Wednesday, January 4, 2023

Fay Weldon obit

Fay Weldon obituary

This article is more than 2 years old

Novelist and screenwriter whose tales of women taking control of their own destinies included The Life and Loves of a She-Devil 

She was not on the list.


The novelist Fay Weldon, who has died aged 91, was to an unusual extent the creation of her own extravagant imagination. A polemicist whose opinions shaped themselves around the plot of her latest book, a pragmatist who giggled her way through every sentence, she was mischievous and evasive, yet wilfully and wittily life-affirming. “I long for a day of judgment when the plot lines of our lives will be neatly tied, and all puzzles explained, and the meaning of events made clear,” she wrote in her rackety 2002 autobiography, Auto da Fay. “We take to fiction, I suppose, because no such thing is going to happen, and at least on the printed page we can observe beginnings, middles and ends and can find where morality resides.”

With these lines, Weldon gave a big wink to her future obituarists: catch me if you can, she appears to be saying – there is nothing you can write about me that I have not written about myself, and it is the storyteller who is in command of the meaning of events, insofar as there is one.

It is perhaps not going too far to say that, like Ruth, the “heroine” of one of her best-known novels, The Life and Loves of a She-Devil (1983), Weldon moulded herself into a succession of identities designed to sandbag her against the misfortune of having been raised – literally and metaphorically – in an earthquake zone.

In literal terms, that zone was New Zealand, where her childhood, as the younger of two sisters born during the short marriage of her English mother, Margaret (nee Jepson), and emigrant father, Frank Birkinshaw, a doctor, was periodically rocked by earth tremors. The first struck while Fay was still in the womb, forcing her young mother to flee the city of Napier and take refuge on a sheep farm, where she remained for three months without knowing whether her philandering husband was alive or dead. “Dr Birkinshaw, my father,” wrote Weldon, with that familiar tang of salt in her phrasing, “was too busy with the injured to take care of his young wife.”

Metaphorically speaking, though, the seismic activity echoed back way before her birth. In Auto da Fay, she traced it back to her maternal grandmother’s inability to come to terms with the madness of a daughter (Margaret’s sister, Faith), who tipped into violent psychosis at the age of 17 after being discovered in bed with her own uncle. “It was the shock waves from this tragedy which echoed through the generations to disastrous effect,” she wrote.

Rather than censuring the abusive uncle, Weldon laid the blame squarely with her grandmother, Frieda. “It is only now, as I write this, that I see the pattern. As you’re done by, so you do. All the mothers betrayed the daughters, looking after their own skin first.”

Frieda came from boisterous bohemian stock. She had modelled as a child for the pre-Raphaelite artist Holman Hunt and studied the piano under Clara Schumann before abandoning her career to marry Edgar Jepson, a friend of Aleister Crowley who wrote 73 popular novels with titles such as Lady Noggs Assists and The Reluctant Footman. One of the family’s many faithless husbands, Edgar committed his final betrayal when, at the age of 69, he impregnated his mistress and decided he had to marry her. It was against the backdrop of this family disintegration that Margaret decided to marry Frank, the young medical student from Birmingham, and emigrate with him to New Zealand.

Traumatised by the earthquake and by her husband’s abandonment, Margaret returned to the UK, to Frank’s family in Barnt Green, Worcestershire, and gave birth to her second daughter, whom she named Franklin because she had been expecting a boy, but who was soon known as Fay. “Thus I started out in a state of ambivalence,” wrote Weldon. “I took out library books as Franklin and read them as Fay.”

After one last try to make a go of the marriage in New Zealand, Margaret left for lodgings in a hotel in Christchurch, and began to earn her own living, writing romantic novels under the pen name Pearl Bellairs, borrowed from Aldous Huxley’s novel Crome Yellow. She sent her daughters off to a nearby convent school, where Fay had pashes on girls and became fascinated by the mutilation of saints. “They were beautiful and good, and pain was their reward: I was fascinated and horrified: I knew there was something wrong in my response but not quite what.”

In 1946, Fay, her mother and her sister, Jane, returned to Europe and settled in London, and she won a scholarship to South Hampstead high school for girls. They lived in the basement of a house where her mother worked as a live-in housekeeper. She went on to study psychology at St Andrews University – which she blamed for her argumentative streak – and, after stints as a waitress and a hospital orderly, landed a job on the Polish desk of the Foreign Office propaganda unit, the Information Research Department. There she began her writing career, penning pamphlets that were designed to be air-dropped on Poland as part of the cold war effort.

The Foreign Office was too buttoned-up to accommodate her for long, and she left after becoming pregnant by a singer and nightclub doorman, and deciding that she wanted the baby, but not the father. When a stint running a tea shop (which she claimed was haunted) in Saffron Walden, Essex, with her mother and sister became too much, she launched a letter-writing campaign to potential London employees and landed a job as an agony aunt at the Daily Mirror.

But readers’ problems were not as exciting as the opportunities offered by the new commercial television and before long she was embarking on the heady life of an advertising copywriter. It was a career that was to produce one of the most famous slogans of the 1950s, “Go to work on an egg” (Weldon has said she did not actually write it, but was running the campaign that produced it). Not all her ideas were as successful. “Vodka gets you drunker quicker” was way ahead of its time, while an attempt to get the nation’s housewives to add an extra egg to their Christmas puddings backfired disastrously when she forgot to add sugar to the recipe.

Employment was never going to be straightforward for such a wayward spirit, and when she had had enough of the demands of reconciling single-motherhood with making a living, in 1956 she married a schoolmaster 25 years her senior. Ronald Bateman didn’t want sex himself but was happy for her to see other men, in a two-year union so mind-bogglingly disreputable that, in her autobiography, she resorts to referring to herself in the third person. She only returns to herself after meeting the jazz musician and antiques dealer Ron Weldon, who in 1962 was to become her second husband.

Fay Weldon wrote her first television play while impatiently awaiting the arrival of the first of their three sons. A Catching Complaint was screened in 1966 as an ITV play of the week, with a cast including Derek Godfrey, Hylda Baker and Tessa Wyatt. The following year, she published her first novel, The Fat Woman’s Joke (1967).

From then on she wrote at an industrial rate, turning out more than 30 novels at the same time as continuing a screenwriting career that included the pilot of the TV series Upstairs, Downstairs, and a five-part adaptation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, which appeared faithful to the original while slyly rearranging the marital politics of Mr and Mrs Bennet to make him meaner and her more sympathetic.

Pride and Prejudice was screened in 1980, the same year that Puffball – her novel of pregnancy as a fungal condition – was published and serialised in Company magazine, and the year after she was shortlisted for the Booker prize for Praxis (1978), one of a succession of tales of women transforming themselves to take control of their own destinies in a discriminatory world. The Life and Loves of a She-Devil was televised with Patricia Hodge, Julie T Wallace and Dennis Waterman in 1986, and made into a film starring Roseanne Barr in 1989.

This was the peak of second-wave feminism, and Weldon’s populist and rather witchy novels were making her one of its high priestesses, while her ability to write topically and at speed suited the burgeoning market in women’s magazines. Her 1987 novel The Hearts and Lives of Men was first published in weekly instalments in Woman’s Own.

She was also becoming part of the literary establishment, albeit a grandee who judged prizes more often than she won them. She ascribed this fate to the brevity of her sentences, “which makes the books appear to lack gravitas” – though perhaps equally significant was her acknowledgment that “even editors don’t seem to understand the make-it-up-as-you-go-along school of writing which I inhabit”.

Her make-it-up-as-you-go-along philosophy played an increasingly important part in her public persona as well as her work. In 2001 she scandalised the literary world by accepting £18,000 from a jeweller for a novel, The Bulgari Connection. Far from being sheepish about the deal, she flamboyantly overdelivered, sprinkling more than 30 namechecks into the text, when she had been contracted to mention the firm 12 times.

Always ready to turn out newspaper opinion pieces for a suitable fee, she could be relied on to say the unsayable, defending facelifts, rounding on feminists, on rape victims, on men and – after Ron left her for his psychotherapist after 30 years of marriage – on the confessional industry. “The more we understand each other, the harder it seems to us to cleave to one another for any length of time,” she wrote.

Ron died in 1994 as their divorce became final. Fay remarried within a year and continued writing and making headlines from the home in Dorset that she shared with her third husband, Nick Fox, a poet and one-time bookseller, who became her manager. He was a quiet presence in the background of many a media profile, serving up plates of pasta, and stepping in to temper her wilder assertions, while Weldon gleefully decried the domestic incompetence of husbands. They separated in 2020.

The provocations continued into her old age. Having been baptised into the Church of England at St Paul’s Cathedral in 2000, she was rewarded with two glimpses of the pearly gates while under anaesthetic, and reported that they were double-glazed and in garish colours, which was not very encouraging. In 2006 she published a book of dos and don’ts for the older woman, What Makes Women Happy, which suggested that porn was not so bad. “Porn is sex in theory, not in practice. It just helps a man get through the day. And many a woman, too, come to that.”

In 2017, she threw herself into the increasingly bad-tempered debate between feminists and trans activists over the rights of transgender women, with Death of a She-Devil, a sequel to her earlier bestseller, which saw an octogenarian she-devil trying to sort out her legacy in the tower once owned by her love rival. In order to inherit the family fortune her estranged grandson must change gender – a transformation for which neither he, nor Weldon herself, appeared to have much enthusiasm. True to form, the villain of the piece was not a man at all but the “fourth-wave” feminist who forced him to make the change – a lesbian so convinced of the superiority of women that she did not associate with men at all.

It would be wrong to dismiss Weldon as a publicity-seeking controversialist. Though she could be infuriatingly contradictory, she saw the pain of the human condition out of the corner of mischievous eyes. A member of the Royal Society of Literature, who was made a CBE in 2001, she was generous to other writers. In her knack at identifying and hitching herself to the zeitgeist and her skill at keeping herself in the public eye, she created a template for a writer’s life that seems prophetic. Hers was a prototype “dandelion career” – releasing clouds of creativity and seeing where each spore landed – long before the term was invented by writers two generations younger than her.

She appeared to cruise through old age with an unstoppable momentum, travelling by taxi to publicity events within a 100-mile radius of her home and throwing herself with gusto into her second professorship of creative writing, at Bath Spa University, in 2012, at the age of 81.

She concluded Auto da Fay by asserting that nothing interesting happened to her after she was 30, and that she simply spent the next 40 years scribbling. On her website, she took a more pragmatic tack: “I buried the rest of the autobiography in three more novels, Mantrapped, She May Not Leave, and Kehua!, bringing the story up to this very year. If you are interested, they await deciphering and scholastic enquiry.”

Her son Tom died in 2019. She is survived by her sons, Nick, Dan and Sam, and her stepdaughter, Karen.

 Fay (Franklin) Weldon, writer, born 22 September 1931; died 4 January 2023.

Writer

Flood Warning

written by

2020

 

Death of a She Devil (2017)

Death of a She Devil

Video

author

2017

 

The Life and Loves of a She-Devil (2013)

The Life and Loves of a She-Devil

Video

author

2013

 

Oscar Pearce and Kelly Reilly in Puffball: The Devil's Eyeball (2007)

Puffball: The Devil's Eyeball

4.3

novel

2007

 

Big Women (1998)

Big Women

6.6

TV Mini Series

written by

1998

4 episodes

 

Good Ideas of the 20th Century (1993)

Good Ideas of the 20th Century

TV Series

Writer

1994

1 episode

 

Growing Rich

8.3

TV Movie

Writer

1992

 

Donna Mills and James Read in The President's Child (1992)

The President's Child

5.4

TV Movie

book

1992

 

Rosalind Bennett and Martin Kemp in Growing Rich (1992)

Growing Rich

7.7

TV Series

Writer

1992

6 episodes

 

The Cloning of Joanna May (1992)

The Cloning of Joanna May

6.4

TV Mini Series

novel

1992

2 episodes

 

Action Replay

5.7

TV Movie

writer

1989

 

Meryl Streep and Roseanne Barr in She-Devil (1989)

She-Devil

5.7

novel "The Life and Loves of a She-Devil"

1989

 

Heart of the Country (1987)

Heart of the Country

6.7

TV Mini Series

Writer

1987

4 episodes

 

The Life and Loves of a She-Devil (1986)

The Life and Loves of a She-Devil

8.0

TV Mini Series

novel

1986

4 episodes

 

Mountain Men

TV Series

script

1986

1 episode

 

Jenny Seagrove in A Dangerous Kind of Love (1986)

A Dangerous Kind of Love

9.6

TV Movie

script

1986

 

For Love Alone (1986)

For Love Alone

5.3

early draft (uncredited)

1986

 

Ladies in Charge (1986)

Ladies in Charge

6.2

TV Series

writer

1986

1 episode

 

Time for Murder (1985)

Time for Murder

6.2

TV Series

Writer

1985

1 episode

 

Live from Pebble Mill

TV Series

written by

1983

1 episode

 

Little Miss Perkins

TV Movie

adaptation

1982

 

Nicholas Ball in Life for Christine (1980)

Life for Christine

TV Movie

Writer

1980

 

Leap in the Dark (1973)

Leap in the Dark

7.7

TV Series

writer

1980

1 episode

 

Pride and Prejudice (1980)

Pride and Prejudice

7.4

TV Mini Series

adaptation

1980

5 episodes

 

Entre Marido e Mulher... (1979)

Entre Marido e Mulher...

TV Mini Series

novel

1979

1 episode

 

Killer's Moon (1978)

Killer's Moon

4.7

Writer (uncredited)

1978

 

Shadows (1975)

Shadows

6.9

TV Series

by

1978

1 episode

 

Send in the Girls (1978)

Send in the Girls

TV Series

writer

1978

1 episode

 

Jubilee (1977)

Jubilee

6.0

TV Series

writer

1977

1 episode

 

Ben Kingsley, Rosemary Leach, and Puneet Sira in The Velvet Glove (1977)

The Velvet Glove

TV Series

writer

1977

1 episode

 

Act of Rape

TV Movie

written by

1977

 

Jan Francis in Rooms (1974)

Rooms

7.4

TV Series

writer

written by

1974–1976

3 episodes

 

The Tale of Timothy Bagshott

TV Movie

writer

1975

 

Cathleen Nesbitt, Angharad Rees, and Billie Whitelaw in Ten from the Twenties (1975)

Ten from the Twenties

8.3

TV Series

dramatisation

1975

1 episode

 

Against the Crowd (1975)

Against the Crowd

6.0

TV Series

writer

1975

1 episode

 

Abschiedsparty

TV Movie

writer

1975

 

Marked Personal (1973)

Marked Personal

7.6

TV Series

writer

1974

2 episodes

 

Upstairs, Downstairs (1971)

Upstairs, Downstairs

8.4

TV Series

by

1971–1973

3 episodes

 

Hermione Baddeley and Rosemary Blake in Then and Now (1973)

Then and Now

TV Series

Writer

1973

1 episode

 

Die Geschichte einer dicken Frau

TV Movie

play

1973

 

Armchair 30

TV Series

writer

1973

1 episode

 

Nigel Stock in Owen, M.D. (1971)

Owen, M.D.

6.8

TV Series

script

1973

4 episodes

 

Menace (1970)

Menace

7.9

TV Series

writer

1973

1 episode

 

Phyllis Calvert and Jack Hedley in Kate (1970)

Kate

8.0

TV Series

writer

1971–1972

6 episodes

 

Richard Beckinsale, Freddie Fletcher, Arthur Lowe, Jack Rosenthal, and Paula Wilcox in ITV Playhouse (1967)

ITV Playhouse

7.3

TV Series

writer

1968–1972

3 episodes

 

Thirty-Minute Theatre (1965)

Thirty-Minute Theatre

7.1

TV Series

writer

1966–1972

2 episodes

 

Katharine Blake and Paul Eddington in Suspicion (1971)

Suspicion

TV Series

writer

1972

1 episode

 

Gemengd dubbel

TV Movie

Writer

1971

 

Joanna Dunham and Moray Watson in Trial (1971)

Trial

TV Series

Writer

1971

 

Armchair Theatre (1956)

Armchair Theatre

7.5

TV Series

by

writer

1967–1971

4 episodes

 

The Doctors (1969)

The Doctors

6.8

TV Series

writer

1969–1970

4 episodes

 

Happy Ever After (1969)

Happy Ever After

TV Series

writer

1969

1 episode

 

Scene (1968)

Scene

6.6

TV Series

writer

1969

1 episode

 

The Wednesday Play (1964)

The Wednesday Play

7.2

TV Series

writer

1967–1969

2 episodes

 

George Baker and Siân Phillips in The Sex Game (1968)

The Sex Game

7.3

TV Series

writer

1968

1 episode

 

For Amusement Only

TV Series

writer

1968

1 episode

 

Half Hour Story (1967)

Half Hour Story

7.6

TV Series

writer

1967–1968

2 episodes

 

Donald Pleasence and Betsy Blair in Love Story (1963)

Love Story

7.1

TV Series

writer

1967

1 episode

 

Barbara Jefford and Hayward B. Morse in Trapped (1967)

Trapped

TV Series

writer

1967

1 episode

 

ITV Play of the Week (1955)

ITV Play of the Week

6.7

TV Series

writer

by

1966–1967

3 episodes

 

Thirty-Minute Theatre

Podcast Series

written by

1972–1998

 

Self

White Rooms and Imaginary Westerns

Self

Post-production

 

In Confidence (2010)

In Confidence

8.4

TV Series

Self - Guest

2013

1 episode

 

Piers Morgan in Piers Morgan's Life Stories (2009)

Piers Morgan's Life Stories

3.7

TV Series

Self - Friend

2013

1 episode

 

Breakfast (2000)

Breakfast

5.2

TV Series

Self

2004–2012

3 episodes

 

Brendan Walker in The House the 50s Built (2012)

The House the 50s Built

TV Series

Self

2012

1 episode

 

Ever to Excel (2012)

Ever to Excel

7.5

Self

2012

 

Melvyn Bragg on Class & Culture (2012)

Melvyn Bragg on Class & Culture

7.3

TV Series

Self

2012

1 episode

 

The One Show (2006)

The One Show

3.5

TV Series

Self - Childhood Home Revisit Reporter & Other Guest

Self

2008–2012

2 episodes

 

Living the Life (2011)

Living the Life

6.5

TV Series

Self

2011

1 episode

 

Late Review (1994)

Late Review

6.6

TV Series

Self

2011

1 episode

 

The Foods That Make Billions (2010)

The Foods That Make Billions

8.6

TV Mini Series

Self - Author and Former Advertising Copywriter

2010

1 episode

 

Matthew Wright in The Wright Stuff (2000)

The Wright Stuff

4.4

TV Series

Self - Guest Panelist

2004–2009

2 episodes

 

Ian Fleming and Geoffrey Boothroyd in Timeshift (2002)

Timeshift

7.1

TV Series

Self - Author and Former Copywriter

Self

2003–2008

2 episodes

 

Mariella Frostrup in The Book Show (2006)

The Book Show

7.5

TV Series

Self

2007

1 episode

 

Andrew Neil in This Week (2003)

This Week

6.2

TV Series

Self

2004–2005

2 episodes

 

Davidsen

TV Series

Self - Author

2005

1 episode

 

Daily Politics (2003)

Daily Politics

6.5

TV Series

Self

2004

1 episode

 

Kaye Adams, Nadia Sawalha, Ruth Langsford, and Charlene White in Loose Women (1999)

Loose Women

2.2

TV Series

Self

2004

1 episode

 

TV-Avisen (1965)

TV-Avisen

7.4

TV Series

Self - Author

2004

1 episode

 

That Was the Week We Watched

TV Series

Self

2003

1 episode

 

Readers and Writers Roadshow

TV Series

Self

2002

1 episode

 

Melvyn Bragg in The South Bank Show (1978)

The South Bank Show

7.0

TV Series

Self

1980–2002

3 episodes

 

Ball Breakers on the Box

TV Special

Self

2001

 

Jon Anderson, Bill Bruford, Tony Kaye, Chris Squire, Peter Banks, and Yes in Top Ten (1995)

Top Ten

6.2

TV Series

Self

2001

1 episode

 

Right to Reply (1982)

Right to Reply

TV Series

Self - Novelist

2000

1 episode

 

The 100 Greatest TV Ads (2000)

The 100 Greatest TV Ads

7.1

TV Special

Self

2000

 

Bookenz

TV Series

Self

1999

 

Omnibus (1967)

Omnibus

7.1

TV Series

Self - Novelist

Self - Contributor

Self

1981–1999

3 episodes

 

Question Time (1979)

Question Time

6.6

TV Series

Self

1999

1 episode

 

The London Programme (1975)

The London Programme

9.0

TV Series

Self

1998

1 episode

 

My Favourite Hymns

TV Series

Self

1998–2005

 

Bokbadet (1997)

Bokbadet

6.2

TV Series

Self

1997

1 episode

 

After Dark (1987)

After Dark

7.5

TV Series

Self

1997

1 episode

 

Upstairs Downstairs Remembered: 25th Anniversary (1996)

Upstairs Downstairs Remembered: 25th Anniversary

8.8

Video

Self

1996

 

Samtaler i natten

TV Series

Self - Author

1996

1 episode

 

Jim Carter and Jessica Marshall-Gardiner in The Late Show (1988)

The Late Show

6.5

TV Series

Self

1994

1 episode

 

Arena (1975)

Arena

7.7

TV Series

Self - Interviewee

1994

1 episode

 

Bookmark (1983)

Bookmark

5.3

TV Series

Self

1983–1992

3 episodes

 

Speaking Volumes

TV Series

Self

1990

1 episode

 

Arthur Miller in Borderlines (1990)

Borderlines

TV Movie

Self

1990

 

The Talk Show with Clive James

TV Series

Self

1990

1 episode

 

The Media Show (1987)

The Media Show

5.4

TV Series

Self

1987–1989

2 episodes

 

Fay Weldon möter Kerstin Hallert

Video

Self

1988

 

When I Get to Heaven

TV Series

Self - Interviewee

1988

1 episode

 

Thinking Aloud

TV Series

Self

1987

1 episode

 

Daytime Live

TV Series

Self

1987

1 episode

 

It's My Pleasure

TV Series

Self

1987

1 episode

 

Saturday Review (1986)

Saturday Review

TV Series

Self - Contributor

Self

1984–1987

2 episodes

 

Choices

TV Series

Self

Self - Panellist

1982–1987

2 episodes

 

Did You See..? (1980)

Did You See..?

5.7

TV Series

Self

1987

1 episode

 

Frank Delaney

TV Series

Self

1984

1 episode

 

Hier is... Adriaan van Dis

TV Series

Self - Guest

1984

1 episode

 

Book Four

TV Series

Self - interviewee

1982

1 episode

 

Gyllene snittet (1981)

Gyllene snittet

TV Series

Self

1981

1 episode

 

Paperbacks

TV Series

Self

1981

1 episode

 

Friday Night, Saturday Morning (1979)

Friday Night, Saturday Morning

6.2

TV Series

Self

1980

1 episode

 

The Book Programme

TV Series

Self

1974–1979

2 episodes

 

Read All About It

TV Series

Self

1979

1 episode

 

Going for a Song (1965)

Going for a Song

6.3

TV Series

Self - On-screen Participant

1977

1 episode

 

Archive Footage

Rowan Dean, Rita Panahi, and James Morrow in Outsiders (2016)

Outsiders

2.3

TV Series

Self (archive footage, uncredited)

2022

1 episode

 

Barneys, Books and Bust Ups: 50 Years of the Booker Prize (2018)

Barneys, Books and Bust Ups: 50 Years of the Booker Prize

TV Special

Self (archive footage, uncredited)

2018

 

Bestseller

6.0

TV Series

Self - Author (archive footage)

2003

1 episode

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