, they are wonderful.

RIP Mr Fraser.

Bats.

Daddy .... the frisbee has gone in the water .... what a finger puppet drama queen I am!
batman is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-01-2008, 01:18 PM
  post #5
Rob Compton has no status.
Senior Member
 
Rob Compton's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Oxfordshire
Gender: Male
Posts: 1,342
Country:
iTrader: (2)
Default

Sad news, though he was in his 80's and hadn't been well for a while. I do agree that using the Flashman character was a great idea, brilliantly followed through. I have all the Flashman books and they bear re-reading many times.

RIP

rgds
Rob
Rob Compton is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-01-2008, 02:27 PM
  post #6
716Jones has no status.
Senior Member
 
716Jones's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: South Yorkshire
Posts: 169
Country:
iTrader: (0)
Default

What a great loss, a wonderful writing talent, whether books or screenplays. The Flashman series of books were so well written and informative about military history and Quartered Safe Out Here is probably the best WW2 memoir I've read. I've just bought his latest book 'The Reavers' but haven't yet started it.

He will be sadly missed.
716Jones is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-01-2008, 06:14 PM
  post #7
Marky B is co-organising a one day marathon charity walk next year
Senior Member
 
Marky B's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: Billingham,Cleveland
Gender: Male
Posts: 4,235
My Mood:
Country:
iTrader: (0)
Smile

A great loss. I didn't know he came from Carlisle,as he got a mention on BBC's Look North.
Ta Ta
Marky B

I once shot an elephant in my pyjamas - how he got in my pyjamas,I'll never know
Marky B is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-01-2008, 10:49 AM
  post #8
Windthrop has no status.
Senior Member
 
Windthrop's Avatar
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: North Yorks
Posts: 5,551
Country:
iTrader: (0)
Default

Obit from the Telegraph

George MacDonald Fraser
Last Updated: 9:01am GMT 04/01/2008



George Macdonald Fraser, who died on Wednesday aged 82, revived in a long-running series of novels the career of one of fiction's most infamous characters, Flashman.


Harry Mount: George MacDonald Fraser was no Flashman
The fag-roasting bully of Tom Brown's Schooldays, Thomas Hughes's 1857 tribute to Dr Arnold's Rugby, was last seen being expelled for drunkenness. Age had not improved him. Fraser's appropriation in 1969, Flashman, joyously confirmed him as a thoroughgoing rotter and cad of the first water.


Fraser: his richly comic narrative spoofed the
heroes of Buchan and GA Henty

The book and its 11 sequels purported to be the memoirs of General Sir Harry Flashman, VC, discovered in a saleroom at Ashby-de-la-Zouch and entrusted to Fraser for editing.

This device allowed Fraser to pilot Flashman through a picaresque series of encounters with some of the choicest episodes of Victorian history. Thus, the first novel took as its background the First Afghan War - for Flashman an odyssey of self-preservation justified by his being the sole survivor of the Retreat from Kabul.

In Royal Flash (1970), which was later made into a film, he floundered his way through the Schleswig-Holstein Question, engaging Bismarck in fisticuffs and dallying with Lola Montez. Flashman at the Charge (1973) saw him accidentally lead the Light Brigade into the "Valley of Death".

So successfully did Fraser bring off the conceit that some critics, especially in America, believed the memoirs to be authentic. A debate ensued in the New York Times, and Flashman's concocted curriculum vitae found its way into works of biographical reference.

Yet Fraser had initially struggled to find a publisher. By profession a journalist, he had started to write the first book in the small hours after work, but had abandoned the project on breaking his arm. His wife, however, read the unfinished manuscript and persuaded him to complete it.

For two years he received rejections from publishers, with one American house adding that Flashman was the wrong name for the character. The book was finally accepted by the small firm of Barrie and Jenkins.

Although some critics saw the series as a satire on Victorian morality, its continued popular success was due to Fraser's ability to make learning history enjoyable.

The richly comic narrative moved with a military dash worthy of Anthony Hope or Rafael Sabatini while spoofing the wholesome sensibilities of the heroes of Buchan and Henty.

Though later instalments perhaps strove for effect, with some critics tiring of Flashman's priapism and finding him braver than of old, the broad comedy was always underpinned by Fraser's meticulous research.

On Desert Island Discs he chose to take with him the Oxford English Dictionary, and he rightly prided himself on his command of 19th-century trivia and slang, often drawn from contemporary issues of Punch.

Fraser's Lord Cardigan, with his Cavalry drawl ("Fwashman's wife? Her father is a Gwasgow weaver"), might have stepped straight out of Thackeray's Book of Snobs.

George MacDonald Fraser was born at Carlisle on April 2 1925. His father was a doctor, his mother a nurse. George was educated at Carlisle Grammar School and Glasgow Academy, where his performance as Laertes was distinguished by his unscripted defeat of Hamlet in the pair's duel.

In 1943 he joined the Border Regiment and served as an infantryman in North Africa and with the "Forgotten" Fourteenth Army in Burma. He was eventually commissioned in the Gordon Highlanders.

Some of his finest writing is contained in his graphic recollections of his Burma service, Quartered Safe Out Here (1992), in which the affectionate portrait of his Cumbrian comrades demonstrated his keen eye for character and acute ear for dialogue. John Keegan, in The Sunday Telegraph, justly called it "one of the great personal memoirs of World War II".

On leaving the Army in 1947 Fraser worked as a reporter on the Carlisle Journal, where he met his wife, Kathleen. After they married they emigrated to Canada, where Fraser briefly sold encyclopaedias and lasted three hours working for the Canadian Pacific Railway before the pair got jobs on the Regina Leader-Post in Saskatchewan.

The couple returned home after a year and Fraser became a sub-editor for the Glasgow Herald in 1953. He was later its features editor, and finally deputy editor from 1964 to 1969.

Fraser wrote a number of other books, notably a series of comic novels that drew on his time in the Gordon Highlanders and centred on Private John McAuslan, "the dirtiest soldier in the world".

He wrote a scholarly and well-received history of the Anglo-Scottish Border Reivers, The Steel Bonnets (1971), and several historical novels. These included a boisterous romp, The Pyrates (1983), and The Candlemass Road (1993), an Elizabethan adventure set in Fraser's beloved Border country.

He also wrote several screenplays, mainly for historical flummery like Richard Lester's Musketeers films and The Prince and the Pauper, as well as for the James Bond film Octopussy.

A short, heavily-built man, Fraser held unashamedly reactionary views on law and order. He was particularly firm in his conviction that the use of the atomic bomb at Hiroshima was justified, believing that among the lives it had saved had been his own.

Nor did he have much time for fashionable attitudes about the emotional delicacy of soldiers and their need for counselling.

His experience, in what he acknowledged was another age, was that war was a job that needed to be done, one accomplished by his generation without relish but with a common sense and resolve since vanished from the public spirit.

He aired his views in Quartered Safe Out Here and was touched when many young people wrote to agree with his sentiments.

Fraser moved to the Isle of Man for tax reasons in 1970, but despite the wealth Flashman brought him lived in modest style. One concession to his success was to exchange his half-size billiard table for one of full length.

He was appointed OBE in 1999.

In 2002 Fraser published a book of reminiscences, The Light's on at Signpost; and the last in the Flashman series - Flashman on the March - appeared in 2005.

Last year he brought out a novel set in Elizabethan England, The Reavers.

George MacDonald Fraser married Kathleen Hetherington in 1949. They had two sons and a daughter.

Thats the joke that killed the Music Hall !
Windthrop is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-01-2008, 03:33 PM
  post #9
Moor Larkin is passing the time
Senior Member
 
Moor Larkin's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: North West Frontier
Gender: Male
Posts: 1,678
Country:
iTrader: (0)
Default

The last testament of Flashman's creator: How Britain has destroyed itself | the Daily Mail

Moor Larkin is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On
Forum Jump

All times are GMT. The time now is 01:18 AM.
SEO by vBSEO 3.2.0 ©2008, Crawlability, Inc.
Copyright © 1998-2008 BritMovie