Roger McGough
Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Use British English Template:Infobox writer
Roger Joseph McGough Template:Post-nominals (Template:IPAc-en; born 9 November 1937) is an English poet, performance poet, broadcaster, children's author and playwright. He presents the BBC Radio 4 programme Poetry Please, as well as performing his own poetry. McGough was one of the leading members of the Liverpool poets, a group of young poets influenced by Beat poetry and the popular music and culture of 1960s Liverpool. He is an honorary fellow of Liverpool John Moores University, a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and President of the Poetry Society.<ref>The Poetry Society Template:Webarchive – accessed 24 July 2009</ref>
Early life
McGough was born in Litherland, Lancashire, on the outskirts of Liverpool, to Roger Francis, a docker, and Mary (McGarry) McGough.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="encyclopedia" /> His ancestry is Irish and he was raised in the Roman Catholic faith.<ref>McGough, Said and Done, pp. 12, 23</ref> He was a pupil at St Mary's College in Crosby, before going on to study French and Geography at the University of Hull.<ref name="guardianint">Emma Brockes interview: Roger McGough The Guardian 14 November 2005</ref> McGough lived in one of the university residences, Needler Hall, for three years from 1955 and served as hall librarian. Contemporaneously, the poet Philip Larkin became the university's librarian; newly arrived at Hull, he served as a sub-warden at Needler Hall, though he lived in private accommodation nearby.<ref>McGough, Said and Done pp. 78–81.</ref> Several years later McGough corresponded with Larkin about poetry, sending him some of his own poems as he still lacked the confidence to approach the man directly. Larkin replied, thanking McGough for the poetry, which he had enjoyed reading. He added that he believed that McGough walked an impressionistic tightrope which, though exhilarating, meant that on occasion he fell off.<ref>McGough, Said and Done p. 85.</ref>
The Scaffold and GRIMMS
Returning to Merseyside in the early 1960s, McGough worked as a French teacher and, with John Gorman, organised arts events. McGough and Gorman later met Mike McGear (Mike McCartney) and together formed the trio The Scaffold; they worked the Edinburgh Festival Fringe until they were signed to Parlophone records in 1966. The Scaffold performed a mixture of comic songs, comedy sketches and the poetry of McGough. The group scored several hit records, reaching number one in the UK Singles Chart in 1968 with their version of "Lily the Pink". McGough wrote the lyrics for many of the group's songs and also recorded the musical comedy/poetry album McGough and McGear.<ref name="guardianint" />
In 1971 GRIMMS was formed, originally as a merger of the Scaffold, the Bonzo Dog Band and the Liverpool Scene. Group member Neil Innes said about the formation of the group: "I don't know what attracted the Scaffold to the Bonzos; we were incredibly anarchic, which was probably something shared by the Scaffold as well."<ref name="Bowen">Bowen, Phil. (2008) A Gallery to Play to: The Story of the Mersey Poets. Liverpool University Press. pp.104–106.</ref>
Poetry
As a poet, McGough came to national prominence through the publication of The Mersey Sound in 1967. The Mersey Sound is an anthology of poetry by three Liverpool poets: McGough, Brian Patten, and Adrian Henri.<ref name=oxfordjournals>"XIV Modern Literature, section 5", John Brannigan Accessed 9 April 2006</ref> It went on to sell over 500,000 copies, becoming one of the bestselling poetry anthologies of all time; remaining in continuous publication, it was revised in 1983 and again in 2007.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The title of the anthology was a conscious association of the three Liverpool poets with the musical phenomenon caused by the eruption of the Beatles and associated bands from the same city, known collectively as the "Merseybeat", on the world. McGough's personal connection with the Beatles was referenced in a much later comic poem, "To Macca's Trousers", contained in the book That Awkward Age (2009). McGough discovered a long forgotten pair of Paul McCartney's blue mohair trousers in his attic; the trousers had been given to him, via McCartney's brother Mike, in the early 1960s.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Template:Quote box One of McGough's early poems, Let Me Die a Youngman's Death (but not, as the poem states, before the poet reaches 73, 91 or 104 years of age), was included in a BBC anthology of the British nation's hundred favourite poems.<ref>Bowen, Phil., (2008) A Gallery to Play to: The Story of the Mersey Poets. Liverpool University Press. p. 67</ref> McGough has been nicknamed "the patron saint of poetry" by Carol Ann Duffy.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Philip Larkin included McGough's poetry in The Oxford Book of Twentieth Century English Verse, which he edited in 1973. Writing to McGough in 1980, Larkin congratulated him on the well-thumbed state of the copies of his books in Hull University's library, when compared to Larkin's own.<ref>McGough, Said and Done, p. 97</ref>
Possibly his shortest, most memorable and overtly political poem, was entitled "Conservative Government Unemployment Figures". The text of poem repeats the words of the title, with layout and punctuation resulting in an arch critique.<ref>McGough,Collected Poems, p. 182</ref> The poem was referenced in a parliamentary debate in the House of Commons in 2004.<ref>House of Commons Hansard Debates for 1 Dec 2004 (pt 35)</ref>
The poetry of McGough has been the subject of academic study. It has been characterised, at least from its early examples, as being reliant on play with words and their meanings. It has also been noted to exhibit a stylised wit, and, at times, a sadness based on themes of lost youth, unfulfilled relationships, and the downside of city life. The form of some of his verse, it has been claimed, has been influenced by his experience of writing song lyrics.<ref>Booth, Martin (1985) British Poetry 1964–1984: Driving Through the Barricades. Routledge, pp. 138–139</ref> A major critical examination of McGough's poetry, by American academic Ben Wright, was published in 2006. The author's stated aim was "to examine and evaluate the accessibility of Roger McGough's message to a wide, general readership, as well as appraising it by the most rigorous literary standards". McGough's popularity, commercial success, use of humour, and the lack of pretension of his verse has tended to restrict appreciation of his work as "serious poetry". Wright's study challenges this under-appreciation.<ref>Wright, Ben, Allan (2006) The Poetry of Roger McGough: The Liverpool Renaissance. Edwin Mellen Press.</ref>
Other activities
McGough was responsible for much of the humorous dialogue in the Beatles' animated film Yellow Submarine, although he did not receive an on-screen credit.<ref name="Yellow Submarine 30">Template:Cite journal</ref> Template:Quote box On 2 March 1978, McGough appeared in All You Need Is Cash, a mockumentary detailing the career of a Beatles-like group called the Rutles. Interviewed by Eric Idle, the introduction of McGough takes so long that he is only asked one question, "Did you know the Rutles?" to which McGough cheerfully responds "Oh yes", before the documentary is forced to move along to other events. In 1980 he recited a high-speed one-minute version of Longfellow's poem "The Wreck of the Hesperus", complete with sound effects, on the album Miniatures produced by Morgan Fisher.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
One of McGough's more unusual compositions was created in 1981, when he co-wrote an "electronic poem" called Now Press Return with the programmer Richard Warner for inclusion with the Welcome Tape of the BBC Micro home computer.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Now Press Return incorporated several novel themes, including user-defined elements to the poem, lines which changed their order (and meaning) every few seconds, and text which wrote itself in a spiral around the screen.<ref>BBC [pdf] bbc.nvg.org</ref> He contributed poetry to and narrated a programme in 1991 for Channel 4 called Equinox: The Elements about the elements.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He made a guest appearance on quiz panel show QI in 2006.
Three plays written by the 17th-century French playwright Molière have been translated by McGough and directed by Gemma Bodinetz. Tartuffe premièred at the Liverpool Playhouse in May 2008 and transferred subsequently to the Rose Theatre, Kingston.<ref>Philip Key, Tartuffe, Roger McGough, Liverpool Playhouse, Liverpool Daily Post (15 May 2008)</ref> The Hypochondriac (The Imaginary Invalid) was staged at the Liverpool Playhouse in July 2009.<ref name="Guardian">Template:Cite web</ref> The Misanthrope was staged at the Liverpool Playhouse in February–March 2013 before touring with the English Touring Theatre.
McGough has also done some voiceover work narrating The Very Hungry Caterpillar and Other Stories by Eric Carle,<ref name=imdb>Template:Cite web</ref> and TV advertisements for the supermarket chain Waitrose.<ref>"Waitrose shifts focus with price-led ads," Marketing Magazine, UK, 2 June 2009</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
He is a patron of Barnes Literary Society.<ref name="barnes" /> In 2019 he became the President of Arts Richmond for one year.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Awards
McGough won a Cholmondeley Award in 1998, and was appointed an Officer (OBE) in 1997, and later, in 2004, Commander (CBE) of the Order of the British Empire.<ref name="CBE">CBE for Liverpool poet McGough BBC News 12 June 2004</ref>
He holds an honorary MA from Nene College of Further Education,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and honorary Doctor of Letters (D.Litt.) degrees from the University of Hull (2004),<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Roehampton University (2006),<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and the University of Liverpool (2006).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2004.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Academic posts
McGough was Fellow of Poetry at Loughborough University (1973–75),<ref name="Who2010">Template:Cite web</ref> Honorary Fellow at John Moores University, and Honorary Professor at Thames Valley University (1993).<ref name="Who2010"/>
Personal life
In 1970, McGough married Thelma Monaghan, and they had two children; they divorced in 1980. He married Hilary Clough in December 1986, with whom he has two children.<ref name="encyclopedia">Template:Cite web</ref> He lives in Barnes, south west London; he and Clough previously lived on Portobello Road in Notting Hill Gate.<ref name="richmond">Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="barnes">Template:Cite web</ref>
Books
Poetry collections
- Young Commonwealth Poets '65, Heinemann, 1965
- The Mersey Sound (with Adrian Henri and Brian Patten), Penguin, 1967
- Frinck, A Life in the Day of, and Summer with Monika: Poems, Joseph, 1967
- Watchwords, Cape, 1969
- After the Merrymaking, Cape, 1971
- Out of Sequence, Turret Books, 1972
- Gig, Cape, 1973
- Sporting Relations, Eyre Methuen, 1974
- In the Glassroom, Cape, 1976
- Mr Noselighter, André Deutsch, 1976
- Holiday on Death Row, Cape, 1979
- Unlucky for Some, Bernard Stone, 1980
- Waving at Trains, Cape, 1982
- Crocodile Puddles, New Pyramid Press, 1984
- Sky in the Pie, Puffin, 1985 (children's)
- Melting into the Foreground, Viking, 1986
- Noah's Ark, Dinosaur, 1986
- Worry, Toni Savage, 1987
- Nailing the Shadow, Viking Kestrel, 1987
- Counting by Numbers, Viking Kestrel, 1989
- Selected Poems, 1967–1987, Cape, 1989
- You at the Back: Selected Poems, 1967–87, Cape, 1991
- Defying Gravity, Viking, 1992
- Pen Pals: A New Poem, Prospero Poets, 1994
- Ferens, the Gallery Cat, Ferens Art Gallery, 1997
- Todays Yodal, Over years ago, 1999
- Until I Met Dudley, Frances Lincoln, 1997
- The Way Things Are, Viking, 1999
- Dotty Inventions, Francis Lincoln, 2002
- Everyday Eclipses, Viking, 2002
- Collected Poems, Viking, 2003
- That Awkward Age, Penguin, 2009
- As Far As I Know, Penguin, 2012
- Joinedupwriting, Viking, 2019
- Safety In Numbers, Viking, 2021
Plays
- Tartuffe (English adaptation of Molière's play)<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
- The Hypochondriac (English adaption of Molière's play)<ref name="Guardian"/>
- The Misanthrope (English adaptation of Molière's play)
Autobiography
- Said And Done, Random House, 2005
See also
References
External links
- Template:IMDb name
- Profile and poems written and audio at Poetry Archive
- Template:British council
- Interview with Roger McGough about 40 years of the Mersey Poets
- BBC Radio 4 archive 4 October 1981 (Audio, 12 minutes). BBC profile.
- James Campbell, "A life in poetry: Roger McGough", The Guardian, 22 August 2009
- National Portrait gallery
- Shahesta Shaitly, Roger McGough: This much I know, The Observer, 4 November 2012
- Scaffold and the Grimms history
- Pages with broken file links
- People from Litherland
- Alumni of the University of Hull
- Commanders of the Order of the British Empire
- Fellows of the Royal Society of Literature
- People associated with Loughborough University
- 20th-century English poets
- 1937 births
- Living people
- Poets from Liverpool
- People educated at St Mary's College, Crosby
- English people of Irish descent
- The Scaffold members
- Grimms members
- English autobiographers
- Presidents of the Poetry Society
- English-language haiku poets