Charles Higham (biographer)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Charles Higham (pronounced HYE-um; 18 February 1931 – 21 April 2012)[1][2] was an English author, editor and poet.

After moving to Australia in 1954, Higham began a career in journalism, before moving to the United States in 1969. In the United States, he became known as a celebrity biographer, mainly of film stars, such as Katharine Hepburn and Errol Flynn. The latter book, among several during Higham's career, was criticized for fabrications.[3] Close friends of another of his subjects, Orson Welles, in particular Peter Bogdanovich, were critical of Higham's interpretation of his career.

Early life and career

Born in London, Higham was the son of

Sir Charles Higham and his fourth wife, Josephine Janet Keuchenius Webb.[4] Higham's parents divorced when he was three, and thereafter Charles lived with his mother. His father died four years later.[5] After Sir Charles' death the family lived in modest circumstances during and after World War II.[6] Higham published two books of verse in England,[4] before moving to Sydney, Australia in 1954.[6] There he became a journalist and critic for The Sydney Morning Herald and, later, the Sydney Daily Mirror.[5] Higham became literary editor of The Bulletin, the country's leading weekly, in 1964, and published three more collections of verse.[4]

In the 1960s, Higham compiled a number of horror anthologies for the Australian publisher

Horwitz. The majority of stories in the anthologies were by writers from the US and UK, with many being reprinted from Montague Summers's 1936 anthology The Grimoire and Other Supernatural Stories. Australian writer Terry Dowling acknowledged the influence of Higham's horror anthologies on his own writing in an essay published in Stephen Jones Horror: Another 100 Best Books.[7]

Biographies

Higham was a

Latin American triptych of more than a quarter century before. The footage was already known to the studio archivists.[8]

In The Films of Orson Welles (1970)[9] and in Orson Welles: The Rise and Fall of an American Genius (1985), he said that Welles suffered from a "fear of completion"[10] that led him to abandon projects when they were nearly finished because others could then be blamed for their flaws.[3] Friends of Welles, in particular Peter Bogdanovich, criticized this thesis; some writers have found it insightful.[11] "It is a facile explanation," wrote Joseph McBride in 1993, "that leaves out much in the way of historical and cultural context but nevertheless contains a germ of truth."[12] In the 1970s, he contributed freelance articles on film to The New York Times, and was a frequent guest on talk shows.[2]

Higham's first bestseller was Kate (1975), the first authorized biography of Katharine Hepburn.[4] This success was followed by Bette: the Life of Bette Davis, a biography of Lucille Ball, and The Duchess of Windsor (1988, 2005). In the book about Wallis Simpson (later the Duchess of Windsor), he claimed she had learned unusual sexual practices in the brothels of Peking and was the lover of Count Ciano and Ribbentrop.[3] Journalist Paul Foot described Higham's biography of Wallis Simpson in the London Review of Books as "an important book. But there is a great deal wrong with it. He has provided his critics with plenty of hostages. Again and again, he quotes the most scurrilous and unlikely gossip, without proving it."[13]

According to Higham and Roy Moseley in their biography of Cary Grant (1989), the actor was on the grounds of the home of actress Sharon Tate on the night in 1969 that she was murdered. Higham admitted in an interview that the association was "poorly documented."[14] The book suffered from many contradictory statements. In a reference to Sophia Loren, Higham described Loren as Grant's former lover four pages after indicating they did not have a physical relationship.[3] Barbara Shulgasser, in The New York Times wrote that the book's "obsession with Grant's sexuality is more a reflection of the authors' keen perception of what sells books than of any allegiance to the dictates of ethical journalism."[15]

After the publication of Higham's book Howard Hughes, according to

Florenz Ziegfeld
.

Higham also wrote Murder in Hollywood: Solving a Silent Screen Mystery on the death of

Jennie Churchill, Dark Lady: Winston Churchill's Mother and Her World (2006).[16]

With Roy Moseley (b. 1938), in addition to the book on Cary Grant, he wrote biographies of Merle Oberon, and Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh (Elizabeth and Philip: The Untold Story 1991).[4]

Higham published his autobiography, In and Out of Hollywood: A Biographer's Memoir, in 2009, which was both criticized as "unashamedly self-promoting"[3] and praised as "very good"[18] and unsparing of himself.[1]

Higham had his share of detractors. The Daily Telegraph called Higham "a much-feared and notoriously bitchy celebrity biographer whose works fell squarely in the 'unauthorised' category." The British newspaper also observed that "critics remarked on how much of his work was based on the testimony of anonymous witnesses" and that Higham repeatedly mined "the themes of fascism, closet homosexuality and sexual perversion."[3] The Sydney Morning Herald remarked that Higham's writing style veered "from scholarship to sensationalism... but his wealth of new details were often newsworthy.... Higham never lost the ability to irritate to get a good story. In this sense he was the best kind of gadfly as a journalist."[19]

Errol Flynn controversy

In 1980, Higham's "most sensational work,"

Nazis before and during World War II[20] and a bisexual who had affairs with many men.[3] "I don't have a document that says A, B, C, D, E, Errol Flynn was a Nazi agent," Higham said in an interview, "But I have pieced together a mosaic that proves that he is."[2] Lawrence S. Dietz in his New York Times review at the time of the book's first publication complained about the writer's "shoddy reporting, about the must-have-happeneds that Mr. Higham constructs to use material contained in the documents he has read."[21] James Wolcott, writing for The New York Review of Books, described the biography's preoccupation with the subject's sex life as "keyhole-peeping porn, written by a man whose mind has turned to pulp."[22] Members of Flynn's family unsuccessfully sued Higham and the book's publisher for libel, a claim which was dismissed on appeal in 1983 because the suit was on behalf of someone who was deceased.[2][23]

Tony Thomas, in Errol Flynn: The Spy Who Never Was (Citadel, 1990) and Buster Wiles in My Days With Errol Flynn: The Autobiography of a Stuntman (Roundtable, 1988) identified Higham's claims as fabrications, an assertion substantiated by viewing the FBI documents, which were altered – rather than quoted verbatim – by Higham.[24] In 2000 Higham restated his claim that Flynn had been a German agent, which he said was corroborated by Anne Lane, secretary to MI5 chief Sir Percy Sillitoe from 1946 to 1951, who had been responsible for maintaining Flynn's file there (although he never saw the file, and could not even confirm its physical existence); and also by journalist Gerry Brown, who said he had been briefed by the Ministry of Defence.[20]

Personal life

In his autobiography, Higham claimed he was molested by his stepmother and says he entered into his 1952 marriage even though he was homosexual. He and his wife Norine Lillian Cecil separated in 1956,[5] but remained friends; she later adopted a lesbian lifestyle. Higham lived with his partner Richard V. Palafox, a nurse, until Palafox's death in 2010,[1] in Los Angeles.[4] His personality was described as "unpleasant"; he habitually insulted restaurant waiters, and would often sit at tables for the better part of an hour before looking at a menu.[3] He died on 21 April 2012, in Los Angeles.

Higham received a Prix des Créateurs from Eugène Ionesco in 1978 for his biography of Marlene Dietrich,[25] and a poetry prize.[6]

Books

References

  1. ^ a b c Elaine Woo "Charles Higham dies at 81; controversial celebrity biographer", Los Angeles Times, 4 May 2012
  2. ^ a b c d e Fox, Margalit "Charles Higham, Celebrity Biographer, Dies at 81", The New York Times, 3 May 2012; "A cloying vulgarity and coarseness suffuse this book", Carolyn See wrote in the Los Angeles Times in 1986, reviewing his Lucy: The Life of Lucille Ball. "But the author is either so cunning – or so closely allied in emotional terms with the subject of this biography – that the reader can’t tell if the vulgarity comes from Charles Higham or from Lucille Ball herself."
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "Charles Higham obituary". The Telegraph. London. 22 April 2012. Retrieved 10 March 2021. Higham claimed she (Duchess of Windsor) was the mistress not only of Count Ciano, but also of Ribbentrop. He maintained that the Duchess's attractions included exotic sexual techniques that she had picked up on visits to the brothels of Peking, which allowed the Prince of Wales to make the best of his supposedly modest endowments. He set a tone for vilification later explored by other biographers.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Charles Higham In and Out of Hollywood: A Biographer's Memoir
  5. ^ a b c Philippe Mora "A scourge of Hollywood and Nazis", Sydney Morning Herald, 7 May 2012
  6. ^ a b c Todd McCarthy "Charles Higham, Noted Film and Political Biographer, Dies at 81", Hollywood Reporter, 5 May 2012
  7. ^ SELECTED NON-FICTION: A selection of Terry Dowling's non-fiction writing Terry Dowling website
  8. ^ It’s All True: Orson Welles’s Pan-American Odyssey by Catherine L. Benamou; University of California Press, page 360; "(Higham's book) has become questionable in that he claims to have rediscovered the definitive, forgotten cache of footage" while he found footage the studio archivists already knew about."
  9. ^ Higham, Charles (1970). The Films of Orson Welles. Berkeley & Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press. p. 190.
  10. ^ Anna Quindlen "The Magnificent Orsons", New York Times, 15 September 1985
  11. ^ Bellman, Joel (7 May 2012). "What I learned from biographer Charles Higham - and Orson Welles". LA Observer. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  12. ^ McBride, Joseph (13 May 1993). "The Lost Kingdom of Orson Welles". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  13. ^ Foot, Paul (15 September 1988). "The great times they could have had". London Review of Books. Vol. 10, no. 16. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  14. ^ Abrams, Garry (24 March 1989). "Shadows on a Legend : Cary Grant's Image as the Perfect Hollywood Heartthrob Is Sullied in Two Competing New Books Portraying a Darker Side to the Star". Los Angeles Times.
  15. ^ Shulgasser, Barbara (30 April 1989). "An Unpretty Portrait". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  16. ^ a b c Charles Higham In and Out of Hollywood: A Biographer's Memoir, pp. ??
  17. ^ Hirsch, Foster (1 July 1984). "Four Stars in Long Shot". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  18. ^ "Paying Tribute to Errol Flynn's Controversial Biographer". www.adweek.com. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
  19. ^ "A scourge of Hollywood and Nazis". 6 May 2012. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  20. ^ a b Higham, Charles (17 April 2000). "The missing Errol Flynn file". New Statesman. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  21. ^ Dietz, Lawrence S. (20 April 1980). "Unmasking An Actor". The New York Times. pp. 94, 102. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  22. ^ Wolcott, James (15 May 1980). "In Like Flynn". New York Review of Books. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  23. ^ Flynn v. Higham, 149 Cal.App.3d 677 (2nd District Court of Appeal 1983-12-09).
  24. ^ Gary Cooper: American Hero Jeffrey Meyers; Rowman & Littlefield, 2001 - page 346, "Flynn's FBI file does not substantiate Higham's claim which was thoroughly refuted ...," pp. 204-205 on Higham, "Charles Higham, the most unreliable writer on Hollywood politics"
  25. ^ "Le Bulletin du livre". 17 November 1978.
  26. ^ Gussow, Mel (20 June 1976). "Hollywood Is A Four Letter Town". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  27. ^ King, Florence (23 April 1995). "The Matriarch". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 March 2021.