E. Arnot Robertson
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Eileen Arbuthnot Robertson (10 January 1903 at Moor Lodge, South Holmwood, Surrey – 21 September 1961 in Hampstead, London) was an English novelist, critic and broadcaster.<ref name="ODNB">Nicola Beauman: 'Robertson, Eileen Arbuthnot (pseud. E. Arnot Robertson) (1903–1961)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, online e. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, September 2004) Retrieved 5 September 2010.</ref> Her 1931 novel Four Frightened People gave rise to a film of the same name in 1934.
Family
Robertson was the daughter of Dr George Arbuthnot Robertson (1860–1942), physician and surgeon,<ref>British Medical Journal, 25 April 1942, p. 539.</ref> and his wife Elsie Margaret (née Brune). She was baptised on 18 March 1903 at St Mary's Church, Holmwood. Her one sister, Mary Arbuthnot, was born in 1899. Robertson was educated at Sherborne School for Girls, which she strongly disliked.<ref>E. Arnot Robertson: Sherborne. In: Graham Greene, ed.: The Old School. Essays by divers hands (London: Jonathan Cape, 1934).</ref> The family moved to London in 1917. She later described the atmosphere in the family as "stultifying".<ref>D. K. Roberts, ed.: Titles to Fame (London: T. Nelson & Sons, 1937)</ref> She continued her education for two years in France and Switzerland.<ref name="ODNB"/>
Robertson took her first job, on the London-based magazine Answers, at the age of 19. In that year she also sat anonymously for the painting A Red Haired Girl by James McBey. On 26 February 1927 she was married in Kensington to H. E. (from 1951 Sir Henry) Turner (1891–1961),<ref name="ODNB" /> secretary-general of the Empire Press Union, later the Commonwealth Press Union. They adopted a son, Gordon Turner, in the late 1930s. The Turners moved to Heath Street, Hampstead, in 1946. They were passionate sailors, as the sailing background of Ordinary Families shows. Turner's death in a boating accident precipitated Robertson's suicide five months later.<ref>"Robertson, E. Arnot (Eileen Arbuthnot) (1903–61)". The Oxford Companion to Twentieth-Century Literature in English. Ed. Jenny Stringer. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996, reprinted 2004. Template:ISBN. p. 575. Also available online via Oxford Index Template:Webarchive.</ref>
Writing
By her mid-twenties E. Arnot Robertson, as she chose to be called in print, was on her way to becoming a popular "middlebrow" novelist with a large following, especially for her first five novels.
Four Frightened People (1931), set in a Malaya that she never actually visited,<ref>Susan Brown, Patricia Clements, and Isobel Grundy (eds): "E. Arnot Robertson Template:Webarchive" (overview entry). In Orlando: Women's Writing in the British Isles from the Beginnings to the Present. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press Online, 2006. Retrieved 7 July 2017.</ref> became Volume 15 on the Penguin list in 1935. A film, directed by Cecil B. DeMille, was released in 1934.<ref>A contemporary review: [1]. Retrieved 4 September 2010.</ref> Equally celebrated was Ordinary Families (1933), the story of a young girl growing up with her family in Pin Mill, Suffolk. Both titles were repeatedly reprinted into the 1980s in the Virago paperback series, as was her first novel, Cullum, in 1989.
However, her later novels added little to the reputation the earlier ones had given her, although she had "seemed at one time likely to develop into a novelist of considerable comic substance and power."<ref>The Times, 23 September 1961, in a retrospective assessment.</ref>
Robertson also wrote astringent film criticism. Reviewing the young Bette Davis in Dangerous for the Picture Post in 1935, she said, "I think Bette Davis would probably have been burned as a witch if she had lived two or three hundred years ago. She gives the curious feeling of being charged with power which can find no ordinary outlet."<ref>Picture Post, 2 November 1946, as quoted in Template:Cite book</ref> She was involved in 1946 in protracted litigation with MGM over what the corporation perceived as unfairly negative reviews of their films. This contributed to her losing a job at the BBC,<ref>Time magazine article, 13 December 1948: [2]. Retrieved 15 August 2010.</ref> but her eventual legal costs of £8,000 were paid from the proceeds of a fundraising appeal made by the Critics' Circle.<ref>Peter Cargin: "A Quite Brief History of the Circle". The Critics' Circle. criticscircle.org.uk. Retrieved 8 July 2017.</ref>
Robertson was a contestant on the BBC panel game My Word! from 1957 to 1961, partnering Frank Muir.<ref>"My Word!". BBC. bbc.co.uk. 28 October 2014. Retrieved 8 July 2017.</ref>
Bibliography
Further reading
- ODNB entry: [3]. Subscription required.
- Who Was Who entry: [4]. Subscription required.
- Photograph of portrait of E. Arnot Robertson (1932): [5]. Retrieved 3 March 2015.