Clive James AO CBE FRSL (7 October 1939 – 24 November 2019)[1] was an Australian author, critic, broadcaster, poet, translator and memoirist. He lived and worked in the United Kingdom from 1961 until his death in 2019Early life
James was born Vivian Leopold James in Kogarah, a southern suburb of Sydney. He was allowed to change his name as a child because "after Vivien Leigh played Scarlett O'Hara the name became irrevocably a girl's name no matter how you spelled it".[3] He chose "Clive", the name of Tyrone Power's character in the 1942 film This Above All.[4]
James's father (Albert Arthur James) was taken prisoner by the Japanese during World War II. Although he survived the prisoner-of-war camp, he died when the aeroplane returning him to Australia crashed in Manila Bay; he was buried at Sai Wan War Cemetery in Hong Kong.[5] James, who was an only child, was brought up by his mother (Minora May, née Darke), a factory worker,[6] in the Sydney suburbs of Kogarah and Jannali, living some years with his English maternal grandfather.[3][7]
In Unreliable Memoirs, James said an IQ test taken in childhood scored him at 140.[8] He was educated at Sydney Technical High School (despite winning a bursary award to Sydney Boys High School) and the University of Sydney, where he studied English and Psychology from 1957 to 1960, and became associated with the Sydney Push, a libertarian, intellectual subculture. At the university, he edited the student newspaper, Honi Soit, and directed the annual Union Revue. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts with Honours in English in 1961. After graduating, James worked for a year as an assistant editor for The Sydney Morning Herald.
In early 1962, James moved to England, where he made his home. During his first three years in London, he shared a flat with the Australian film director Bruce Beresford (disguised as "Dave Dalziel" in the first three volumes of James's memoirs), was a neighbour of Australian artist Brett Whiteley, became acquainted with Barry Humphries (disguised as "Bruce Jennings") and had a variety of occasionally disastrous short-term jobs – sheet metal worker, library assistant, photo archivist and market researcher.
James later gained a place at Pembroke College, Cambridge, to read English literature. While there, he contributed to all the undergraduate periodicals, was a member and later President of the Cambridge Footlights, and appeared on University Challenge as captain of the Pembroke team, beating St Hilda's, Oxford, but losing to Balliol on the last question in a tied game. During one summer vacation, he worked as a circus roustabout to save enough money to travel to Italy.[9] His contemporaries at Cambridge included Germaine Greer (known as "Romaine Rand" in the first three volumes of his memoirs), Simon Schama and Eric Idle. Having, he claimed, scrupulously avoided reading any of the course material (but having read widely otherwise in English and foreign literature), James graduated with a 2:1—better than he had expected—and began a Ph.D. thesis on Percy Bysshe Shelley.[5]
Career
Critic and essayist
James became the television critic for The Observer in 1972,[6] remaining in the role until 1982. Selections from the column were published in three books — Visions Before Midnight, The Crystal Bucket and Glued to the Box – and finally in a compendium, On Television.
He extensively wrote literary criticism for newspapers, magazines and periodicals in Britain, Australia and the United States, including, among many others, The Australian Book Review, The Monthly, The Atlantic Monthly, the New York Review of Books, The Liberal and the Times Literary Supplement. John Gross included James's essay "A Blizzard of Tiny Kisses" in the Oxford Book of Essays (1992, 1999).
The Metropolitan Critic (1974), his first collection of literary criticism, was followed by At the Pillars of Hercules (1979), From the Land of Shadows (1982), Snakecharmers in Texas (1988), The Dreaming Swimmer (1992), Even As We Speak (2004), The Meaning of Recognition (2005) and Cultural Amnesia (2007), a collection of miniature intellectual biographies of over 100 significant figures in modern culture, history and politics. A defence of humanism, liberal democracy and literary clarity, the book was listed among the best of 2007 by The Village Voice.
Another volume of essays, The Revolt of the Pendulum, was published in June 2009.
He also published Flying Visits, a collection of travel writing for The Observer.
For many years, until mid-2014, he wrote the weekly television critique page in the "Review" section of the Saturday edition of The Daily Telegraph.
Poet and lyricist
James published several books of poetry, including Poem of the Year (1983), a verse-diary, Other Passports: Poems 1958–1985, a first collection, and The Book of My Enemy (2003), a volume that takes its title from his poem "The Book of My Enemy Has Been Remaindered".[10]
He published four mock-heroic poems — The Fate of Felicity Fark in the Land of the Media: a moral poem (1975), Peregrine Prykke's Pilgrimage Through the London Literary World (1976), Britannia Bright's Bewilderment in the Wilderness of Westminster (1976) and Charles Charming's Challenges on the Pathway to the Throne (1981) — and one long autobiographical epic, The River in the Sky (2018).[11]
During the 1970s he also collaborated on six albums of songs with Pete Atkin:
Beware of the Beautiful Stranger (1970)
Driving Through Mythical America (1971)
A King at Nightfall (1973)
The Road of Silk (1974)
Secret Drinker (1974)
Live Libel (1975).
A revival of interest in the songs in the late 1990s, triggered largely by the creation by Steve Birkill of an Internet mailing list "Midnight Voices" in 1997, led to the reissue of the six albums on CD between 1997 and 2001, as well as live performances by the pair. A double album of previously unrecorded songs written in the seventies and entitled The Lakeside Sessions: Volumes 1 and 2 was released in 2002 and Winter Spring, an album of new material written by James and Atkin was released in 2003.[citation needed] This was followed by Midnight Voices, an album of remakes of the best Atkin/James songs from the early albums, and, in 2015, by The Colours of the Night, which included several newly completed songs.
James acknowledged the importance of the Midnight Voices group in bringing to wider attention the lyric-writing aspect of his career. He wrote in November 1997, "That one of the midnight voices of my own fate should be the music of Pete Atkin continues to rank high among the blessings of my life".[12]
In 2013, he issued his translation of Dante's Divine Comedy. The work, adopting quatrains to translate the original's terza rima, was well received by Australian critics.[13][14] Writing for The New York Times,[15] Joseph Luzzi thought it often fails to capture the more dramatic moments of the Inferno, but that it is more successful where Dante slows down, in the more theological and deliberative cantos of the Purgatorio and Paradiso.
Novelist and memoirist
In 1980 James published his first book of autobiography, Unreliable Memoirs, which recounted his early life in Australia and extended to over a hundred reprintings. It was followed by four other volumes of autobiography: Falling Towards England (1985), which covered his London years; May Week Was in June (1990), which dealt with his time at Cambridge; North Face of Soho (2006), and The Blaze of Obscurity (2009), concerning his subsequent career as a television presenter. An omnibus edition of the first three volumes was published under the generic title of Always Unreliable.
James also wrote four novels: Brilliant Creatures (1983), The Remake (1987), Brrm! Brrm! (1991), published in the United States as The Man from Japan, and The Silver Castle (1996).
In 1999, John Gross included an excerpt from Unreliable Memoirs in The New Oxford Book of English Prose. John Carey chose Unreliable Memoirs as one of the fifty most enjoyable books of the twentieth century in his book Pure Pleasure (2000).
Television
James developed his television career as a guest commentator on various shows, including as an occasional co-presenter with Tony Wilson on the first series of So It Goes, the Granada Television pop music show. On the show when the Sex Pistols made their TV debut, James commented: "During the recording, the task of keeping the little bastards under control was given to me. With the aid of a radio microphone, I was able to shout them down, but it was a near thing ... they attacked everything around them and had difficulty in being polite even to each other".[16]
James subsequently hosted the ITV show Clive James on Television, in which he showcased unusual or (often unintentionally) amusing television programmes from around the world, notably the Japanese TV show Endurance. After his defection to the BBC in 1988, he hosted a similarly-formatted programme called Saturday Night Clive (1988–1990) which initially screened on Saturday evening, returning as Saturday Night Clive on Sunday in its second series when it changed screening day and then Sunday Night Clive in its third and final series. In 1995 he set up Watchmaker Productions to produce The Clive James Show for ITV, and a subsequent series launched the British career of singer and comedian Margarita Pracatan. James hosted one of the early chat shows on Channel 4 and fronted the BBC's Review of the Year programmes in the late 1980s (Clive James on the '80s) and 1990s (Clive James on the '90s), which formed part of the channel's New Year's Eve celebrations.
In the mid-1980s, James featured in a travel programme called Clive James in... (beginning with Clive James in Las Vegas) for LWT (now ITV) and later switched to BBC, where he continued producing travel programmes, this time called Clive James's Postcard from... (beginning with Clive James's Postcard from Miami) – these also eventually transferred to ITV. He was also one of the original team of presenters of the BBC's The Late Show, hosting a round-table discussion on Friday nights.
His major documentary series Fame in the 20th Century (1993) was broadcast in the United Kingdom by the BBC, in Australia by the ABC and in the United States by the PBS network. This series dealt with the concept of "fame" in the 20th century, following over a course of eight episodes (each one chronologically and roughly devoted to one decade of the century, from the 1900s to the 1980s) discussions about world-famous people of the 20th century. Through the use of film footage, James presented a history of "fame" which explored its growth to today's global proportions. In his closing monologue he remarked, "Achievement without fame can be a rewarding life, while fame without achievement is no life at all."
A well known fan of motor racing, James presented the 1982, 1984 and 1986 official Formula One season review videos produced by the Formula One Constructors Association, more commonly known as FOCA. James, who attended most F1 races during the 1980s and was a friend of former FOCA boss Bernie Ecclestone, added his own humour to the reviews which became popular with fans of the sport. He also presented The Clive James Formula 1 Show for ITV to coincide with their Formula One coverage in 1997.
Summing up the medium, he said: "Anyone afraid of what he thinks television does to the world is probably just afraid of the world".
Radio
In 2007, James started presenting the BBC Radio 4 series A Point of View, with transcripts appearing in the "Magazine" section of BBC News Online. In this programme James discussed various issues with a slightly humorous slant. Topics covered included media portrayal of torture,[17] young black role models[18] and corporate rebranding.[19] Three of James's broadcasts in 2007 were shortlisted for the 2008 Orwell Prize.[20]
In October 2009 James read a radio version of his book The Blaze of Obscurity, on BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week programme.[21] In December 2009 James talked about the P-51 Mustang and other American fighter aircraft of World War II in The Museum of Curiosity on BBC Radio 4.[22]
In May 2011 the BBC published a new podcast, A Point of View: Clive James, which features all sixty A Point of View programmes presented by James between 2007 and 2009.
He posted vlog conversations from his internet show Talking in the Library, including conversations with Ian McEwan, Cate Blanchett, Julian Barnes, Jonathan Miller and Terry Gilliam. In addition to the poetry and prose of James himself, the site featured the works of other literary figures such as Les Murray and Michael Frayn, as well as the works of painters, sculptors and photographers such as John Olsen and Jeffrey Smart.
Theatre
In 2008 James performed in two self-titled shows at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe: Clive James in Conversation and Clive James in the Evening. He took the latter show on a limited tour of the UK in 2009.
Famous lines
He famously described Arnold Schwarzenegger, in his bodybuilding days, as looking like "a brown condom full of walnuts".[23] He described the romantic novelist Barbara Cartland as having "Twin miracles of mascara, her eyes looked like the corpses of two small crows that had crashed into the white cliffs of Dover." He also used to call the Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat by the female name 'Yasmin Arafat'.
Honours
In 1992, James was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM). This was upgraded to Officer level (AO) in the 2013 Australia Day Honours. James was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2012 New Year Honours for services to literature and the media.[24] In 2003 he was awarded the Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal for Literature. He received honorary doctorates from the Universities of Sydney and East Anglia. In April 2008, James was awarded a Special Award for Writing and Broadcasting by the judges of the Orwell Prize.[25]
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2010.[26] He was an Honorary Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge (his alma mater). In the 2015 BAFTAs, James received a special award honouring his 50-year career.
In 2014, he was awarded the President's Medal by the British Academy.[27]
Political views
James's political views were prominent in much of his later writing. While critical of communism for its tendency towards totalitarianism, he still identified with the left. In a 2006 interview in The Sunday Times,[28] James said of himself: "I was brought up on the proletarian left, and I remain there. The fair go for the workers is fundamental, and I don't believe the free market has a mind." In a speech given in 1991, he criticised privatisation: "The idea that Britain's broadcasting system—for all its drawbacks one of the country's greatest institutions—was bound to be improved by being subjected to the conditions of a free market: there was no difficulty in recognising that notion as politically illiterate. But for some reason people did have difficulty in realising that it was economically illiterate too."[29]
Overall, James identified as a liberal social democrat.[30] He strongly supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq, saying in 2007 that "the war only lasted a few days" and that the continuing conflict in Iraq was "the Iraq peace".[31] He also wrote that it was "official policy to rape a woman in front of her family" during Saddam Hussein's regime and that women have enjoyed more rights since the invasion.[32] He was also a Patron of the Burma Campaign UK, an organisation that campaigns for human rights and democracy in Burma.[33]
James was noted for expressing views sympathetic to climate change scepticism.[34][35]
Describing religions as "advertising agencies for a product that doesn't exist", James was an atheist and saw it as the default and obvious position.[36][37]
Personal life
In 1968, at Cambridge,[38] James married Prudence A. "Prue" Shaw,[2] an emeritus reader in Italian studies at University College London and the author of Reading Dante: From Here to Eternity. James and Shaw had two daughters. In April 2012, the Australian Channel Nine programme A Current Affair ran an item in which the former model Leanne Edelsten admitted to an eight-year affair with James beginning in 2004.[39] Shaw threw her husband out of the family home following the revelation.[2] Prior to this, for most of his working life, James divided his time between a converted warehouse flat in London and the family home in Cambridge. He maintained a general policy of not talking publicly about his family although he made occasional self-deprecating comments in his various memoirs about some of his experiences of living in a house with three women.
After the death of his friend Diana, Princess of Wales, James wrote a piece for The New Yorker entitled "Requiem", recording his overwhelming grief.[40] The article is also available here.[41] Since then he mainly declined to comment about their friendship, apart from some remarks in his fifth volume of memoirs Blaze of Obscurity.
James was able to read, with varying fluency, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian and Japanese.[42] A tango enthusiast, he travelled to Buenos Aires for dance lessons and had a dance floor in his house.[36]
Health
For much of his early life, James was a heavy drinker and smoker. He recorded in May Week Was in June his habit of filling a hubcap ashtray daily.[43][44] At various times he wrote of attempts – intermittently successful – to give up drinking and smoking.[45] He admitted smoking 80 cigarettes a day for a number of years.[46] In April 2011, after media speculation that he had suffered kidney failure,[47] James confirmed that he was suffering from B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia and had been in treatment for 15 months at Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge.[48] In an interview with BBC Radio 4 in June 2012, James admitted that the disease "had beaten him" and that he was "near the end".[49] He said that he was also diagnosed with emphysema and kidney failure in early 2010.[50]
On 3 September 2013, an interview with journalist Kerry O'Brien, Clive James: The Kid from Kogarah, was broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.[51] The interview was filmed in the library of his old college at Cambridge University.[51]
In a BBC interview with Charlie Stayt, broadcast on 31 March 2015, James described himself as "near to death but thankful for life".[52] However, in October 2015, he admitted to feeling "embarrassment" at still being alive thanks to experimental drug treatment.[53]
Until June 2017, he wrote a weekly column for The Guardian entitled "Reports of My Death...".[54]
Death
James died on 24 November 2019 at his home in Cambridge.[55][56][57]Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).
Bibliography
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Non-fiction
James, Clive (1974). The Metropolitan Critic.
— (1977). Visions before midnight : television criticism from The Observer 1972–76.
— (1979). At the Pillars of Hercules.
— (1980). First Reactions : critical essays 1968–79.
— (1981). The crystal bucket : television criticism from The Observer 1976–79.
— (1982). From the land of shadows.
— (1983). Glued to the box : television criticism from The Observer.
— (1984). Flying visits : postcards from The Observer, 1976–83.
— (1988). Snakecharmers in Texas : essays 1980–87.
— (1991). Clive James on television.[58]
— (1992). The dreaming swimmer : non-fiction, 1987–1992.
— (1993). Fame in the 20th Century.
— (2001). Reliable essays : the best of clive james.
— (2003). As of this writing : essays 1968–2000.
— (2004). Even as we speak : new essays 1993–2001.
— (2005). The meaning of recognition : new essays 2001–2005.
— (2007). Cultural amnesia : necessary memories from history and the arts.
— (2009). The revolt of the pendulum : essays 2005–2009.
— (2011). A Point of View.[59]
— (2013). Cultural cohesion : essential essays.
— (2014). Poetry notebook 2006–2014.
— (2015). Latest readings.
— (2016). Play all.
— (2019). Somewhere becoming rain: Collected writings on Philip Larkin.
Memoirs
James, Clive (1980). Unreliable memoirs.
— (1985). Falling towards England.
— (1990). May Week was in June.
— (2006). North Face of Soho.
— (2009). The blaze of obscurity.
Novels
James, Clive (1983). Brilliant creatures.
— (1987). The remake.
— (1991). Brrm! Brrm!.[60]
— (1996). The Silver Castle.
Poetry
Epics
— (1975). The fate of Felicity Fark in the land of the media: a moral poem.
— (1976). Peregrine Prykke's pilgrimage through the London literary world.
— (1976). Britannia Bright's bewilderment in the wilderness of Westminster.
— (1981). Charles Charming's challenges on the pathway to the throne.
— (1983). Poem of the Year.
— (2016). Gate of lilacs: A verse commentary on Proust.
— (2018). The River in the Sky.
Collections
— (1977). Fan-mail: seven verse letters.
— (1986). Other passports: poems 1958–1985.
— (2003). The book of my enemy.[61]
— (2008). Angels over Elsinore: collected verse 2003–2008.
— (2009). Opal sunset: selected poems 1958–2009.
— (2012). Nefertiti in the flak tower.
— (2015). Sentenced to life.
— (2016). Collected poems 1958–2015.
— (2017). Injury time.
Translations
Dante Alighieri (2013). Dante's divine comedy. Translated by Clive James
James was born Vivian Leopold James in Kogarah, a southern suburb of Sydney. He was allowed to change his name as a child because "after Vivien Leigh played Scarlett O'Hara the name became irrevocably a girl's name no matter how you spelled it".[3] He chose "Clive", the name of Tyrone Power's character in the 1942 film This Above All.[4]
James's father (Albert Arthur James) was taken prisoner by the Japanese during World War II. Although he survived the prisoner-of-war camp, he died when the aeroplane returning him to Australia crashed in Manila Bay; he was buried at Sai Wan War Cemetery in Hong Kong.[5] James, who was an only child, was brought up by his mother (Minora May, née Darke), a factory worker,[6] in the Sydney suburbs of Kogarah and Jannali, living some years with his English maternal grandfather.[3][7]
In Unreliable Memoirs, James said an IQ test taken in childhood scored him at 140.[8] He was educated at Sydney Technical High School (despite winning a bursary award to Sydney Boys High School) and the University of Sydney, where he studied English and Psychology from 1957 to 1960, and became associated with the Sydney Push, a libertarian, intellectual subculture. At the university, he edited the student newspaper, Honi Soit, and directed the annual Union Revue. He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts with Honours in English in 1961. After graduating, James worked for a year as an assistant editor for The Sydney Morning Herald.
In early 1962, James moved to England, where he made his home. During his first three years in London, he shared a flat with the Australian film director Bruce Beresford (disguised as "Dave Dalziel" in the first three volumes of James's memoirs), was a neighbour of Australian artist Brett Whiteley, became acquainted with Barry Humphries (disguised as "Bruce Jennings") and had a variety of occasionally disastrous short-term jobs – sheet metal worker, library assistant, photo archivist and market researcher.
James later gained a place at Pembroke College, Cambridge, to read English literature. While there, he contributed to all the undergraduate periodicals, was a member and later President of the Cambridge Footlights, and appeared on University Challenge as captain of the Pembroke team, beating St Hilda's, Oxford, but losing to Balliol on the last question in a tied game. During one summer vacation, he worked as a circus roustabout to save enough money to travel to Italy.[9] His contemporaries at Cambridge included Germaine Greer (known as "Romaine Rand" in the first three volumes of his memoirs), Simon Schama and Eric Idle. Having, he claimed, scrupulously avoided reading any of the course material (but having read widely otherwise in English and foreign literature), James graduated with a 2:1—better than he had expected—and began a Ph.D. thesis on Percy Bysshe Shelley.[5]
Career
Critic and essayist
James became the television critic for The Observer in 1972,[6] remaining in the role until 1982. Selections from the column were published in three books — Visions Before Midnight, The Crystal Bucket and Glued to the Box – and finally in a compendium, On Television.
He extensively wrote literary criticism for newspapers, magazines and periodicals in Britain, Australia and the United States, including, among many others, The Australian Book Review, The Monthly, The Atlantic Monthly, the New York Review of Books, The Liberal and the Times Literary Supplement. John Gross included James's essay "A Blizzard of Tiny Kisses" in the Oxford Book of Essays (1992, 1999).
The Metropolitan Critic (1974), his first collection of literary criticism, was followed by At the Pillars of Hercules (1979), From the Land of Shadows (1982), Snakecharmers in Texas (1988), The Dreaming Swimmer (1992), Even As We Speak (2004), The Meaning of Recognition (2005) and Cultural Amnesia (2007), a collection of miniature intellectual biographies of over 100 significant figures in modern culture, history and politics. A defence of humanism, liberal democracy and literary clarity, the book was listed among the best of 2007 by The Village Voice.
Another volume of essays, The Revolt of the Pendulum, was published in June 2009.
He also published Flying Visits, a collection of travel writing for The Observer.
For many years, until mid-2014, he wrote the weekly television critique page in the "Review" section of the Saturday edition of The Daily Telegraph.
Poet and lyricist
James published several books of poetry, including Poem of the Year (1983), a verse-diary, Other Passports: Poems 1958–1985, a first collection, and The Book of My Enemy (2003), a volume that takes its title from his poem "The Book of My Enemy Has Been Remaindered".[10]
He published four mock-heroic poems — The Fate of Felicity Fark in the Land of the Media: a moral poem (1975), Peregrine Prykke's Pilgrimage Through the London Literary World (1976), Britannia Bright's Bewilderment in the Wilderness of Westminster (1976) and Charles Charming's Challenges on the Pathway to the Throne (1981) — and one long autobiographical epic, The River in the Sky (2018).[11]
During the 1970s he also collaborated on six albums of songs with Pete Atkin:
Beware of the Beautiful Stranger (1970)
Driving Through Mythical America (1971)
A King at Nightfall (1973)
The Road of Silk (1974)
Secret Drinker (1974)
Live Libel (1975).
A revival of interest in the songs in the late 1990s, triggered largely by the creation by Steve Birkill of an Internet mailing list "Midnight Voices" in 1997, led to the reissue of the six albums on CD between 1997 and 2001, as well as live performances by the pair. A double album of previously unrecorded songs written in the seventies and entitled The Lakeside Sessions: Volumes 1 and 2 was released in 2002 and Winter Spring, an album of new material written by James and Atkin was released in 2003.[citation needed] This was followed by Midnight Voices, an album of remakes of the best Atkin/James songs from the early albums, and, in 2015, by The Colours of the Night, which included several newly completed songs.
James acknowledged the importance of the Midnight Voices group in bringing to wider attention the lyric-writing aspect of his career. He wrote in November 1997, "That one of the midnight voices of my own fate should be the music of Pete Atkin continues to rank high among the blessings of my life".[12]
In 2013, he issued his translation of Dante's Divine Comedy. The work, adopting quatrains to translate the original's terza rima, was well received by Australian critics.[13][14] Writing for The New York Times,[15] Joseph Luzzi thought it often fails to capture the more dramatic moments of the Inferno, but that it is more successful where Dante slows down, in the more theological and deliberative cantos of the Purgatorio and Paradiso.
Novelist and memoirist
In 1980 James published his first book of autobiography, Unreliable Memoirs, which recounted his early life in Australia and extended to over a hundred reprintings. It was followed by four other volumes of autobiography: Falling Towards England (1985), which covered his London years; May Week Was in June (1990), which dealt with his time at Cambridge; North Face of Soho (2006), and The Blaze of Obscurity (2009), concerning his subsequent career as a television presenter. An omnibus edition of the first three volumes was published under the generic title of Always Unreliable.
James also wrote four novels: Brilliant Creatures (1983), The Remake (1987), Brrm! Brrm! (1991), published in the United States as The Man from Japan, and The Silver Castle (1996).
In 1999, John Gross included an excerpt from Unreliable Memoirs in The New Oxford Book of English Prose. John Carey chose Unreliable Memoirs as one of the fifty most enjoyable books of the twentieth century in his book Pure Pleasure (2000).
Television
James developed his television career as a guest commentator on various shows, including as an occasional co-presenter with Tony Wilson on the first series of So It Goes, the Granada Television pop music show. On the show when the Sex Pistols made their TV debut, James commented: "During the recording, the task of keeping the little bastards under control was given to me. With the aid of a radio microphone, I was able to shout them down, but it was a near thing ... they attacked everything around them and had difficulty in being polite even to each other".[16]
James subsequently hosted the ITV show Clive James on Television, in which he showcased unusual or (often unintentionally) amusing television programmes from around the world, notably the Japanese TV show Endurance. After his defection to the BBC in 1988, he hosted a similarly-formatted programme called Saturday Night Clive (1988–1990) which initially screened on Saturday evening, returning as Saturday Night Clive on Sunday in its second series when it changed screening day and then Sunday Night Clive in its third and final series. In 1995 he set up Watchmaker Productions to produce The Clive James Show for ITV, and a subsequent series launched the British career of singer and comedian Margarita Pracatan. James hosted one of the early chat shows on Channel 4 and fronted the BBC's Review of the Year programmes in the late 1980s (Clive James on the '80s) and 1990s (Clive James on the '90s), which formed part of the channel's New Year's Eve celebrations.
In the mid-1980s, James featured in a travel programme called Clive James in... (beginning with Clive James in Las Vegas) for LWT (now ITV) and later switched to BBC, where he continued producing travel programmes, this time called Clive James's Postcard from... (beginning with Clive James's Postcard from Miami) – these also eventually transferred to ITV. He was also one of the original team of presenters of the BBC's The Late Show, hosting a round-table discussion on Friday nights.
His major documentary series Fame in the 20th Century (1993) was broadcast in the United Kingdom by the BBC, in Australia by the ABC and in the United States by the PBS network. This series dealt with the concept of "fame" in the 20th century, following over a course of eight episodes (each one chronologically and roughly devoted to one decade of the century, from the 1900s to the 1980s) discussions about world-famous people of the 20th century. Through the use of film footage, James presented a history of "fame" which explored its growth to today's global proportions. In his closing monologue he remarked, "Achievement without fame can be a rewarding life, while fame without achievement is no life at all."
A well known fan of motor racing, James presented the 1982, 1984 and 1986 official Formula One season review videos produced by the Formula One Constructors Association, more commonly known as FOCA. James, who attended most F1 races during the 1980s and was a friend of former FOCA boss Bernie Ecclestone, added his own humour to the reviews which became popular with fans of the sport. He also presented The Clive James Formula 1 Show for ITV to coincide with their Formula One coverage in 1997.
Summing up the medium, he said: "Anyone afraid of what he thinks television does to the world is probably just afraid of the world".
Radio
In 2007, James started presenting the BBC Radio 4 series A Point of View, with transcripts appearing in the "Magazine" section of BBC News Online. In this programme James discussed various issues with a slightly humorous slant. Topics covered included media portrayal of torture,[17] young black role models[18] and corporate rebranding.[19] Three of James's broadcasts in 2007 were shortlisted for the 2008 Orwell Prize.[20]
In October 2009 James read a radio version of his book The Blaze of Obscurity, on BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week programme.[21] In December 2009 James talked about the P-51 Mustang and other American fighter aircraft of World War II in The Museum of Curiosity on BBC Radio 4.[22]
In May 2011 the BBC published a new podcast, A Point of View: Clive James, which features all sixty A Point of View programmes presented by James between 2007 and 2009.
He posted vlog conversations from his internet show Talking in the Library, including conversations with Ian McEwan, Cate Blanchett, Julian Barnes, Jonathan Miller and Terry Gilliam. In addition to the poetry and prose of James himself, the site featured the works of other literary figures such as Les Murray and Michael Frayn, as well as the works of painters, sculptors and photographers such as John Olsen and Jeffrey Smart.
Theatre
In 2008 James performed in two self-titled shows at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe: Clive James in Conversation and Clive James in the Evening. He took the latter show on a limited tour of the UK in 2009.
Famous lines
He famously described Arnold Schwarzenegger, in his bodybuilding days, as looking like "a brown condom full of walnuts".[23] He described the romantic novelist Barbara Cartland as having "Twin miracles of mascara, her eyes looked like the corpses of two small crows that had crashed into the white cliffs of Dover." He also used to call the Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat by the female name 'Yasmin Arafat'.
Honours
In 1992, James was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM). This was upgraded to Officer level (AO) in the 2013 Australia Day Honours. James was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in the 2012 New Year Honours for services to literature and the media.[24] In 2003 he was awarded the Philip Hodgins Memorial Medal for Literature. He received honorary doctorates from the Universities of Sydney and East Anglia. In April 2008, James was awarded a Special Award for Writing and Broadcasting by the judges of the Orwell Prize.[25]
He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2010.[26] He was an Honorary Fellow of Pembroke College, Cambridge (his alma mater). In the 2015 BAFTAs, James received a special award honouring his 50-year career.
In 2014, he was awarded the President's Medal by the British Academy.[27]
Political views
James's political views were prominent in much of his later writing. While critical of communism for its tendency towards totalitarianism, he still identified with the left. In a 2006 interview in The Sunday Times,[28] James said of himself: "I was brought up on the proletarian left, and I remain there. The fair go for the workers is fundamental, and I don't believe the free market has a mind." In a speech given in 1991, he criticised privatisation: "The idea that Britain's broadcasting system—for all its drawbacks one of the country's greatest institutions—was bound to be improved by being subjected to the conditions of a free market: there was no difficulty in recognising that notion as politically illiterate. But for some reason people did have difficulty in realising that it was economically illiterate too."[29]
Overall, James identified as a liberal social democrat.[30] He strongly supported the 2003 invasion of Iraq, saying in 2007 that "the war only lasted a few days" and that the continuing conflict in Iraq was "the Iraq peace".[31] He also wrote that it was "official policy to rape a woman in front of her family" during Saddam Hussein's regime and that women have enjoyed more rights since the invasion.[32] He was also a Patron of the Burma Campaign UK, an organisation that campaigns for human rights and democracy in Burma.[33]
James was noted for expressing views sympathetic to climate change scepticism.[34][35]
Describing religions as "advertising agencies for a product that doesn't exist", James was an atheist and saw it as the default and obvious position.[36][37]
Personal life
In 1968, at Cambridge,[38] James married Prudence A. "Prue" Shaw,[2] an emeritus reader in Italian studies at University College London and the author of Reading Dante: From Here to Eternity. James and Shaw had two daughters. In April 2012, the Australian Channel Nine programme A Current Affair ran an item in which the former model Leanne Edelsten admitted to an eight-year affair with James beginning in 2004.[39] Shaw threw her husband out of the family home following the revelation.[2] Prior to this, for most of his working life, James divided his time between a converted warehouse flat in London and the family home in Cambridge. He maintained a general policy of not talking publicly about his family although he made occasional self-deprecating comments in his various memoirs about some of his experiences of living in a house with three women.
After the death of his friend Diana, Princess of Wales, James wrote a piece for The New Yorker entitled "Requiem", recording his overwhelming grief.[40] The article is also available here.[41] Since then he mainly declined to comment about their friendship, apart from some remarks in his fifth volume of memoirs Blaze of Obscurity.
James was able to read, with varying fluency, French, German, Italian, Spanish, Russian and Japanese.[42] A tango enthusiast, he travelled to Buenos Aires for dance lessons and had a dance floor in his house.[36]
Health
For much of his early life, James was a heavy drinker and smoker. He recorded in May Week Was in June his habit of filling a hubcap ashtray daily.[43][44] At various times he wrote of attempts – intermittently successful – to give up drinking and smoking.[45] He admitted smoking 80 cigarettes a day for a number of years.[46] In April 2011, after media speculation that he had suffered kidney failure,[47] James confirmed that he was suffering from B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia and had been in treatment for 15 months at Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge.[48] In an interview with BBC Radio 4 in June 2012, James admitted that the disease "had beaten him" and that he was "near the end".[49] He said that he was also diagnosed with emphysema and kidney failure in early 2010.[50]
On 3 September 2013, an interview with journalist Kerry O'Brien, Clive James: The Kid from Kogarah, was broadcast by the Australian Broadcasting Corporation.[51] The interview was filmed in the library of his old college at Cambridge University.[51]
In a BBC interview with Charlie Stayt, broadcast on 31 March 2015, James described himself as "near to death but thankful for life".[52] However, in October 2015, he admitted to feeling "embarrassment" at still being alive thanks to experimental drug treatment.[53]
Until June 2017, he wrote a weekly column for The Guardian entitled "Reports of My Death...".[54]
Death
James died on 24 November 2019 at his home in Cambridge.[55][56][57]Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).
Bibliography
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
Non-fiction
James, Clive (1974). The Metropolitan Critic.
— (1977). Visions before midnight : television criticism from The Observer 1972–76.
— (1979). At the Pillars of Hercules.
— (1980). First Reactions : critical essays 1968–79.
— (1981). The crystal bucket : television criticism from The Observer 1976–79.
— (1982). From the land of shadows.
— (1983). Glued to the box : television criticism from The Observer.
— (1984). Flying visits : postcards from The Observer, 1976–83.
— (1988). Snakecharmers in Texas : essays 1980–87.
— (1991). Clive James on television.[58]
— (1992). The dreaming swimmer : non-fiction, 1987–1992.
— (1993). Fame in the 20th Century.
— (2001). Reliable essays : the best of clive james.
— (2003). As of this writing : essays 1968–2000.
— (2004). Even as we speak : new essays 1993–2001.
— (2005). The meaning of recognition : new essays 2001–2005.
— (2007). Cultural amnesia : necessary memories from history and the arts.
— (2009). The revolt of the pendulum : essays 2005–2009.
— (2011). A Point of View.[59]
— (2013). Cultural cohesion : essential essays.
— (2014). Poetry notebook 2006–2014.
— (2015). Latest readings.
— (2016). Play all.
— (2019). Somewhere becoming rain: Collected writings on Philip Larkin.
Memoirs
James, Clive (1980). Unreliable memoirs.
— (1985). Falling towards England.
— (1990). May Week was in June.
— (2006). North Face of Soho.
— (2009). The blaze of obscurity.
Novels
James, Clive (1983). Brilliant creatures.
— (1987). The remake.
— (1991). Brrm! Brrm!.[60]
— (1996). The Silver Castle.
Poetry
Epics
— (1975). The fate of Felicity Fark in the land of the media: a moral poem.
— (1976). Peregrine Prykke's pilgrimage through the London literary world.
— (1976). Britannia Bright's bewilderment in the wilderness of Westminster.
— (1981). Charles Charming's challenges on the pathway to the throne.
— (1983). Poem of the Year.
— (2016). Gate of lilacs: A verse commentary on Proust.
— (2018). The River in the Sky.
Collections
— (1977). Fan-mail: seven verse letters.
— (1986). Other passports: poems 1958–1985.
— (2003). The book of my enemy.[61]
— (2008). Angels over Elsinore: collected verse 2003–2008.
— (2009). Opal sunset: selected poems 1958–2009.
— (2012). Nefertiti in the flak tower.
— (2015). Sentenced to life.
— (2016). Collected poems 1958–2015.
— (2017). Injury time.
Translations
Dante Alighieri (2013). Dante's divine comedy. Translated by Clive James
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