Alexander Fiske-Harrison

Alexander Fiske-Harrison
Born (1976-07-22) 22 July 1976
Occupation writer, actor

Alexander Rupert Fiske-Harrison (born 22 July 1976) is an English author and journalist, playwright, actor and producer.

He was named "the bullfighter-philosopher"[1] by The Times of London for his research – theoretical and practical – into bullfighting for his book Into The Arena: The World Of The Spanish Bullfight which was shortlisted for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award 2011.

He is also a well-known bull-runner,[2] co-authored and edited the official eGuide Fiesta: How To Survive The Bulls Of Pamplona.

Background & Personal Life

He is the youngest son of Clive Fiske Harrison,[3][4] chairman of Fiske plc, where he is also a non-executive director.[5] His brother Jules William Fiske Harrison was, according to The Times, a "famously skilled and fearless skier" who died in a skiing accident in Zermatt, Switzerland in 1988.[6]

Fiske-Harrison was educated at Eton College and the University of Oxford, and as a posgraduate at the London School of Economics and Political Science.[7] He also trained at the Method acting school, the Stella Adler Conservatory in New York City when Marlon Brando was its chairman.[8] (He was consultant on the Universal Pictures' documentary on Brando, Listen To Me Marlon.)[9]

He has been friends since Oxford with British actor Hugh Dancy,[10] and his wife, Claire Danes, who appear in his book Into The Arena.[11]

Journalism

Fiske-Harrison has written for various newspapers and magazine including The Times,[12] Financial Times,[13] Daily Telegraph,[14] The Times Literary Supplement,[15] GQ[16] The Spectator,[17] and Prospect[18] and has been himself featured in magazines such as Condé Nast's Tatler.[19]

He has been interviewed and provided commentary on various broadcast media outlets including the BBC,[20] CNN,[21] Al-Jazeera,[22] Discovery Channel,[23] US National Public Radio.[24] and the Australian Broadcasting Corporation National Radio.[25]

He has also written in Spanish for ABC[26] and El Norte de Castilla[27] and has been himself featured in magazines such as ¡Hola![28] (Spanish parent of Hello! magazine.)

Spain

Bullfighting

Fiske-Harrison toreando, 'bullfighting', in Palma del Río, Córdoba province, Spain

A controversial essay on bullfighting for Prospect magazine[29] in September 2008 led Fiske-Harrison to move to Spain to further research the topic. He lived, trained and fought alongside matadors including the one-eyed Juan José Padilla, Cayetano Rivera Ordóñez – whose father Paquirri was killed in the ring, and grandfather Antonio Ordóñez the subject of Hemingway's The Dangerous Summer – and Eduardo Dávila Miura of the famous Miura bull family. He wrote about his experiences on his blog The Last Arena: In Search of the Spanish Bullfight.[30] In September 2009 the journalist Giles Coren visited him in Spain and described him as: "Very brave. Very British. Very Charge of the Light Brigade. Very trenches. Very scary."[31]

Bull-running

Fiske-Harrison, circled, running among the bulls of Torrestrella on calle Estafeta in Pamplona

As part of his researches in 2009 Fiske-Harrison began running with the bulls in Pamplona,[32][33] and became a part of the 'Runners Team of the World',[34] and continued to do it across the rest of Spain, including the encierros, 'bull-runs', of the Navarran towns of Tafalla and Falces - where the run is down a mountain path beside a sheer drop called 'El Pilón'[35]- in the Madrid suburb of San Sebastián de los Reyes and the ancient castle of Cuéllar in Old Castile,[36][37] which hosts the oldest encierro, 'bull-run' in Spain,[38] and where he was awarded a prize for writing about the encierros in 2013.[39] He has written and spoken on the subject widely, including for Bear Grylls on the Discovery Channel[40] and for the Esquire Network's coverage of the Pamplona running of the bulls.[41][42]

Into The Arena: The World Of The Spanish Bullfight

In 2011 Profile Books published his Into The Arena: The World of the Spanish Bullfight. The Mail on Sunday gave it four stars, saying, "his descriptions of the fights are compelling and lyrical... One begins to understand what has captivated Spaniards for centuries."[43] The Sunday Times said that "it provides an engrossing introduction to Spain's 'great feast of art and danger'",[44] the Sunday Telegraph said, it was "a compelling read, unusual for its genre, exalting the bullfight as pure theatre,"[45] and the Financial Times called it, "an engrossing introduction to bullfighting."[46]

In answer to Animal Welfare and Animal Rights concerns, the Daily Mail said that although Fiske-Harrison "develops a taste for the whole gruesome spectacle, what makes the book work is that he never loses his disgust for it,"[47] the Financial Times said, "it's to Fiske-Harrison's credit that he never quite gets over his moral qualms about bullfighting," and the Literary Review concluded: "The question of whether a modern society should endorse animal suffering as entertainment is bound to cross the mind of any casual visitor to a bullfight. Alexander Fiske-Harrison first tussled with the issue in his early twenties and, as a student of both philosophy and biology, has perhaps tussled with it more lengthily and cogently than most of us."[48]

It was selected by Sunday Telegraph as a "best summer holiday read"[49] and the Sunday Times as one of the summer's "essential travel book list."[50] It was shortlisted for William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award 2011.[51] Both the Sunday Times and Sunday Telegraph went on to recommend it among their sports books of the year.[52][53]

Fiesta: How To Survive The Bulls Of Pamplona

In Spring 2014 Fiske-Harrison co-authored and edited the book Fiesta: How To Survive The Bulls Of Pamplona, published by Mephisto Press. It included a foreword from the Mayor of Pamplona and contributions from famous living aficionados of the festival of San Fermín, including John Hemingway, grandson of Ernest Hemingway, Beatrice Welles, daughter of Orson Welles, along with chapters of advice from the most experienced American and Spanish bull-runners such as Joe Distler,[54] Julen Madina,[55] Miguel Ángel Eguiluz[56] and Jokin Zuasti[57] and photographs from EPA veteran Jim Hollander. It caused headlines around the world when one of the contributors was gored by a bull soon after publication.[58] Fiske-Harrison himself had been running with the same animal minutes earlier, although he was uninjured.[59][60] As a result, the gored writer's contribution was replaced by advice from other bull-running authors.[61] In a feature on the event, the Daily Telegraph described Fiske-Harrison as "a stone-cold pragmatist with a poet's heart."[62]

Fiske-Harrison has also contributed to various anthologies on 'the world of the bulls', including Olé: Capturing The Passion of Bullfighters And Aficionados in the 21st Century, The Bull and the Ban and Running The Bulls With Hemingway & Other Pamplona Tales.[63]

Drama

Fiske-Harrison's acting debut was as Govianus in The Second Maiden's Tragedy at the Hackney Empire theatre in London.[64] He has also acted on the German stage[65] and in independent film in the UK and Italy.[66]

The Pendulum

The Pendulum

Alexander Fiske-Harrison & Gareth Kennerley
Written by Alexander Fiske-Harrison
Date premiered 3 June 2008
Place premiered Jermyn Street Theatre, West End, London

The play is a two-act four-hander set in 1900 Vienna. Its first production was in the summer of 2008 at the Jermyn Street Theatre, in London's West End.[67]

Michael Billington in The Guardian gave it three stars and said, "Fiske-Harrison has clearly done his homework: he understands, for instance, the tensions between Franz Joseph’s imperial benevolence and the antisemitism of Vienna’s populist mayor, Karl Lueger. The author himself plays the disintegrating hero with the right poker-backed irascibility... while it is refreshing to find a new play that gets away from bedsit angst, one wonders why Fiske-Harrison has tackled this subject now. If there are contemporary parallels, they are not obvious, and one comes away with the sensation of having seen an accomplished, but oddly impersonal, historical play."[68] The Sunday Times described it as "something earnest, nicely acted – if a little contained – but as far from the wildness of Schnitzler or the darkness of Schiele as you can possibly imagine".[69]

References

  1. Flintoff, John-Paul. Today's toffs: tough, violent, amoral?, The Times. 18 May 2010
  2. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'A Good Run' The Spectator, 14 July 2012
  3. Winter, Laura. "Clive Fiske Harrison". Debrett's People of Today 2012
  4. Fiske Harrison of Layer de la Haye Burke's Peerage
  5. http://www.londonstockexchange.com/exchange/news/market-news/market-news-detail/11864242.html
  6. Coren, Giles. 'How do I hate skiing?', The Times 21 March 2009
  7. Fiske Harrison of Layer de la Haye Burke's Peerage
  8. Profile Books Author page Alexander Fiske-Harrison
  9. Alexander Fiske-Harrison at the Internet Movie Database
  10. Alexander Fiske-Harrison's Biography at IMDb
  11. Coren, Giles. 'Mad bulls and Englishmen', The Times 26 December 2009
  12. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'Who to back in the Grand National? Not the tipsters' The Times. 12 April 2012
  13. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander. 'Talking with apes', Financial Times. 24 November 2001
  14. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'To the Spanish bullfighting is much more than just a sport' Daily Telegraph. 25 November 2011
  15. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander. 'Can computers converse?', The Times Literary Supplement. 9 June 2000
  16. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'The Last Matador', GQ. September 2012
  17. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'Warrior: The Story of the real warhorse', The Spectator, 21 January 2012
  18. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander. 'On Philosophers and Wolves', Prospect. 22 January 2009
  19. Compston, Harriet. 'Hottie Ahoy!', Tatler. July 2008
  20. Lewis, Alun 'testbeds: Artificial Intelligence', BBC Radio 4, 17 February 2000
  21. 'The future of bullfighting in Spain', CNN, 28 July 2010
  22. 'Bullfighting debate with Alexander Fiske-Harrison and Jordi Casamitjana', Al-Jazeera, September 2008
  23. Frayer, Lauren 'World's Scariest Animal Attacks', Mentorn TV. 16 August 2012
  24. Bullfighting in Spain Stays Alive Despite Regional Ban', NPR. 28 September 2011.
  25. Doogue, Geraldine. 'Into the bullfighting arena', ABC National Radio. 4 August 2012
  26. Pina, Marina 'De Eton a Cuéllar, en un solo encierro', ABC. 31 August 2013
  27. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'Gracias, Cuéllar, desde Londres' El Norte de Castilla. 3 September 2012
  28. Sanchez, Mamen. 'Alexander Fiske-Harrison, the English ‘gentleman’ who one day became an expert on bullfighting' (English translation, ¡Hola!. 13 May 2015
  29. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander. 'A Noble Death', Prospect. September 2008
  30. Davis, Clive. 'In the arena', The Spectator. 2 March 2009
  31. Coren, Giles. 'Mad bulls and Englishmen', The Times 26 December 2009
  32. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'A Good Run', The Spectator, 14 July 2012
  33. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander , The Spectator, 26 October 2013
  34. 7del7 Runner Team del Mundo
  35. 'My article ‘See you soon, Cuéllar’ in El Norte de Castilla' The Last Arena, 14 September 2014
  36. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'Gracias, Cuéllar, desde Londres', 'El Norte de Castilla', 3 September 2012
  37. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'Y una vez más,gracias, Cuéllar, desde Londres', 'El Norte de Castilla', 2 September 2013
  38. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'The real, old stuff', Financial Times, 31 May 2013
  39. Ernes 'Galardonados con el trofeo Ehtoro a la divulgación del encierro de Cuéllar', Burladero.com, 27 June 2013
  40. IMDb page
  41. 'Running Of The Bulls 2015:A democratic sport', Esquire TV
  42. 'Running Of The Bulls 2015: Why do Americans keep getting gored', Esquire TV
  43. Owen, James 'Where Hemingway Feared To Tread', Mail on Sunday. 10 July 2011
  44. Schofield, Brian 'Review: Into The Arena by Alexander Fiske-Harrison', Sunday Times. 29 May 2011
  45. Brown, Oliver 'Books for Christmas: Sport Books: Into The Arena', Sunday Telegraph. 27 November 2011
  46. Eltringham, Dan 'Books: Non-fiction: Into The Arena', Financial Times. 4 June 2011
  47. Palmer, Mark 'Etonian Matador Who Triumphs In The Bullring' Daily Mail. 26 May 2011
  48. France, Miranda 'Blood, Sweat and tears', Literary Review. August 2011
  49. Kerr, Michael 'The best summer holiday reads', Sunday Telegraph. 8 July 2011
  50. Sattin, Anthony and Schofield, Brian 'Summer reads for travellers', Sunday Times. 19 June 2011
  51. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'To the Spanish bullfighting is much more than a sport' Daily Telegraph. 26 November 2011
  52. Pitt, Nick 'Sports Books Of The Year', Sunday Times. 4 December 2011
  53. Brown, Oliver 'Books for Christmas: Sport', Sunday Telegraph, 27 November 2011
  54. Distler, Joe 'Why I will run the bulls again' New York Times, 6 July 2010
  55. 'Julen Madina: Cinco Cornadas Incrementan Su Leyenda' (Julen Madina: Five Gorings Increase His Legend) ABC, 14 July 2004
  56. 'Eguiluz: "Correr delante de la cara del toro es un éxtasis"' (Eguiluz: "Running in front of the face of the bull is an ecstasy") La Vanguardia 8 July 2014
  57. 'La tradicion por encima de todo' (Tradition above all) El Pais, 15 July 2009
  58. 'San Fermín So Far - 2014' The Pamplona Post, 12 July 2014
  59. 'Co-Author Of Bull-Running Guide Gored In Pamplona' New York Times, 9 July 2014
  60. 'Bull-Run Survival Guide Author Gored In Spain' The Times, 9 July 2014
  61. Fiske-Harrison, Alexander 'A new fiesta' The Last Arena
  62. Furey, Joseph S.'Why running with the bulls is more than a deathwish', Daily Telegraph. 31 July 2015
  63. Amazon Author Page for Alexander Fiske-Harrison
  64. London Theatre Database page
  65. "'Alone Together':Familienkomödie im English Theatre", Die Welt. 23 November 2007
  66. IMDb page
  67. http://www.doollee.com/PlaywrightsF/fiske-harrison-alexander.html
  68. Billington, Michael. 'Theatre Review: The Pendululm', The Guardian. 9 June 2008
  69. Wise, Louis. 'Theatre Review: The Pendulum, Jermyn Street, SW1'. Sunday Times 15 June 2008

External links

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