George MacDonald Fraser
George MacDonald Fraser | |
---|---|
Born | 2 April 1925 Carlisle, England |
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Isle of Man |
Occupation | Author |
Known for | The Flashman Papers series of novels; McAuslan short stories; screenplay for Octopussy |
Spouse(s) | Kathleen Hetherington |
Children | Caro Fraser, writer |
George MacDonald Fraser OBE FRSL (2 April 1925 – 2 January 2008) was a Scottish author who wrote historical novels, non-fiction books and several screenplays. He is best known for a series of works that featured the character Flashman.
Biography
Fraser was born to Scottish parents in Carlisle, England on 2 April 1925.[1] His father was a doctor and his mother a nurse. It was his father who passed on to Fraser his love of reading, and a passion for his Scottish heritage.[2]
Fraser was educated at Carlisle Grammar School and Glasgow Academy;[3] he later described himself as a poor student due to "sheer laziness".[2] This meant that he was unable to follow his father's wishes and study medicine.[4]
War service
In 1943, during World War II, Fraser enlisted in the Border Regiment and served in the Burma Campaign, as recounted in his memoir Quartered Safe Out Here (1993). After completing his OCTU (Officer Cadet Training Unit) course, Fraser was granted a commission into the Gordon Highlanders. He served with them in the Middle East and North Africa immediately after the war, notably in Tripoli. In 1947, Fraser decided against remaining with the army and took up his demobilisation. He has written semi-autobiographical stories and anecdotes of his time with the Gordon Highlanders in the "McAuslan" series.
Journalism
After his discharge, Fraser returned to the United Kingdom. Through his father he got a job as a trainee reporter on the Carlisle Journal and married another journalist, Kathleen Hetherington.[5] They travelled to Canada, working on newspapers there, before returning to Scotland. Starting in 1953, Fraser worked for many years as a journalist at the Glasgow Herald newspaper,[5] where he was deputy editor from 1964 until 1969. He briefly held the title of acting editor.
Novelist
In 1966, Fraser got the idea to turn Flashman, a fictional coward and bully originally created by Thomas Hughes in Tom Brown's School Days (1857), into a hero, and he wrote a novel around the character's exploits. The book proved popular and sale of the film rights enabled Fraser to become a full time writer. He moved to the Isle of Man where he could pay less tax.[6]
There were a series of further Flashman novels, presented as packets of memoirs written by the nonagenarian Flashman looking back on his days as a hero of the British Army during the 19th century. The series is notable for the accuracy of its historical settings and praise it received from critics. For example, P.G. Wodehouse said of Flashman, "If ever there was a time when I felt that 'watcher-of-the-skies-when-a-new-planet' stuff, it was when I read the first Flashman."[7]
Fraser also fictionalised his post-war military experience as the adventures of the rather unassuming "Dand" MacNeill in a Scottish Highland regiment. This series of short stories is noted for the strong and strange characters surrounding McNeill, including an aged and prototypical colonel, a perfect-soldier regimental sergeant-major, a Wodehousian adjutant, an active and dedicated pipe sergeant, a die-hard Algerian revolutionary, various blackguards and spivs, and, most memorably, Private John McAuslan, the dirtiest soldier in the world. Featuring games of golf, scrapes, and run-ins with the police both military and civil, the transfer of the die-hard to the French, and McAuslan's various disasters, these works form a picture of the British army in the period immediately after World War II.[citation needed]
Screenwriter
The film rights to Flashman were bought by Richard Lester, who was unable to get the film funded but hired Fraser to write the screenplay for The Three Musketeers in Christmas 1972. This was successful, and it launched Fraser as a screenwriter.[8] Fraser wrote the screenplay for the movie Royal Flash (1975), by Richard Lester, and for the next 20 years, Fraser alternated between writing novels and film scripts; he also worked as a script doctor.[citation needed]
Honours
George MacDonald Fraser was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1999.[9] A traditionalist, he was an Honorary Member of the British Weights and Measures Association, which opposes compulsory conversion to the metric system.[10] He died on 2 January 2008 from cancer, aged 82.[1]
Family
Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Fraser married Kathleen Hetherington in 1949. They had three children, Simon, Caroline, and Nicholas. He had eight grandchildren, Julie, Jack, Sophie, Genevieve, Andrew, Harry, Emily and Tom.
Works
Flashman novels
The Flashman series constitute Fraser's major works. There are 12 books in the series:
- Flashman (1969)
- Royal Flash (1970)
- Flash for Freedom! (1971)
- Flashman at the Charge (1973)
- Flashman in the Great Game (1975)
- Flashman's Lady (1977)
- Flashman and the Redskins (1982)
- Flashman and the Dragon (1985)
- Flashman and the Mountain of Light (1990)
- Flashman and the Angel of the Lord (1994)
- Flashman and the Tiger (1999)
- Flashman on the March (2005)
Short stories
The "Dand MacNeill" or "McAuslan" stories is a semi-autobiographical series of short stories based on the author's experiences in the Gordon Highlanders, in North Africa and Scotland, soon after World War II. Some of the stories were originally bylined "by Dand MacNeill", a play on the regimental motto BYDAND,[11] meaning standfast:
- The General Danced at Dawn (1970)
- McAuslan in the Rough (1974)
- The Sheikh and the Dustbin (1988)
- The Complete McAuslan (HarperCollins 2000) (All the stories in the three volumes, with a new introduction.)[12]
History
- The Steel Bonnets (1971), a history of the Border Reivers of the Anglo-Scottish Border.
- The Hollywood History of the World: From One Million Years B.C. to Apocalypse Now (1988, revised 1996) The book discusses how Hollywood deals with history. It concludes that the standard of historical analysis in most movies is far better than one might imagine. The text is illustrated by comparative images of figures from history and the actors who portrayed them in film.
Memoirs
- Quartered Safe Out Here (1992), a memoir of his experiences as an infantryman in the Border Regiment during the Burma Campaign of World War II
- The Light's on at Signpost (2002), a memoir of the author's days writing in Hollywood, interspersed with criticism of political correctness and New Labour.
Other novels
- Mr American (1980), a novel about a mysterious American in England.
- The Pyrates (1983), a tongue-in-cheek novel incorporating all the possible buccaneer film plots into one.
- Black Ajax (1997), a novel about Tom Molineaux, a 19th-century black prizefighter in England. (As in Mr American, this novel is also connected to the Flashman series—in this case Sir Harry Flashman's father plays a minor role.)
- The Candlemass Road (1993), a short novel about the Border Reivers of the 16th century.
- The Reavers (2007), a comic novel of the Border Reivers, loosely based on the Candlemass Road, in the style of his earlier novel The Pyrates.
- "Captain in Calico" (2015), a novel posthumously issued.
Screenplays
Fraser wrote or co-wrote the screenplays for:
- The Three Musketeers (1973)
- The Four Musketeers (1974)
- Royal Flash (1975, adapted from his novel)
- Crossed Swords (US) or The Prince and the Pauper (UK) (1977)
- Force 10 from Navarone (uncredited) (1978)
- Octopussy (1983)
- Red Sonja (1985)
- The Return of the Musketeers (1989)
- Some script-doctor work on Superman II and Ashanti (1979)[13]
Unproduced screenplays
Fraser also wrote the following scripts which were never filmed:[14]
- adaptation of The General Danced at Dawn commissioned in 1972
- Prince of Thieves from the Alexandre Dumas' version of the Robin Hood story
- Bulldog Drummond – adaptation of the novels
- Hannah – adaptation of novel about the life of Helena Rubenstein with director Jack Clayton
- Thirteen Against the Bank – true story about a man who leaned how to beat the bank at Monte Carlo
- adaptation of the William Tell story set against the background of the Battle of Mortgarten
- The Lone Ranger with director John Landis, circa 1990[15]
- The Ice People – adaptation of a novel about the discovery of a man and a woman from an ancient civilisation trapped in ice
- Berry and Co based on a story by Dornford Yates for director Lindsay Anderson
- Stortebekker for director Wolfgang Petersen about the medieval German pirate Klaus Störtebeker
- Quentin Durward from the novel by Sir Walter Scott
- Stillwell, a biopic of Joe Stillwell for director Martin Ritt at MGM (early 1980s)[16]
- adaptation of the James Clavell novel Tai-Pan, intended to star Steve McQueen (not used when the movie was made in 1986) – also a sequel
- adaptation of Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea for Dino de Laurentiis
Select articles
- "Long before the decay of lying", Chicago Tribune (1963) [Chicago, Ill] 9 Nov 1969: p6.
Radio
Fraser also wrote radio plays for the BBC.[citation needed]
Popular culture
In film
In the film All My Friends Are Leaving Brisbane (2007), the character of Michael (Matthew Zeremes) has an ideal image of a woman, which includes her being a fan of George MacDonald Fraser novels.
In print
Fraser's Flashman at the Charge (1973) was serialized in the April and June 1973 issues of Playboy. The climactic sequence of Flashman in the Great Game (1975) was also excerpted there.[citation needed]
References
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- ↑ Toby Clements, "Flashman flies the Jolly Roger: George MacDonald Fraser's lost pirate novel" Daily Telegraph8 August 2015
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- ↑ An adjectival use of the Middle Scots present participle of bide (SND: Bydand)
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Fraser, George MacDonald. The Light's on at Signpost, HarperCollins Publishers Ltd (7 May 2002)
- ↑ George MacDonald Fraser, The Light's on at Signpost, HarperCollins, 2002 p 280-283
- ↑ Landis fulfills HBO's dreams of gold: [FIVE STAR SPORTS FINAL Edition] Buck, Jerry. Chicago Sun - Times [Chicago, Ill] 20 July 1990: 63.
- ↑ AT THE MOVIES; by Tom Buckley; Brad Dourif's long association with 'Ragtime.' New York Times, Late Edition (East Coast) [New York, N.Y] 07 Nov 1980: C.6.
External links
- George MacDonald Fraser at the Internet Movie DatabaseLua error in Module:EditAtWikidata at line 29: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
- Obituary in The Daily Telegraph, 4 January 2008
- Obituary in The Economist, 10 January 2008
- Appreciation in The Herald, 4 January 2008
- The Last Testament of Flashman's Creator, Daily Mail 5 January 2008
- Hail the Cowardly Hero And His Bravely Un-P.C. Creator, The Wall Street Journal 17 January 2008
Media offices | ||
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Preceded by | Acting Editor of The Herald 1964–1965 |
Succeeded by Alastair Wilson |
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- EngvarB from August 2013
- Use dmy dates from August 2013
- Articles with hCards
- Articles with unsourced statements from November 2014
- 1925 births
- 2008 deaths
- 20th-century Scottish novelists
- 21st-century Scottish novelists
- Anglo-Scots
- Border Regiment soldiers
- British Army personnel of World War II
- Cancer deaths in the Isle of Man
- Clan Fraser
- Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature
- Gordon Highlanders officers
- Officers of the Order of the British Empire
- People educated at Carlisle Grammar School
- People educated at the Glasgow Academy
- People from Carlisle, Cumbria
- Scottish autobiographers
- Scottish historical novelists
- Scottish newspaper editors
- Scottish screenwriters
- 20th-century British dramatists and playwrights