Donald Sidney-Fryer

Donald Sidney-Fryer is a poet and entertainer born September 8, 1934, in New Bedford, Massachusetts. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps, and moved to California, where he attended university, and met Clark Ashton Smith several times. In 1969, he married Gloria Kathleen Braly, and started giving readings shortly thereafter, usually incorporating material by Smith, and his other principal poetic influence, Edmund Spenser.

Sidney-Fryer is connected principally to the works of Clark Ashton Smith in a number of ways. He published an important essay on him, "The Sorcerer Departs" in 1963, and wrote the principal bibliography, The Emperor of Dreams. He also edited a number of collections of Smith's poetry, chiefly, Poems in Prose and Selected Poems. He has edited a number of collections of Smith's short stories, and co-edited The Black Book of Clark Ashton Smith.

In addition, he has translated Aloysius Bertrand's Gaspard de la Nuit, written A Checklist of the Ballet Scores of Cesare Pugni, and published three collections of his own verse under the generic title: Songs and Sonnets Atlantean.

Donald Sidney-Fryer's poetry has appeared in: The Arkham Collector, Coven 13, The Cthulhu Codex, Flame Annual, The Galley Sail Review, Haunted, Macabre, Nocturne, Nyctalops, The Romantist, San Francisco, Weird Tales, Worlds of Fantasy and Horror, Witchcraft and Sorcery and The Young Physique.

Sidney-Fryer's verse is marked by a strong imagination, and a Francophilic focus. He is a strong believer in pure poetry, and practices formalist verse, developing his own specific poetic form, the Spenserian stanza-sonnet.

Sidney-Fryer is also a prolific historian of 19th century ballet, and is an expert on the ballet theatre of the romantic era.

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