Edgar Lustgarten

Edgar Lustgarten
Born May 3, 1907(1907-05-03)
Manchester, England
Died 15 December 1978
Manchester, England
Pen name Brent Wood
Occupation Novelist and journalist
Nationality English
Genres Detective fiction, crime fiction, mystery fiction
Literary movement None


Edgar Marcus Lustgarten (born 3 May 1907, Manchester, England, died on 15 December 1978) was a British broadcaster and noted crime writer.

His books included crime fiction, but most were accounts of true-life criminal cases. The legal justice system and courtroom procedures were his main interests and his writings reflect this. He also wrote numerous articles for newspapers and presented the radio series Advocate Extraordinary. He used to say that he had no schedules, writing everywhere any time, on bars, on cars and while walking by the streets.

He is most widely remembered for hosting the filmed crime series Scotland Yard and The Scales of Justice in the 1950s and 1960s, filmed at Merton Park Studios, London, SW19. One of those programs, Scotland Yard was broadcast beginning on November 17, 1957, on the American Broadcasting Company in the United States.[1]

Lustgarten died at the Marylebone library while reading The Spectator.[2] In the decade following his death, Lustgarten briefly ascended into the realm of pop culture when his inimitable voice appeared in dance music. Samples of him reading from "Death on the Crumbles" were used in the Australian band "Severed Heads" 1984 hit song "Dead Eyes Opened". His works are still used as introductory readings in several law schools in different countries because of their accuracy on the atmosphere of trials and attorneys' behaviour. He was famously mimicked as the Narrator in the Rocky Horror Picture Show.

References

  1. ^ "Scotland Yard episodes on ABC". tvguide.com. http://www.tvguide.com/tvshows/scotland-yard/episodes/204254. Retrieved December 14, 2010. 
  2. ^ Bathurst, Bella. Bathurst, Bella (1 May 2011). "The Secret Life of Libraries.". The Guardian (London). http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2011/may/01/the-secret-life-of-libraries.  The Observer. May 1, 2011. Retrieved June 11, 2011.