William John Locke
William John Locke | |
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William John Locke
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Born | Cunningsbury St George, Christ Church, Demerara, British Guiana |
20 March 1863
Died | Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist. Paris, France |
Occupation | Novelist and playwright |
Nationality | British |
Genre | Drama |
Spouse | Aimee Maxwell Close (née Heath) |
Children | Adopted Sheila Rosemary Baines |
Relatives | John Locke – Father Sarah Elizabeth Locke (née Johns) – Mother Charlie Alfred Locke – Brother Anna Alexandra Hyde (née Locke) - Half sister |
William John Locke (20 March 1863 – 15 May 1930) was a novelist and playwright.
Biography
He was born in Cunningsbury St George, Christ Church, Demerara, British Guiana on 20 March 1863, the eldest son of John Locke, bank manager of Barbados, and his first wife, Sarah Elizabeth Locke (née Johns). His parents were English. In 1864 his family moved to Trinidad and Tobago. In 1865, a second son was born, Charlie Alfred Locke, who was eventually to become a doctor. Charlie Locke died in 1904 aged 39. His half-sister, Anna Alexandra Hyde (née Locke), by his father's second marriage, died in 1898 in childbirth aged 25.
At the age of three, Locke was sent to England for further education. He remained in England for nine years, before returning to Trinidad to attend prep school with his brother at Queen's Royal College. There, he won an exhibition to enter St John's College, Cambridge. He returned to England in 1881 to attend Cambridge University, where he graduated with honours in Mathematics in 1884, despite his dislike of that "utterly futile and inhuman subject".[1]
After leaving Cambridge, Locke became a schoolmaster. He disliked teaching, but is known to have been a master at the Oxford Military College at Temple Cowley, in 1889 and 1890, and at Clifton College, Bristol in 1890; from 1891 to 1897 he was modern languages master at Trinity College, Glenalmond. In 1893 he published a school edition of Murat, an extract from the Celebrated Crimes (Les crimes célèbres) of Alexandre Dumas père. In 1890 he became seriously ill with tuberculous, which affected him for the rest of his life. From 1897 to 1907 he was secretary of the Royal Institute of British Architects and lived in London.
In 1894 he published his first novel, At the Gate of Samaria, but he did not achieve real success for another decade, with The Morals of Marcus Ordeyne (1905) and The Beloved Vagabond (1906). Chambers Biographical Dictionary wrote of his "long series of novels and plays which with their charmingly written sentimental themes had such a success during his life in both Britain and America.... His plays, some of which were dramatised versions of his novels, were all produced with success on the London Stage" (p. 836).
On 19 May 1911, Locke married Aimee Maxwell Close (née Heath), the divorced wife of Percy Hamilton Close, in Chelsea in London. The wedding was attended by Alice Baines and James Douglas.
Five times Locke's books made the list of best-selling novels in the United States for the year. His works have been made into 24 motion pictures the most recent of which was Ladies in Lavender, filmed in 2004 and starring Dame Judi Dench and Maggie Smith. Adapted to the screen by Charles Dance, it was based on Locke's 1916 short story of the same title that had been published in a collection entitled "Faraway Stories." Probably the most famous of Locke's books adapted to the screen was the 1918 Pickford Film Corporation production of Stella Maris starring Mary Pickford. In addition, four of his books were made into Broadway plays, two of which Locke wrote and were produced by Charles Frohman.
Locke died of cancer at 64 rue Desbordes Valmore, Paris, France, on 15 May 1930.
Bibliography
Books
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Short stories
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References
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- Campbell, C. C., The Young Colonials: A Social History of Education in Trinidad and Tobago 1834 - 1939, The Press of the University of the West Indies (1996).
- Chambers Biographical Dictionary (rev. edn 1984)
- D. C. Browning (ed.), Everyman's Dictionary of Literary Biography English & American (1958)
- "E. O'Brien", Locke, William John (1863–1930), rev. Charlotte Mitchell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press (2004).
- Tibbetts, J. C. "Mary Pickford and the American 'Growing Girl'" (2001), Journal of Popular Film and Television, Volume 29, No. 2, Routledge (2001).
- The William J. Locke Calendar (1914). Compiled by Emma M. Pope - Reference from the British Library (www.bl.uk)
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to William John Locke. |
- Works by William John Locke at Project Gutenberg
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- Works by William John Locke at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)
- William John Locke at the Internet Movie Database
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- Use British English from August 2011
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- Articles with Internet Archive links
- 1863 births
- 1930 deaths
- 20th-century British novelists
- British short story writers
- British dramatists and playwrights
- Alumni of St John's College, Cambridge
- Guyanese people
- British male novelists
- Male dramatists and playwrights
- British male short story writers
- Alumni of Queen's Royal College, Trinidad