Ivor John Carnegie Brown CBE (25 April 1891 – 22 April 1974) was a British journalist and man of letters.
After graduating from Oxford with top honours, he joined the civil service, but left after two days to pursue a freelance career as a writer. He later joined the staff of The Manchester Guardian as its London drama critic, and subsequently wrote for, and for six years edited, The Observer. He was widely regarded as the leading drama critic of his generation.
Brown was a prolific author; he published more than seventy-five books – some of them compilations of his journalism, and others about words, their origins, meaning and use.
In the entrance examination for the civil service in 1913 he came sixth out of eighty-four successful candidates."Home and India Civil Services", The Times, 24 September 1913, p. 9 Those above him went on to distinguished careers as public servants, but Brown did not. He was assigned to the Home Office, where his career lasted two days: finding himself asked to deal with an application by Staffordshire police for the increased provision of lavatories he wrote his comments and walked out, to earn his living writing as a freelance about subjects of more interest to him. He became involved in progressive politics, and was a conscientious objector during the First World War. He lectured for the Oxford Tutorial Classes Committee, published three novels and two other books: English Political Theory and The Meaning of Democracy and wrote articles for The New Age, an "independent socialist review of politics, literature and art". The Times later described his articles as "trenchant and witty"."Obituary: Mr Ivor Brown, journalist and author", The Times, 23 April 1974, p. 18
On 4 January 1916 Brown married Irene Gladys Hentschel (1890–1979), an actress and later a director. The biographer Philip Howard writes, "her knowledge of the far side of the footlights enriched her husband's criticism". The marriage was lifelong. They had no children.
The Times commented that it fell to Brown to interpret "the great outburst of new and experimental modes of playwriting" that followed the war. His responses to the expressionists such as Karel Čapek, Luigi Pirandello, Elmer Rice and Eugene O'Neill were collected in a volume, Masques and Phrases (1926), compiled from his press reviews. The Times commented that it remains a valuable commentary on a remarkable chapter in the history of the theatre. Brown had his blind spots: as late as 1934 he dissented from the – by then – wide admiration led by F. R. Leavis, F. O. Matthiessen, Cleanth Brooks and others of T. S. Eliot and The Waste Land.Gish, p. 12 He said that Eliot "offers the public the balderdash of his Waste-land (pretentious bungling with the English language?) and immediately becomes a pundit, bestriding the Atlantic".Brown (1934), p. 10 He was equally dismissive of Ezra Pound.Brown (1934), p. 202
In addition to his work for The Guardian, Brown became the drama critic for the Saturday Review in 1923 and was the Shute lecturer in the art of the theatre at Liverpool University three years later. In 1929 he added The Observer to the papers for whom he reviewed. In 1939 he was appointed professor of drama by the Royal Society of Literature and the following year he became as director of drama for the Council for the Encouragement of Music and the Arts the following year.
In February 1942 J. L. Garvin was forced out after 34 years as editor of The Observer because of a political dispute with the paper's owner, Waldorf Astor. Garvin was a Conservative and Astor and his fellow directors wished to give the paper a new political attitude – "more progressive at home, more international abroad"."Ivor Brown", The Observer, 28 April 1974, p. 12 But this was in the middle of the Second World War, and few journalists were available. Astor offered the editorship to a leading civil servant who declined it. Meanwhile the paper was brought out by the efforts of staff from The Economist and an informally assembled team of European emigrés. The directors turned to Brown and invited him to be acting editor until after the war. With the help of his friend Donald Tyerman of The Economist, he "successfully steered the paper on its altered course". He served as editor until Astor's son David Astor officially succeeded him in 1948, after which he continued as the paper's drama critic until he was replaced by Kenneth Tynan in 1954.Cockett, pp.102–104 and 171
Although known for the fluency of his prose, in person Brown could be uncommunicative and unprepossessing. Darlington said of him: "In private life he was a staunch friend and good companion, but because he concealed his kind heart under an undemonstrative, even dour, manner, some people found him alarming. When he emerged or was coaxed from behind this barrier he was human and delightful". His friend George Lyttelton (to whom he dedicated Words in Season, 1961)Brown (1961), p. 5 described him as "a dry wine perhaps, but full of flavour" and his publisher, Rupert Hart-Davis, found him "nice as ever but even more liberally spread with scurf, cigarette-ash and shaving-soap than usual".Lyttelton and Hart-Davis, Volume 3, p. 51 and Volume 4, p. 53 A former colleague wrote:
Brown died at his home in Hampstead, London in 1974, aged 82.
He became famous for his books about words, "agreeable rambles around correct usage and philology, enlivened by literary allusion, quotation, wit, and personal anecdote". Like his contemporaries H. W. Fowler and Eric Partridge he cared not only about precise use of words, but for words in themselves. Howard comments that Brown collected words as others collect porcelain, and was the most good-humoured of prescriptivists, but was nevertheless "incorrigibly convinced that there existed such a thing as correct English, and that it was to be preferred to the other kind".
Manchester Guardian and other papers
Final years
Works
Radio and television
Books
Word series
Individual books
Editor
Notes, references and sources
Notes
Sources
External links
|
|