Thomas Anstey Guthrie
Thomas Anstey Guthrie (8 August 1856 - 10 March 1934) was an English novelist and journalist, who wrote his comic novels under the pseudonym F. Anstey.
He was born in Kensington, London, to Augusta Amherst Austen, an organist and composer, and Thomas Anstey Guthrie. He was educated at King's College School and at Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and was called to the bar in 1880.[1] But the popular success of his story Vice Versa (1882) with its topsy turvy substitution of a father for his schoolboy son, at once made his reputation as a humorist of an original type. He published in 1883 a serious novel, The Giant's Robe; but he discovered (and again in 1889 with The Pariah) that it was not as a serious novelist but as a humorist that the public insisted on regarding him. As such, his reputation was further confirmed by The Black Poodle (1884), The Tinted Venus (1885), A Fallen Idol (1886), and other works. Baboo Jabberjee B.A. (1897), and A Bayard from Bengal (1902) are humorous yet truthful studies of the East Indian with a veneer of English civilization.[2]
Guthrie became an important member of the staff of Punch magazine, in which his voces populi and his humorous parodies of a reciter's stock-piece (Burglar Bill, &c.) represent his best work. In 1901, his successful farce The Man from Blankleys, based on a story that originally appeared in Punch, was first produced at the Prince of Wales Theatre, in London. He wrote Only Toys (1903) and Salted Almonds (1906).[2]
Many of Anstey's stories have been adapted into theatrical productions and motion pictures. The Tinted Venus was adapted by S. J. Perelman, Ogden Nash, and Kurt Weill into One Touch of Venus in 1943. Vice Versa has been filmed many times, usually transposed in setting and without any credit to the original book. Another of his novels, The Brass Bottle, has also been filmed more than once, including The Brass Bottle (1964). His Tourmalin's Time Cheques (1891) is one of the earliest stories featuring the science fiction concept of intentional and frequent movement in time, and probably the first to investigate the practical paradoxes such a concept would create.
Bibliography
- Vice Versa (1882)
- The Black Poodle And Other Tales (1884)
- The Giant's Robe (1884)
- The Tinted Venus (1885)
- A Fallen Idol (1886)
- Burglar Bill And Other Pieces (1888)
- The Pariah (1889)
- Voces Populi (1890)
- Tourmalin's Time Cheques (1891)
- Mr. Punch's Model Music-Hall Songs And Dramas (1892)
- The Talking Horse And Other Tales (1892)
- The Travelling Companions (1892)
- The Man From Blankley's And Other Sketches (1893)
- Mr Punch's Pocket Ibsen (1893)
- Under the Rose (1894)
- Lyre and Lancet (1895)
- The Statement of Stella Maberly, Written By Herself (1896)
- Baboo Jabberjee, B. A. (1897)
- Puppets At Large (1897)
- Love Among The Lions (1898)
- Paleface And Redskin (1898)
- The Brass Bottle (1900)
- A Bayard From Bengal (1902)
- Only Toys! (1903)
- Salted Almonds (1906)
- Winnie, An Everyday Story (1909)
- In Brief Authority (1915)
- Percy and Others (1915)
- The Last Load (1925)
- The Would-Be Gentleman (Adapted From Molière's Le Bourgeois gentilhomme) (1927)
- The Imaginary Invalid (Adapted From Molière's Le Malade imaginaire) (1929)
- Humour and Fantasy (1931)
- A Long Retrospect (1936)
External links
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: Thomas Anstey Guthrie |
- Works by F. Anstey at Project Gutenberg
- F. Anstey at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- Mr. Punch's Pocket Ibsen, 1893.
- National Portrait Gallery sketch and full caricature
References
- ↑ "Guthrie, Thomas Anstey (GTRY875TA)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 New International Encyclopedia
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Guthrie, Thomas Anstey". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press
|