T. E. B. Clarke
Template:Short description Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Template:More citations needed Template:Infobox person Thomas Ernest Bennett "Tibby" Clarke, OBE (7 June 1907 – 11 February 1989) was a film screenwriter who wrote several of the Ealing Studios comedies.
Early life
Clarke was born in Watford on 7 June 1907. His father, Ernest Clarke, had been raised in Hull, moving to South Africa in the late 19th century. He was enlisted to carry dispatches for the Jameson Raid though, avoiding imprisonment, managed to obtain a job working for a gold mining company. Ernest then married Madeline Gardiner, with whom he raised three children. Their eldest child was Dudley Clarke, who would later become a pioneer of military deception operations during the Second World War. A girl, Dollie, followed.
The gold mining company Ernest had been working for then offered him an opportunity to move to their London office, enabling him to return to England with his young family. They sailed from South Africa, the first ship to leave the country following the end of the Boer War.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Upon arriving in England, Ernest purchased a house in Watford, where Madeline gave birth to their third and final child, Thomas Ernest Bennett Clarke.
Always known as "Tibby", Clarke attended Charterhouse School and Clare College, Cambridge, where he studied law for a year before departing after he was caught impersonating a proctor and booking students for being out after dark without a cap and gown.<ref name=dnb>Street, Sarah (rev.), "Clarke, Thomas Ernest Bennett (1907–1989)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edition, January 2011. Retrieved 7 February 2024. Template:Subscription required</ref><ref>T. E. B. Howarth, Cambridge Between Two Wars (London: Collins, 1978), p. 64. Template:ISBN</ref> He then visited Australia, New Zealand, San Francisco, and Canada, returning to England to work as a journalist for, in succession, the Hardware Trade Journal, the weekly magazine Answers, and The Daily Sketch tabloid newspaper. After gaining temporary employment as a publicity officer for the W. S. Crawford Advertising Agency in the late 1920s, he came into contact with the film industry for the first time.<ref name=dnb/>
Film career
Clarke's first screen credit was for heavily modifying the script of For Those in Peril in 1944, followed by proper contributions to The Halfway House (1944) and Johnny Frenchman (1945).<ref name=dnb/> His scripts always featured careful logical development from a slightly absurd premise to a farcical conclusion. In 1952, he was awarded a Best Original Screenplay Oscar for his script for The Lavender Hill Mob, making him one of just a handful of Britons to receive this award. He continued to work as a scriptwriter after Ealing ceased production, his later contributions including Sons and Lovers and the Disney film The Horse Without a Head.
Clarke was also a novelist and writer of non-fiction, but presented at least one fictional work as fact. His book Murder at Buckingham Palace (1981) purports to tell the story of a hushed-up murder at the Royal residence in 1935. Despite its including 'documentary' photographs, there is no external evidence that the book is anything but pure fiction. For The Blue Lamp (1950) he drew on his experience as a war reserve constable with the Metropolitan Police during the Second World War.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
He was awarded the OBE in 1952. He was the subject of This Is Your Life in 1960 when he was surprised by Eamonn Andrews at the BBC Television Theatre.
Animal welfare
Clarke was an advocate of animal welfare and opposed coursing. He authored A Savage Sport: The Case Against Coursing for the National Society for the Abolition of Cruel Sports in 1935.<ref>Clarke, T. E. B. (1935). A Savage Sport: The Case Against Coursing. National Society for the Abolition of Cruel Sports.</ref>
Death
Clarke was diagnosed with cancer in 1988. He died at London Bridge Hospital in February, 1989.<ref>Template:Cite news Template:Subscription required</ref>
Bibliography
Screenplays
- Johnny Frenchman (1945)
- Hue and Cry (1947)
- Against the Wind (1948)
- Passport to Pimlico (1949)
- The Blue Lamp (1950)
- The Magnet (1950)
- The Lavender Hill Mob (1951)
- The Titfield Thunderbolt (1953)
- The Rainbow Jacket (1954)
- Who Done It? (1956)
- Barnacle Bill (US: All at Sea, 1957)
- Gideon's Day (US: Gideon of Scotland Yard, 1958)
- Sons and Lovers (1960)
- The Horse Without a Head
- High Rise Donkey (1980)
Non-fiction
- A Savage Sport: The Case Against Coursing
- Go South - Go West
- What's Yours?
- Intimate Relations
- This is Where I Came In
Novels
- Jeremy's England
- Cartwright Was a Cad
- Two and Two Make Five
- Mr Spirket Reforms
- The World Was Mine
- The Wide Open Door
- The Trail of the Serpent
- The Wrong Turning
- The Man Who Seduced a Bank
- Murder at Buckingham Palace
- Intimate Relations (Template:ISBN)
References
External links
Template:AcademyAwardBestOriginalScreenplay 1940–1960 Template:Authority control
- 1907 births
- 1989 deaths
- 20th-century English screenwriters
- Alumni of Clare College, Cambridge
- Anti-hunting activists
- Best Original Screenplay Academy Award winners
- 20th-century British police officers
- Metropolitan Police officers
- People educated at Charterhouse School
- People from Watford
- Officers of the Order of the British Empire