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Revision as of 14:41, 28 December 2020
Tom Mallin (14 June 1927 – 21 December 1977)[1] was a British writer of novels and plays, and also an artist. Beginning his working life in the art world, as a picture restorer as well as a practising painter, illustrator and sculptor, Mallin at the age of 43, became a full-time writer, with five novels published and several plays produced on stage and for BBC Radio before his death from cancer at the age of 50.
Biography
Early years, family and education
Tom Mather Mallin was born at West Bromwich, Staffordshire, England, to Clifford Vincent Mallin (1887–1932) and his wife Olive May née Mather (1895–1978).[1]
From 1943 to 1945 Mallin studied at Birmingham School of Art, going on to win a scholarship to the Royal Academy Schools. However, but after doing National Service he decided to study at the international Anglo-French Art Centre in London, where he met his future wife Muriel Grace George. They married in 1949, moved to Clare, Suffolk, in 1955, and had two sons, Simon and Rupert.[1]
Writing
Mallin had his first play, Curtains, produced in 1968, and went on to write many more, for both stage and radio, having a six plays broadcast on BBC Radio before his death in 1977 and others posthumously.[2]
Turning to full-time writing in 1970, at the age of 43, he also had five novels published by Allison and Busby.[2] In a 1971 article in The Guardian, Michael McNay described Mallin's first novel, Dodecahedron (1970), as "shocking", and said: "Tom Mallin's prose bleeds. His plays and novels are the flayed flesh of English language. If there had to be a visual comparison (and why not? Mallin used to be a realist painter) it would be with a crucifixion by Grunewald or a film by Bunuel."[3] Mallin's last novel, Bedrok, published in 1978, was described by Hermione Lee in The Observer as "a stylish as well as a very troubling novel".[4]
Awards and recognition
In 1979, alongside John Arden, Richard Harris, Don Haworth, Jill Hyem, Jennifer Phillips and Fay Weldon, Mallin won a Giles Cooper Award, with his posthumous winning work being included in Best Radio Plays of 1978.[5]
Mallin was included in The Imagination on Trial: British and American writers discuss their working methods (Allison & Busby, 1982), co-edited by Alan Burns and Charles Sugnet, which contained interviews with 10 other authors as well as Burns himself: J. G. Ballard, Eva Figes, John Gardner, Wilson Harris, John Hawkes, B. S. Johnson, Michael Moorcock, Grace Paley, Ishmael Reed, and Alan Sillitoe.
Bibliography
Novels
- Dodecahedron, Allison & Busby, 1970
- Knut, Allison & Busby, 1971; new edition, Verbivoracious Press, 2014
- Erowina, Allison & Busby, 1972; new edition, Verbivoracious Press, 2015
- Lobe, Allison & Busby, 1977
- Bedrok, Allison & Busby, 1978
Selected plays
- Curtains, 1968 – Edinburgh Festival's Traverse Theatre, directed by Michael Rudman; Canonbury Theatre, London, 1970; produced for radio by Guy Vaeson; published by Calder & Boyars, Playscript 57, 1971
- As Is Proper, 1971, King's Head Theatre, London
- Cot, 1971, Edinburgh Fringe Festival
- Downpour – broadcast 1971
- The Novelist, 1971, Traverse Theatre, Edinburgh; Hampstead Theatre Club
- Mrs Argent, 1972, Soho Poly, London; BBC Radio 3, 1980
- Rooms – broadcast 1973
- Birds of Prey – (not produced), 1973
- Two Gentlemen of Hadleigh Heath – broadcast 1973
- The Lodger – broadcast 1974
- Vicar Martin – broadcast 1974 (BBC Radio 3, 1976)
- Whispers (not produced), 1974
- Rowland, BBC Radio 4: The Monday Play, 4 July 1977, and BBC Radio 4: Afternoon Theatre, 27 August 1978
- Spanish Fly – broadcast BBC Radio 3, 18 September 1977
- Halt! Who Goes There?, 1977, broadcast posthumously, with Clive Swift, Rosemary Leach, 26 March 1978; winner of a Giles Cooper Award 1978 and published in Best Radio Plays of 1978 by Methuen, 1979[2]
References
- ^ a b c "Tom Mallin". Suffolk Artists. Retrieved 28 December 2020.
- ^ a b c Wortley, Richard. "Tom Mallin Radio Plays". Retrieved 28 December 2020.
- ^ "Curtains Up". The Guardian. 26 January 1971.
- ^ Lee, Hermione (16 July 1978). "World of the pigsty". The Observer. p. 26.
- ^ "In brief". The Guardian. 7 June 1979. p. 9.
External links
- Tom Mallin at doolleecom
- Rupert Mallin, "Tom Mallin 1927 – 1977"