Carol Gould (writer)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Carol Gould
Paddington, London
, England
Occupation(s)Writer, broadcaster

Carol Gould (19 September 1953 – 25 November 2021) was an American writer and broadcaster who lived in England.

From the mid-2000s she regularly appeared as a commentator on radio and television news channels.

Education and career

Born in Philadelphia, U.S., Gould attended the Philadelphia High School for Girls and Temple University, where she was elected Phi Beta Kappa. She moved to the university's London campus in 1976 where she studied documentary film history with Edgar Anstey, followed by postgraduate research at University of Kent on the history of Joan Littlewood's Theatre Workshop.[1]

Her first plays, Virgo Rising and Barking to the Angel, were produced in London in 1977. Further plays followed, and in 1980 her play A Chamber Group, about a contemporary music ensemble, was performed at the

Edinburgh Festival.[2]

In 1981, she became Associate Head of Drama at

.

Sir John Woolf, executive director, was resolute in his opposition to optioning any books by P.D. James or committing backing to a television series. He thought her books were dreary. Gould spent several sessions with him urging a change of mind because she saw a series as an international hit and the proposed leading actor, Roy Marsden, as a future star. Sir John relented, got Board backing, and the acquisition of rights by Gould resulted in six world-acclaimed series based on the James books and Marsden as Inspector Dalgliesh being catapulted to stardom, the programmes selling to sixty-five countries. Phyllis James attended every location shoot with Gould, talking well into the wee hours, and the six Anglia series made P.D. James a household name. Tales of the Unexpected had run out of stories when Gould joined Anglia Television but she canvassed every literary agent in the UK and found enough stories, by Wolf Mankowitz, Antonia Fraser and other writers, to fill a further three years of the series, which continued to sell to one-hundred countries. Classic episodes of the Gould-commissioned series are still being broadcast in the UK and around the world.[3]

A proposal for a drama series Spitfire Girls based on the women pilots of the World War II Air Transport Auxiliary won the enthusiastic support of Sir John,[4] with actors including Janet Suzman and writers including Peter Nichols, Shelagh Delaney, and Tom Kempinski interested in becoming involved, the latter even braving his severe agoraphobia to come in to London to discuss the project.[5] However incoming Anglia drama executive Graeme MacDonald found the theme uninspiring, and in 1988 development was cancelled. Gould was allowed to retain the rights in her treatment for the series, and attracted the keen interest of Ros de Lanerolle of the Women's Press.[5] But the company moved away from publishing fiction, and it was finally in 1998 that Spitfire Girls appeared as a hardback novel published by Black Ace Books. A paperback edition by Random House followed in 2009.[6] The book was optioned the next year by Sally Head Productions, but to date remains unproduced.

The

African-American "GI babies
".

On 10 May 2021, Gould was the subject of a

Anglia Television 'Tales of the Unexpected' series.[8]

Political commentator

A comment feature for

Notre Dame University in London between Dr Jan Halper-Hayes for the Republicans and Salli Anne Swartz for the Democrats.[17] The event was heated with a large, combative audience. In 2015, the London branch of the United Nations Association asked Gould to deliver the Hebrew prayer at its 70th Anniversary Commemorative Service at the Temple Church London.[18]

Amongst many other radio and television appearances, and articles written for major UK papers, Gould appeared again on the BBC Radio 4's

LBC radio. She has also been a frequent guest for both LBC and the BBC in their coverage of the Academy Awards,[21] correctly predicting the success of The Shape of Water for Best Picture on Oscar evening 2018, much to the astonishment of LBC host Alex Salmond
.

In November 2020, Gould joined Respectability.org [1], a Washington-based disability magazine, as London correspondent.

In July 2021, Gould re-joined the BBC NewsUK/BBC World News roster of live newspaper analysts. She will be delivering a lecture to the Benjamin Franklin House London [2] in the autumn about Franklin's astonishing immune system in an era of epidemics.

Personal life

Gould's father Oscar was Chief of the

US Army Corps of Engineers Marine Design Division (CEMDC) in Philadelphia from 1969 to 1990 and after retirement was Consultant to the International Cargo Gear Bureau.[22]
He was honoured after his death by the Department of the Army with a plaque at the US Customs House in Philadelphia.

Her mother Kay (née Karash) was a social worker fighting for the rights of impoverished black residents of the Philadelphia ghettoes in the 1930s and during World War II served as a US Army recruitment officer.

Camp Pickett
, Virginia, her objection to segregation of black and white troops, and a German POW who fell in love with her. Gould is now writing the play as her second novel.

Gould was one of eighteen women who developed complications and were allegedly misdiagnosed with breast cancer at the hands of Harley Street surgeon Owen Gilmore. Unlike the case of surgeon

Ian Paterson, who was jailed in 2017 for twenty years,[24] Gilmore was excused from trial due to illness, one of scores of doctors allowed to voluntarily remove themselves from the medical register rather than face investigations into their fitness to practise.[25]

In November 2016, Gould was diagnosed with

HER2 receptor mutation. She was placed in a trial of the drug Neratinib
and as of June 2019 the tumours had stabilised, although she later had to be switched to alternate chemotherapy due to side-effects.

Gould was married to the actor Barry Philips (1946–2018) from 1980 to 1987.[28][29] Her sister Susan Gould is a musicologist and opera coach based in Philadelphia.[30]

Death

After suffering a fall, Gould was admitted to hospital in Paddington on 11 November 2021, where she tested positive for COVID-19. She died on 25 November 2021, at the age of 68.[31]

Awards

Gould was a member of

BAFTA since 1987 and served on the Jury of the Prix Italia
, and on the Screenplay Jury at BAFTA during her time at Anglia TV.

In December 2020, Gould was inducted into the Court of Honour of Distinguished Daughters of the academically prestigious Philadelphia High School for Girls [3] Archived 29 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine; she joined the ranks of other recipients: women's rights lawyer Gloria Allred Gloria Allred; Helene Hanff, author of '84 Charing Cross Road' Helene Hanff and Barbara Harris, Bishop of Washington DC Barbara Harris (bishop).

Further reading

References

  1. ^ Carol Gould speaker biography, Battle of Ideas, 2009
  2. ^ Carol Gould's profile at doollee.com. Lists all of Gould's plays. Accessed August 2008
  3. ^ Carol Gould, 42 years in Britain - 37 years in broadcasting (talk), July 2018
  4. ^ Sir John Woolf obituary, The Guardian, 1 July 1999
  5. ^ a b Carol Gould, The story of Spitfire Girls, May 2017
  6. ^ Review of Carol Gould's novel Spitfire Girls Archived 7 February 2019 at the Wayback Machine, 21 April 2010.
  7. ^ Long Night's Journey into Day, British Council film website. Accessed 5 February 2019
  8. ^ Fordy, Tom (10 May 2021). "From Tales of the Unexpected to Inside No.9: how Roald Dahl's twisted genius comes alive on screen". Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 10 December 2021.
  9. ^ "An American Scapegoat in London", The Guardian Comment, 16 October 2004, accessed September 2008.
  10. ^ Any Questions? 22/08/2008, BBC website (full audio). Accessed 12 June 2019.
  11. Jewish Chronicle
    , 19 August 2010
  12. South Bank Centre, 11 July 2011
    "Why Boycott Culture?" — a revealing debate
    , One Democracy, 12 July 2011
  13. ^ eg: Carol Gould: What Next for America and the World? (event), Meretz UK, 18 November 2018
  14. ^ The YouGov Panel on US Politics, 29 February 2012
  15. ^ Carol Gould address to the UNAssociation London Meeting re Israel-Palestine, 28 September 2015
  16. ^ Election 2020: Carol Gould on American Politics (event), Benjamin Franklin House, 12 June 2019
  17. ^ The Unprecedented Election: A Bipartisan Discussion of the Key Issues[permanent dead link] (event), American Women Lawyers in London, 1 November 2016
  18. ^ Multi-faith service for the 70th anniversary of the UN, 10 October 2015. UNA London and South-East Region newsletter, Feb 2016, p.7
  19. ^ Any Questions? 06/11/2009, BBC website (full audio). Accessed 12 June 2019.
  20. ^ Moral Maze: US Presidential Election, BBC website, 2 November 2016 (full audio)
  21. BBC World News
    , via YouTube
  22. ^ Carol Gould, Water Management?, The American, 29 April 2014
  23. ^ Carol Gould, My Jewish Mother and President Obama, The Forward, 18 October 2013.
  24. ^ Ian Paterson: Disgraced breast surgeon has sentence increased, BBC News, 3 August 2017.
  25. ^ GMC criticised for letting doctors retire to avoid malpractice claims, The Sunday Times, 17 November 2011
  26. ^ Q&A: plasmaMATCH trial, Royal Marsden Hospital. Accessed 16 June 2019
  27. ^ A trial using a blood test to find certain gene changes and decide treatment for advanced breast cancer (plasmaMATCH), Cancer Research UK, Accessed 16 June 2019
  28. ^ Carol Gould, My 40 Years in St John's Wood, The American, 15 November 2018
  29. ^ Carol Gould, Remembering Barry Philips, 18 March 2018
  30. ^ Articles by Susan Gould, Bachtrack. Accessed 10 June 2019
  31. ^ "Births, marriages and deaths: Saturday December 4, 2021". The Times. 4 December 2021. Archived from the original on 4 December 2021. Retrieved 4 December 2021.

External links