fbpx
Wikipedia

Garry O'Connor (writer)

Garry O'Connor (born 31 January 1938) is an English playwright, biographer and novelist.[1]

Garry O'Connor
Born (1938-01-31) 31 January 1938 (age 85)
Edgware, London, England
EducationSt Albans School, Hertfordshire
King's College, Cambridge
GenreBiography, fiction, plays
RelativesCavan O'Connor (father)

Rita O'Connor, née Odoli-Tate (mother)
Dame Maggie Teyte DBE (great aunt)

James W Tate (great uncle)
Website
www.garryoconnor.co.uk

Personal life

Born Edgware, London, England, Garry O'Connor is a biographer and novelist, noted for his publications on theatrical and literary figures.

Son of Cavan O'Connor, Irish tenor, BBC broadcasting star and variety artist,[2][3] and Rita, also a singer, maiden name Odoli-Tate, O'Connor is the grand-nephew of Dame Maggie Teyte DBE, Croix de Lorraine, Chevalier, Legion d'Honneur, the international opera soprano and interpreter of French song, and of James William Tate, songwriter, accompanist, and composer.

Educated at St Albans School and King's College, Cambridge, where he was an Exhibitioner and State Scholar, and won the James Essay Prize, O'Connor was President of University Actors. He was taught at Cambridge by Professors Boris Ford and John Broadbent, with George Rylands as his Director of Studies, where O'Connor concentrated mainly on directing and writing plays. He is an MA of King's College.

After Cambridge, winning a French Government scholarship to Paris for drama, he studied mime at the École Jacques Le Coq in Paris before joining the Royal Shakespeare Company as Michel Saint-Denis' assistant. This was during the Peter Hall seasons at Stratford Upon Avon. Thereafter he directed plays in London and elsewhere until becoming a full-time writer.

On 25 June 1970 he married Victoria Meredith-Owens, a farmer and yoga teacher. They have six children and six grandchildren. His home is in King's Sutton, Northamptonshire.

Theatre and media career

O'Connor directed his own version of Jonson's Catiline in the Stratford Studio, with Roy Dotrice, Janet Suzman, and directed Jean Tardieu's The Keyhole at the Aldwych Theatre. He directed the 1965 London premiere of Alun Owen's A Little Winter Love at Stratford East ('directed by Garry O'Connor with almost the psychic speed of communication that there can be about jazz': Penelope Gilliatt, Observer);[4][better source needed] devised and directed A John Whiting Evening, premieres at the Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh, and productions at RADA, the London Drama Centre, and Webber-Douglas School. He also read plays for the RSC and translated plays from French for the RSC, and later for the National Theatre in Olivier's regime.

O'Connor was the first Resident Dramatist and Appeals Director of the Hampstead Theatre Club. He has had eight of his own plays produced, among them: I Learnt in Ipswich How to Poison Flowers (1969), at the Arts Theatre Ipswich, directed by Nick Barter;[5][better source needed] The Musicians (Mercury Theatre, London, 1970), in which Tom Conti made his first appearance on a London Stage; and Semmelweis at the Edinburgh Festival (1976).

His Dialogue Between Friends at the Open Space was based on his involvement with Arnold Wesker's controversial The Friends, staged at the Roundhouse in 1970. His book Darlings of the Gods was adapted as a three-part mini-series for Thames Television and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 1991, and was filmed in Australia. More recently Campion's Ghost, adapted from his novel about John Donne, was performed on Radio 4 (1997), with Paul McGann and Timothy West in the leading roles. He has also written and presented features for Radio 3, and acted as consultant on BBC 1 documentaries on Laurence Olivier and Pope John Paul II, appearing in the latter. After the death of Pope John Paul II, O'Connor appeared on the BBC's Breakfast with Frost on 3 April 2005.[6]

Writing career

In the early 1960s O'Connor wrote a short Daily Mail Charles Greville column, and then became television critic for Queen Magazine 1965–66, succeeding Sir Angus Wilson. He contributed to the Financial Times as its Paris arts correspondent when he lived in Paris, and as a full-time London daily critic (1966–73), regularly writing also for Plays and Players, Theatre Quarterly, the TLS and other periodicals. He has reviewed books and written features, conducted interviews for the Times, Sunday Times, Mail on Sunday and other newspapers.

O'Connor's first book, French Theatre Today, came out in 1976, followed by his first biography, that of his great-aunt, Dame Maggie Teyte (1979), and many more biographies followed; his most recent being Ian McKellen: The Biography (2019). Many have garnered praise and positive reviews; a few have provoked controversy. He is perhaps best known for his theatre biographies - including two of Alec Guinness; Paul Scofield; Ralph Richardson; as well as two books on William Shakespeare, these being his personal favourites and probably his most controversial works (see review citations in the Bibliography below for contemporary critical appraisal). He wrote a controversial biography of Tony and Cherie Blair (The Darlings of Downing Street, 2007), dividing critics from the political right and the left,[citation needed] and also wrote biographies of Pope John Paul II, and Pope Benedict XVI. His 1997 biography of Peggy Ashcroft provoked a storm of anger and controversy within the British Press, with attacks from Harold Pinter, Lord Jeremy Hutchinson, and Labour politician Gerald Kaufman. The book was defended by former Labour Party leader Michael Foot. (Links to press articles in the Bibliography below.)

Some of O'Connor's works have been translated into other languages, including Polish and Swedish.

Awards, honours

French Government Scholarship for Drama; Oxford Experimental Theatre Club, Oxford, 1st Prize in 1974 for I Forget How Nelson Died; Arts Council bursaries for plays I Learnt In Ipswich How to Poison Flowers and Epitaph For a Militant; Arts Council Literature Award, 1979; often cited in Books of the Year by The Times, Sunday Times, Observer.

Bibliography

Biography and History

  • Ian McKellen: The Biography (London: Orion Publishing, 2019 ISBN 9781474608510; New York: St. Martin's Press, 2019 ISBN 9781250223883) Paperback editions 2020[7]
  • The Butcher of Poland: Hitler’s Lawyer Hans Frank (The History Press, 2013. Hardback ISBN 9780752498133).
  • Subdued Fires: An Intimate Portrait of Pope Benedict XVI (The History Press, 2013. Paperback ISBN 9780752498973).[8]
  • The First Household Cavalry Regiment, 1943-44: In the Shadow of Monte Amaro (The History Press, 2013. Hardback ISBN 9780752488578).
  • ‘As told to Garry O’Connor’ – Derek Jacobi, As Luck Would Have It (London: HarperCollins, 2013. Hardback ISBN 9780007458875).
  • Holy Crosses and Nazi Flags: Benedict and the Roman Catholic Church (Amolibros, 2010). (Part re-published as Subdued Fires; part re-published as The Butcher of Poland).
  • The Darlings of Downing Street: the psycho-sexual drama of power (London: Methuen Politicos, 2007. Hardback ISBN 9781842752029).[9][10][11][12]
  • Universal Father: A Life of Pope John Paul II (London and New York: Bloomsbury, 2005; paperback 2006).[13][14][15]
  • Paul Scofield: The Biography (London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 2002; New York: Applause, 2003).[16][17][18][19]
  • Alec Guinness, the Unknown: A Life (London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 2002; New York: Applause, 2002).[20][21]
  • William Shakespeare: A Popular Life (new expanded edition) (New York: Applause, 1999).[22][23]
  • The Secret Woman: A Life of Peggy Ashcroft (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1997).[24][25][26][27][28][29][30]
  • Alec Guinness: Master of Disguise (London, Hodder and Stoughton, 1994; Sceptre, 1995).[31]
  • William Shakespeare: A Life (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1991; Sceptre, 1994).[32][33][34][35]
  • Sean O’Casey: A Life (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1988; New York: Atheneum, 1988; Paladin paperback, 1989).[36][37][38][39][40][41]
  • Darlings of the Gods: One Year in the Lives of Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1984). Also serialised in The Observer and was filmed as a three-part mini-series in Australia by ABC and Thames Television.[42]
  • Ralph Richardson: An Actor’s Life (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1982 Hardback ISBN 0340270411; Coronet paperback 1982; reprinted by London: Methuen Publishing, 1999; and by USA: Applause Theatre and Cinema Books, 2000).[43][44][45]
  • The Pursuit of Perfection: A Life of Maggie Teyte (London: Victor Gollancz, and New York: Atheneum, 1979).[46]

Memoir

  • The Vagabond Lover: A Father-Son Memoir (CentreHouse Press, 2017. Hardback ISBN 9781902086156).

Edited

  • Olivier: In Celebration (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1987).[47][48][49]

Fiction

  • Death’s Duel, A Novel of John Donne (Lume Books, 2015).
  • Love At An End: A Novel of Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier (Lume Books, 2015).
  • The Book That Kills (Oxford: Aesop Publications, 2014. Hardback ISBN 9780957206175).
  • Chaucer’s Triumph, A Novel. Including the Case of Cecilia Chaumpaigne… And Other Offices of the Flesh in the Year 1399 (Petrak Press, 2007. Hardback ISBN 9780955376801).
  • Campion’s Ghost: The Sacred and Profane Memories of Donne, Poet (London: Hodder and Stoughton, 1993; Sceptre paperback 1994).

Theatre

  • Le Theatre en Angleterre, French translation by Georgette Illes, (French Information Service, 1968).
  • French Theatre Today (London: Pitman, 1976).
  • The Mahabharata: Peter Brook’s Epic in the Making (Lume Books, 2015).

Plays

  • Naked Woman: Semmelweis, De Raptu Meo (CentreHouse Press, 2016. Paperback ISBN 9781902086125).
  • De Raptu Meo, Geoffrey Chaucer on Trial for Rape, Inner Temple Hall, 2014.
  • Debussy Was My Grandfather / The Madness of Vivien Leigh – Two Plays (CentreHouse Press, 2012).
  • Campion’s Ghost (1998 BBC 4 play adapted by O’Conner from the 1994 novel of the same name).
  • Dialogue between Friends (one-act), produced in London, England, 1976.
  • Semmelweis (two-act), produced in Edinburgh, Scotland at the Edinburgh Festival, 1975.
  • Different Circumstances (two-act), produced in Oxford, England, 1974.
  • I Learnt in Ipswich How to Poison Flowers (two-act), produced in Ipswich, England, 1969.
  • The Musicians (two-act), produced in London, England 1969.

References

  1. ^ "O'Connor, Garry 1938–", Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 23 January 2021
  2. ^ Obituary: Cavan O'Connor by Peter Cotes, The Independent, 14 January 1997. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  3. ^ Cavan O'Connor - Obituary, The Times (London, England), 15 January 1997, p. 19. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  4. ^ Observer (London), 13 June 1965
  5. ^ Financial Times, BA Young, 6 December 1969
  6. ^ BBC Breakfast with Frost, ‘Pope is Dead: On Sunday 03 April 2005, Sir David Frost interviewed Rt. Rev Richard Harries, Bishop of Oxford and Garry O’Connor, Biographer' - transcript of interview. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  7. ^ Book review by Benedict Nightingale in The Times (London, UK), 6 September 2019, ‘Ian McKellen by Garry O’Connor review – the actor whose mask won’t slip – Benedict Nightingale wonders whether Ian McKellen’s sexuality is the key to his genius’ . Retrieved 28 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  8. ^ Garry O’Connor speaks about his book Subdued Fires on YouTube, 13 May 2013. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  9. ^ Book review by Harry Reid in The Herald / The Sunday Herald (Glasgow, Scotland), 4 August 2007. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  10. ^ Book review by Roger Lewis in The Express on Sunday, 12 August 2007. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  11. ^ An extract from the book was published in the Catholic Herald, 20 July 2007. Article heading, ‘A baffling bid for John Paul’s support in Iraq’, . Retrieved January 29, 2021.
  12. ^ Book review by Geoffrey Goodman in the Camden New Journal, 13 September 2007. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  13. ^ Book review by Damian Thompson in The Daily Telegraph / Sunday Telegraph, 23 April 2005, p. 6. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  14. ^ Book review by Michael McGough in The Washington Post, 16 June 2005, ‘The Man in the White Hat’. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  15. ^ Book review by Christopher Caldwell in The New York Times, 15 May 2005, ‘Universal Father and The Pontiff in Winter: The Loneliest Job’. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  16. ^ Book review by Roger Lewis in The Express / Express on Sunday, 17 February 2002. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  17. ^ Book review by Hugh Massingberd in The Daily Telegraph / Sunday Telegraph, 9 February 2002. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  18. ^ Book review by Christopher Silvester in The Sunday Times, 20 January 2002. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  19. ^ Article about Garry O'Connor's forthcoming book about Paul Scofield: Richard Brooks, 'Olivier "tried to sabotage" rival Scofield', The Sunday Times, 22 July 2001, News p. 7, section: Home. Retrieved 30 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  20. ^ Book review by Simon Callow in The Guardian, 23 November 2002. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  21. ^ Considered by the Literary Review to be 'a truly brilliant detective story...one of the truly great actor biographies of our time'. Literary Review, November 2002.[page needed]
  22. ^ Book review in Publishers Weekly, 31 January 2000. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  23. ^ Library Journal, 1 November 1999, review of William Shakespeare: A Popular Life, p82.
  24. ^ New Statesman & Society, 11 April 1997, review by William Buchan of The Secret Woman, p49.
  25. ^ Nicholas Hellen, 'Ex-lover defends Dame Peggy' in The Sunday Times, 16 February 1997 (this article appeared in the paper on the same day as The Sunday Times begain serialisation of Garry O'Connor's biography of Peggy Ashcroft). Retrieved 30 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  26. ^ A brief review of Garry O'Connor's book on Peggy Ashcroft in: David Lister, 'Arts notebook', The Independent / The Independent on Sunday, 22 February 1997. Retrieved 30 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  27. ^ Book review by Boyd Tonkin, 'A week in books', The Independent / The Independent on Sunday, 1 March 1997. Retrieved 30 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  28. ^ Book review by Sheridan Morley, 'What a dame - Books', in The Sunday Times, 2 March 1997, Books p. 3, section: Features. Retrieved 30 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  29. ^ Book review by Michael Arditti, 'Theatre's lady of virtue - some of it easy - Books', in The Times, 8 March 1997, Directory p. 9, section: Features. Retrieved 30 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  30. ^ Book review roundup which paraphrases Alastair Macaulay's scathing review in The Financial Times. 'Fair game in retrospect - Loved It', The Times (London, England), 15 March 1997, Directory p. 10, section: Features. Retrieved 30 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  31. ^ Sunday Telegraph, 7 February 1993. [further citation needed, unable to retrieve 29 January 2021].
  32. ^ Book review by Benedict Nightingale in The Times, 26 October 1991, ‘Dark Gentleman of the theatre’ . Retrieved 28 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  33. ^ Book review by John Mortimer in The Sunday Times, 17 November 1991. Retrieved 28 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  34. ^ A brief mention in Shakespeares for our age’ by Lachlan Mackinnon, in The Times Literary Supplement, Friday 6 March 1992, issue 4640, pp. 10-12  , retrieved from www.gale.com document number GALE|EX1200465863, 28 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  35. ^ Book review by Peter Levi in The Spectator, 16 November 1991, ‘A tale told by an idiot, signifiying nothing’. Retrieved 29 January 2021. There is a reply to this scathing review in The Spectator, 30 November 1991, p. 33 Lecturer lectured’ . Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  36. ^ Book review in Publishers Weekly, 01 January 1988. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  37. ^ Book review in Kirkus Reviews, 15 April 1988. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  38. ^ Book review by Richard Holmes in The Times, 10 March 1988, ‘Books: Comedy, exile, cunning – Review of ‘Sean O’Casey, A Life’ by Garry O’Connor. Retrieved 28 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  39. ^ Book review by Austin MacCurtain in The Sunday Times, 29 October 1989, ‘Paperbacks – Books’. Retrieved 28 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  40. ^ Book review by Paul Johnson in The Times Literary Supplement, May 6, 1988, ‘Genius of the terrible tongue’ p. 495. Retrieved from www.gale.com document number GALE|EX1200454839, 28 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  41. ^ Book review by Paul Taylor in The Spectator, ‘Nothing much but the truth’, 9 April 1988, p. 31. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  42. ^ IMDB listing no. tt0101665, retrieved 28 January 2021.
  43. ^ Book review in The New York Times by John Mortimer, 19 December 1982. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  44. ^ Book review by Stephen Wall, ‘Playing the private person’ in The Times Literary Supplement 24 December 1982 (issue 4160) p. 13, retrieved from www.gale.com document number GALE|EX1200439950. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  45. ^ Garry O’Connor, ‘Chasing Sir Ralph, A Biographer’s Reluctant Quarry’ in The New York Times, 26 October 1997 Section 2, p. 4. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  46. ^ Book review by Gabriele Annan, A Melisande from the Midlands’, in The Times Literary Supplement, 23 November 1979 p. 44 , retrieved from www.gale.com document number GALE|EX1200426813. Retrieved 29 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)
  47. ^ Book review in Publishers Weekly, 06 July 1989. Retrieved 28 January 2021.
  48. ^ Book review by Anthony Holden in The Spectator, 18 April 1987, p. 30 ‘Yes, but what’s he really like?’. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  49. ^ Book review by Michael Coveney: 'Arts: Sir's 80 Years / Review of "Olivier - In Celebration" edited by Garry O'Connor', in The Financial Times, 18 April 1987. Retrieved 30 January 2021.(subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries)

External links

  • Garry O'Connor official website

garry, connor, writer, garry, connor, born, january, 1938, english, playwright, biographer, novelist, garry, connorborn, 1938, january, 1938, edgware, london, englandeducationst, albans, school, hertfordshireking, college, cambridgegenrebiography, fiction, pla. Garry O Connor born 31 January 1938 is an English playwright biographer and novelist 1 Garry O ConnorBorn 1938 01 31 31 January 1938 age 85 Edgware London EnglandEducationSt Albans School HertfordshireKing s College CambridgeGenreBiography fiction playsRelativesCavan O Connor father Rita O Connor nee Odoli Tate mother Dame Maggie Teyte DBE great aunt James W Tate great uncle Websitewww wbr garryoconnor wbr co wbr uk Contents 1 Personal life 2 Theatre and media career 3 Writing career 4 Awards honours 5 Bibliography 5 1 Biography and History 5 2 Memoir 5 3 Edited 5 4 Fiction 5 5 Theatre 5 6 Plays 6 References 7 External linksPersonal life EditBorn Edgware London England Garry O Connor is a biographer and novelist noted for his publications on theatrical and literary figures Son of Cavan O Connor Irish tenor BBC broadcasting star and variety artist 2 3 and Rita also a singer maiden name Odoli Tate O Connor is the grand nephew of Dame Maggie Teyte DBE Croix de Lorraine Chevalier Legion d Honneur the international opera soprano and interpreter of French song and of James William Tate songwriter accompanist and composer Educated at St Albans School and King s College Cambridge where he was an Exhibitioner and State Scholar and won the James Essay Prize O Connor was President of University Actors He was taught at Cambridge by Professors Boris Ford and John Broadbent with George Rylands as his Director of Studies where O Connor concentrated mainly on directing and writing plays He is an MA of King s College After Cambridge winning a French Government scholarship to Paris for drama he studied mime at the Ecole Jacques Le Coq in Paris before joining the Royal Shakespeare Company as Michel Saint Denis assistant This was during the Peter Hall seasons at Stratford Upon Avon Thereafter he directed plays in London and elsewhere until becoming a full time writer On 25 June 1970 he married Victoria Meredith Owens a farmer and yoga teacher They have six children and six grandchildren His home is in King s Sutton Northamptonshire Theatre and media career EditO Connor directed his own version of Jonson s Catiline in the Stratford Studio with Roy Dotrice Janet Suzman and directed Jean Tardieu s The Keyhole at the Aldwych Theatre He directed the 1965 London premiere of Alun Owen s A Little Winter Love at Stratford East directed by Garry O Connor with almost the psychic speed of communication that there can be about jazz Penelope Gilliatt Observer 4 better source needed devised and directed A John Whiting Evening premieres at the Traverse Theatre Edinburgh and productions at RADA the London Drama Centre and Webber Douglas School He also read plays for the RSC and translated plays from French for the RSC and later for the National Theatre in Olivier s regime O Connor was the first Resident Dramatist and Appeals Director of the Hampstead Theatre Club He has had eight of his own plays produced among them I Learnt in Ipswich How to Poison Flowers 1969 at the Arts Theatre Ipswich directed by Nick Barter 5 better source needed The Musicians Mercury Theatre London 1970 in which Tom Conti made his first appearance on a London Stage and Semmelweis at the Edinburgh Festival 1976 His Dialogue Between Friends at the Open Space was based on his involvement with Arnold Wesker s controversial The Friends staged at the Roundhouse in 1970 His book Darlings of the Gods was adapted as a three part mini series for Thames Television and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation in 1991 and was filmed in Australia More recently Campion s Ghost adapted from his novel about John Donne was performed on Radio 4 1997 with Paul McGann and Timothy West in the leading roles He has also written and presented features for Radio 3 and acted as consultant on BBC 1 documentaries on Laurence Olivier and Pope John Paul II appearing in the latter After the death of Pope John Paul II O Connor appeared on the BBC s Breakfast with Frost on 3 April 2005 6 Writing career EditIn the early 1960s O Connor wrote a short Daily Mail Charles Greville column and then became television critic for Queen Magazine 1965 66 succeeding Sir Angus Wilson He contributed to the Financial Times as its Paris arts correspondent when he lived in Paris and as a full time London daily critic 1966 73 regularly writing also for Plays and Players Theatre Quarterly the TLS and other periodicals He has reviewed books and written features conducted interviews for the Times Sunday Times Mail on Sunday and other newspapers O Connor s first book French Theatre Today came out in 1976 followed by his first biography that of his great aunt Dame Maggie Teyte 1979 and many more biographies followed his most recent being Ian McKellen The Biography 2019 Many have garnered praise and positive reviews a few have provoked controversy He is perhaps best known for his theatre biographies including two of Alec Guinness Paul Scofield Ralph Richardson as well as two books on William Shakespeare these being his personal favourites and probably his most controversial works see review citations in the Bibliography below for contemporary critical appraisal He wrote a controversial biography of Tony and Cherie Blair The Darlings of Downing Street 2007 dividing critics from the political right and the left citation needed and also wrote biographies of Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI His 1997 biography of Peggy Ashcroft provoked a storm of anger and controversy within the British Press with attacks from Harold Pinter Lord Jeremy Hutchinson and Labour politician Gerald Kaufman The book was defended by former Labour Party leader Michael Foot Links to press articles in the Bibliography below Some of O Connor s works have been translated into other languages including Polish and Swedish Awards honours EditFrench Government Scholarship for Drama Oxford Experimental Theatre Club Oxford 1st Prize in 1974 for I Forget How Nelson Died Arts Council bursaries for plays I Learnt In Ipswich How to Poison Flowers and Epitaph For a Militant Arts Council Literature Award 1979 often cited in Books of the Year by The Times Sunday Times Observer Bibliography EditBiography and History Edit Ian McKellen The Biography London Orion Publishing 2019 ISBN 9781474608510 New York St Martin s Press 2019 ISBN 9781250223883 Paperback editions 2020 7 The Butcher of Poland Hitler s Lawyer Hans Frank The History Press 2013 Hardback ISBN 9780752498133 Subdued Fires An Intimate Portrait of Pope Benedict XVI The History Press 2013 Paperback ISBN 9780752498973 8 The First Household Cavalry Regiment 1943 44 In the Shadow of Monte Amaro The History Press 2013 Hardback ISBN 9780752488578 As told to Garry O Connor Derek Jacobi As Luck Would Have It London HarperCollins 2013 Hardback ISBN 9780007458875 Holy Crosses and Nazi Flags Benedict and the Roman Catholic Church Amolibros 2010 Part re published as Subdued Fires part re published as The Butcher of Poland The Darlings of Downing Street the psycho sexual drama of power London Methuen Politicos 2007 Hardback ISBN 9781842752029 9 10 11 12 Universal Father A Life of Pope John Paul II London and New York Bloomsbury 2005 paperback 2006 13 14 15 Paul Scofield The Biography London Sidgwick amp Jackson 2002 New York Applause 2003 16 17 18 19 Alec Guinness the Unknown A Life London Sidgwick amp Jackson 2002 New York Applause 2002 20 21 William Shakespeare A Popular Life new expanded edition New York Applause 1999 22 23 The Secret Woman A Life of Peggy Ashcroft London Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1997 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Alec Guinness Master of Disguise London Hodder and Stoughton 1994 Sceptre 1995 31 William Shakespeare A Life London Hodder and Stoughton 1991 Sceptre 1994 32 33 34 35 Sean O Casey A Life London Hodder and Stoughton 1988 New York Atheneum 1988 Paladin paperback 1989 36 37 38 39 40 41 Darlings of the Gods One Year in the Lives of Laurence Olivier and Vivien Leigh London Hodder and Stoughton 1984 Also serialised in The Observer and was filmed as a three part mini series in Australia by ABC and Thames Television 42 Ralph Richardson An Actor s Life London Hodder and Stoughton 1982 Hardback ISBN 0340270411 Coronet paperback 1982 reprinted by London Methuen Publishing 1999 and by USA Applause Theatre and Cinema Books 2000 43 44 45 The Pursuit of Perfection A Life of Maggie Teyte London Victor Gollancz and New York Atheneum 1979 46 Memoir Edit The Vagabond Lover A Father Son Memoir CentreHouse Press 2017 Hardback ISBN 9781902086156 Edited Edit Olivier In Celebration London Hodder and Stoughton 1987 47 48 49 Fiction Edit Death s Duel A Novel of John Donne Lume Books 2015 Love At An End A Novel of Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier Lume Books 2015 The Book That Kills Oxford Aesop Publications 2014 Hardback ISBN 9780957206175 Chaucer s Triumph A Novel Including the Case of Cecilia Chaumpaigne And Other Offices of the Flesh in the Year 1399 Petrak Press 2007 Hardback ISBN 9780955376801 Campion s Ghost The Sacred and Profane Memories of Donne Poet London Hodder and Stoughton 1993 Sceptre paperback 1994 Theatre Edit Le Theatre en Angleterre French translation by Georgette Illes French Information Service 1968 French Theatre Today London Pitman 1976 The Mahabharata Peter Brook s Epic in the Making Lume Books 2015 Plays Edit Naked Woman Semmelweis De Raptu Meo CentreHouse Press 2016 Paperback ISBN 9781902086125 De Raptu Meo Geoffrey Chaucer on Trial for Rape Inner Temple Hall 2014 Debussy Was My Grandfather The Madness of Vivien Leigh Two Plays CentreHouse Press 2012 Campion s Ghost 1998 BBC 4 play adapted by O Conner from the 1994 novel of the same name Dialogue between Friends one act produced in London England 1976 Semmelweis two act produced in Edinburgh Scotland at the Edinburgh Festival 1975 Different Circumstances two act produced in Oxford England 1974 I Learnt in Ipswich How to Poison Flowers two act produced in Ipswich England 1969 The Musicians two act produced in London England 1969 References Edit O Connor Garry 1938 Encyclopedia com Retrieved 23 January 2021 Obituary Cavan O Connor by Peter Cotes The Independent 14 January 1997 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Cavan O Connor Obituary The Times London England 15 January 1997 p 19 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Observer London 13 June 1965 Financial Times BA Young 6 December 1969 BBC Breakfast with Frost Pope is Dead On Sunday 03 April 2005 Sir David Frost interviewed Rt Rev Richard Harries Bishop of Oxford and Garry O Connor Biographer transcript of interview Retrieved 29 January 2021 Book review by Benedict Nightingale in The Times London UK 6 September 2019 Ian McKellen by Garry O Connor review the actor whose mask won t slip Benedict Nightingale wonders whether Ian McKellen s sexuality is the key to his genius Retrieved 28 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Garry O Connor speaks about his book Subdued Fires on YouTube 13 May 2013 Retrieved 29 January 2021 Book review by Harry Reid in The Herald The Sunday Herald Glasgow Scotland 4 August 2007 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Roger Lewis in The Express on Sunday 12 August 2007 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries An extract from the book was published in the Catholic Herald 20 July 2007 Article heading A baffling bid for John Paul s support in Iraq Retrieved January 29 2021 Book review by Geoffrey Goodman in the Camden New Journal 13 September 2007 Retrieved 29 January 2021 Book review by Damian Thompson in The Daily Telegraph Sunday Telegraph 23 April 2005 p 6 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Michael McGough in The Washington Post 16 June 2005 The Man in the White Hat Retrieved 29 January 2021 Book review by Christopher Caldwell in The New York Times 15 May 2005 Universal Father and The Pontiff in Winter The Loneliest Job Retrieved 29 January 2021 Book review by Roger Lewis in The Express Express on Sunday 17 February 2002 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Hugh Massingberd in The Daily Telegraph Sunday Telegraph 9 February 2002 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Christopher Silvester in The Sunday Times 20 January 2002 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Article about Garry O Connor s forthcoming book about Paul Scofield Richard Brooks Olivier tried to sabotage rival Scofield The Sunday Times 22 July 2001 News p 7 section Home Retrieved 30 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Simon Callow in The Guardian 23 November 2002 Retrieved 29 January 2021 Considered by the Literary Review to be a truly brilliant detective story one of the truly great actor biographies of our time Literary Review November 2002 page needed Book review in Publishers Weekly 31 January 2000 Retrieved 28 January 2021 Library Journal 1 November 1999 review of William Shakespeare A Popular Life p82 New Statesman amp Society 11 April 1997 review by William Buchan of The Secret Woman p49 Nicholas Hellen Ex lover defends Dame Peggy in The Sunday Times 16 February 1997 this article appeared in the paper on the same day as The Sunday Times begain serialisation of Garry O Connor s biography of Peggy Ashcroft Retrieved 30 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries A brief review of Garry O Connor s book on Peggy Ashcroft in David Lister Arts notebook The Independent The Independent on Sunday 22 February 1997 Retrieved 30 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Boyd Tonkin A week in books The Independent The Independent on Sunday 1 March 1997 Retrieved 30 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Sheridan Morley What a dame Books in The Sunday Times 2 March 1997 Books p 3 section Features Retrieved 30 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Michael Arditti Theatre s lady of virtue some of it easy Books in The Times 8 March 1997 Directory p 9 section Features Retrieved 30 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review roundup which paraphrases Alastair Macaulay s scathing review in The Financial Times Fair game in retrospect Loved It The Times London England 15 March 1997 Directory p 10 section Features Retrieved 30 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Sunday Telegraph 7 February 1993 further citation needed unable to retrieve 29 January 2021 Book review by Benedict Nightingale in The Times 26 October 1991 Dark Gentleman of the theatre Retrieved 28 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by John Mortimer in The Sunday Times 17 November 1991 Retrieved 28 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries A brief mention in Shakespeares for our age by Lachlan Mackinnon in The Times Literary Supplement Friday 6 March 1992 issue 4640 pp 10 12 retrieved from www gale com document number GALE EX1200465863 28 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Peter Levi in The Spectator 16 November 1991 A tale told by an idiot signifiying nothing Retrieved 29 January 2021 There is a reply to this scathing review in The Spectator 30 November 1991 p 33 Lecturer lectured Retrieved 29 January 2021 Book review in Publishers Weekly 01 January 1988 Retrieved 28 January 2021 Book review in Kirkus Reviews 15 April 1988 Retrieved 28 January 2021 Book review by Richard Holmes in The Times 10 March 1988 Books Comedy exile cunning Review of Sean O Casey A Life by Garry O Connor Retrieved 28 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Austin MacCurtain in The Sunday Times 29 October 1989 Paperbacks Books Retrieved 28 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Paul Johnson in The Times Literary Supplement May 6 1988 Genius of the terrible tongue p 495 Retrieved from www gale com document number GALE EX1200454839 28 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review by Paul Taylor in The Spectator Nothing much but the truth 9 April 1988 p 31 Retrieved 29 January 2021 IMDB listing no tt0101665 retrieved 28 January 2021 Book review in The New York Times by John Mortimer 19 December 1982 Retrieved 28 January 2021 Book review by Stephen Wall Playing the private person in The Times Literary Supplement 24 December 1982 issue 4160 p 13 retrieved from www gale com document number GALE EX1200439950 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Garry O Connor Chasing Sir Ralph A Biographer s Reluctant Quarry in The New York Times 26 October 1997 Section 2 p 4 Retrieved 29 January 2021 Book review by Gabriele Annan A Melisande from the Midlands in The Times Literary Supplement 23 November 1979 p 44 retrieved from www gale com document number GALE EX1200426813 Retrieved 29 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries Book review in Publishers Weekly 06 July 1989 Retrieved 28 January 2021 Book review by Anthony Holden in The Spectator 18 April 1987 p 30 Yes but what s he really like Retrieved 29 January 2021 Book review by Michael Coveney Arts Sir s 80 Years Review of Olivier In Celebration edited by Garry O Connor in The Financial Times 18 April 1987 Retrieved 30 January 2021 subscription may be required or content may be available in libraries External links EditGarry O Connor official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Garry O 27Connor writer amp oldid 1132816545, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.