Frederic Raphael
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Frederic Raphael (born Chicago, 1931) is a noted screenwriter, as well as a prolific novelist and journalist.
Educated at Charterhouse School and St John's College, Cambridge, he won an Oscar for the screenplay for the 1965 movie Darling, and two years later an Oscar nomination for his screenplay for Two for the Road.
His articles and book reviews appear in a number of newspapers and magazines, including the Los Angeles Times and The Sunday Times. He has published more than twenty novels, the best-known of which is the semi-autobiographical The Glittering Prizes (1976), which traces the lives of a group of Cambridge University undergraduates in post-war Britain. His adaptation of the book into a BBC mini-series won him a Royal Television Society Writer of the Year Award.
Raphael has also published several history books, collections of essays and translations.
In 1999, Raphael published Eyes Wide Open, a memoir of his collaboration with legendary director Stanley Kubrick on the screenplay of Eyes Wide Shut, Kubrick's final movie. That year, Penguin Books also published a new translation of Arthur Schnitzler's Dream Story, the basis for Eyes Wide Shut, featuring an introduction by Raphael.
He is the father of the late painter Sarah Raphael (1960-2001).
Contents |
[edit] Works
[edit] Fiction
- Obbligato 1956
- The Earlsdon Way 1958
- The Limits of Love 1960
- A Wild Surmise 1961
- The Graduate Wife 1962
- The Trouble with England 1962
- Lindmann 1963
- Orchestra and Beginners 1967
- Like Men Betrayed 1970
- Who Were You With Last Night? 1971
- April, June and November 1972
- Richard’s Things 1973
- California Time 1975
- The Glittering Prizes 1976
[edit] Other
- Somerset Maugham and his World 1976
- The Poems of Catullus (with Kenneth McLeish) 1976
- Eyes Wide Open 1999
[edit] Screenplays (partial list)
- Nothing but the Best 1964
- Darling 1965
- Far from the Madding Crowd 1967
- Two for the Road 1968
- Daisy Miller 1974
- Eyes Wide Shut 1999