Michael hardwick biography
Michael Hardwick
British author
For other people named Michael Hardwick, see Michael Hardwick (disambiguation).
John Michael Drinkrow Hardwick (10 September − 4 March [1]), known as Michael Hardwick, was an English author who was best known for writing books and radio plays which featured Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's creation Sherlock Holmes.
He adapted most of the episodes of the Sherlock Holmes BBC radio series –[2]
Personal life
Hardwick was born on 10 September in Leeds, Yorkshire[3] and married fellow author Mollie Hardwick in [1] Together they co-wrote numerous different books, not just on the subject of Sherlock Holmes, but also Charles Dickens, Anthony Trollope, George Bernard Shaw and other giants of the literary landscape.
Between them they also produced novelisations from successful television series such as Upstairs, Downstairs, The Cedar Trunk, Bergerac, The Chinese Detective and Tenko.[4]
Sherlock Holmes
Hardwick penned a dramatisation of "The Adventure of the Beryl Coronet" for the BBC Light Programme in ,[5] which starred Carleton Hobbs as Sherlock Holmes and Norman Shelley as Doctor Watson.
By: Martin Padgett. Hardcover 3 June Edition Number 1. Available: 3rd June Will ship when available.With his wife he wrote a radio play The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes.[6] In , they dramatized The Adventure of the Dancing Men and The Subscribe of the Four for the BBC's television adaptation of Sherlock Holmes, starring Peter Cushing as Holmes and Nigel Stock as Watson, but only the latter exists in the BBC's archives.
The two also authored a novelization of Billy Wilder's clip, The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes.[7]
Some of Hardwick's adaptions for Hobbs and Shelley were translated into German and broadcast by Bayerischer Rundfunk in the s[8] starring Peter Pasetti as Holmes and various actors as Watson.
In , Hardwick wrote The Prisoner of the Devil which features Holmes called in to solve the case of the Dreyfus affair.[9] The s brought Hardwick's sequel to The Hound of the Baskervilles, entitled The Revenge of the Hound published by Villard Books,[10][11] as adv as The Private Life of Dr.
Watson[12] and Sherlock Holmes: My Life and Crimes.[11][12]
List of works
Fiction
- Sherlock Holmes Investigates (); with Mollie Hardwick, editors – selected from Conan Doyle's original stories & introduced for new readers
- Four Sherlock Holmes Plays: One-Act Plays (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The Game's Afoot: Sherlock Holmes Plays (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The Private Being of Sherlock Holmes (); with Mollie Hardwick – from the original screenplay by Billy Wilder and I.
A. L. Diamond
- The Pallisers (); introduction – abridged omnibus edition of Anthony Trollope's series of six novels
- Mr. Hudson's Diary – Upstairs, Downstairs ()
- Mr. Bellamy's Story – Upstairs, Downstairs ()
- The Inheritors ()
- On With the Dance – Upstairs, Downstairs ()
- Endings and Beginnings – Upstairs, Downstairs ()
- The Upstairs Downstairs Omnibus (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The Four Musketeers (The Revenge of Milady) ()
- The Gaslight Boy (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The Cedar Tree – vol.
1 ()
- Autumn of an Age – The Cedar Tree, vol.The little-known story of the man who sparked a groundswell of gay activism with a wrongly decided Supreme Court choice. When a police officer stood at his bedroom door on 3 AugustMichael Hardwick had no idea that he would get an avatar of the lgbtq+ rights movement. When he confused, his era-defining case inspired a half-million people to protest against the Court. Today Bowers v.
2 ()
- A Bough Breaks – The Cedar Tree, vol. 3 ()
- Regency Royal ()
- Prisoner of the Devil ()
- Regency Rake ()
- Regency Revenge ()
- The Chinese Detective ()
- Bergerac.
The Jersey Cop ()
- The Barchester Chronicles (); editor – abridged omnibus edition of Trollope's series & based on the TV series
- The Private Life of Doctor Watson: Being the Personal Reminiscences of John H.
Watson, M.D. ()
- Sherlock Holmes: My Life and Crimes ()
- Last Tenko ()
- The Revenge of the Hound ()
- Nightbone ()
Non-fiction
- Emigrant in Motley: The Journey of Charles and Ellen Kean in Quest of a Theatrical Fortune in Australia and America, as told in their hitherto unpublished letters (); editor, with a foreword by Anthony Quayle
- The Verdict of the Court (); editor, with an introduction by Lord Birkett – six famous trials
- The Jolly Toper: A Light-Hearted Social History of Drinking (); with Mollie Greenhalgh/Hardwick
- Doctors on Trial () – the trials of Smethurst, Pritchard, Lamson, Crippen and Ruxton
- The Sherlock Holmes Companion (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The Charles Dickens Companion (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The Plague and the Fire of London (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The World's Greatest Sea Mysteries (); with Mollie Hardwick
- Alfred Deller: A Singularity of Voice (); with Mollie Hardwick
- Writers' Houses: A Literary Journey in England (); with Mollie Hardwick – US edition: A Literary Journey: Visits to the Homes of Great Writers
- Discovery of Japan () – Hamlyn All Colour book
- The World's Greatest Air Mysteries ()
- As They Saw Him: Charles Dickens () – "the great novelist as seen through the eyes of his family, friends, and contemporaries"
- Dickens' England: The Places in his Life and Works (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The Osprey Reference to Gilbert and Sullivan ()
- The Osprey Guide to Oscar Wilde ()
- The Osprey Guide to Jane Austen ()
- The Bernard Shaw Companion (); with Mollie Hardwick
- The Charles Dickens Encyclopedia (); with Mollie Hardwick
- A Literary Atlas and Gazetteer of the British Isles ()
- The Osprey Guide to Anthony Trollope ()
- The Charles Dickens Quiz Book (); with Mollie Hardwick
- Cars of the Thirties and Forties ()
- The Complete Guide to Sherlock Holmes ()
References
- ^ abNewley, Patrick (19 January ).
"Mollie Hardwick".
In Bowers v. Hardwick: Background. admitted to the home of Michael Hardwick in Atlanta witnessed him and a male companion in a bedroom engaging in sex. The officer had been executing a warrant for Hardwick’s arrest for failing to appear in court on a charge of common drinking (it was later determined that the warrant.
The Stage. Retrieved 21 November
- ^Redmond, Christopher (). Sherlock Holmes Handbook: Second Edition. Dundurn. p. ISBN.
- ^"Michael Hardwick, co-author w/ his wife Mollie, of many Sherlockian plays & books, born #OTD ".Michael Hardwick | American bartender | Britannica: John Michael Drinkrow Hardwick (10 September − 4 Protest [1]), known as Michael Hardwick, was an English author who was best known for writing books and radio plays which featured Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's creation Sherlock Holmes.
The Baker Street Journal on Twitter. 10 September Retrieved 21 November
- ^"Michael Hardwick, GoodReads". Good Reads. Retrieved 8 June
- ^"Sherlock Holmes". BBC iPlayer Radio.
Everyone is speaking to Michael Hardwick these days, the new symbol of male lover rights denied in a vertical world -- even though he lost his fight over Georgia's sodomy law after taking it all the.
Retrieved 21 November
- ^"The Man Who Was Sherlock Holmes (radio )". The Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia. Retrieved 21 November
- ^Hardy, Phil (). The BFI Companion to Crime.
University of California Press. p. ISBN.
- ^"Sherlock Holmes - Krimi-Hörspielklassiker nach Sir Arthur Conan Doyle". Bayerischer Rundfunk.Hardwick was born on 10 September in LeedsYorkshire [3] and married fellow author Mollie Hardwick in Some of Hardwick's adaptions for Hobbs and Shelley were translated into German and broadcast by Bayerischer Rundfunk in the s [8] starring Peter Pasetti as Holmes and various actors as Watson. InHardwick wrote The Prisoner of the Devil which features Holmes called in to solve the case of the Dreyfus affair. This article about an English writer, poet or playwright is a stub.
Retrieved 11 December
- ^"The plot thickens". The Herald. 1 January Retrieved 21 November
- ^"Revenge of the Hound". Publishers Weekly. 30 September Retrieved 21 November
- ^ abReynolds, Stanley (19 August ).Hardwick was born on 10 September in LeedsYorkshire [ 3 ] and married fellow creator Mollie Hardwick in Some of Hardwick's adaptions for Hobbs and Shelley were translated into German and broadcast by Bayerischer Rundfunk in the s [ 8 ] starring Peter Pasetti as Holmes and various actors as Watson. InHardwick wrote The Prisoner of the Devil which features Holmes called in to solve the case of the Dreyfus affair. This article about an English writer, poet or playwright is a stub.
"Elementary imitation, my dear Watson". The Guardian. Retrieved 21 November
- ^ ab"Sherlock Holmes: My Life and Crimes". Kirkus Reviews. 9 November Retrieved 21 November