Roald Dahl Biography
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Roald Dahl (September 13, 1916 – November
23, 1990) was a British novelist and short story author of Norwegian
descent, famous as a writer for both children and adults. Among his most
popular books are Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, James and the Giant
Peach, Matilda, The Witches and Kiss Kiss.
****
Biography
Childhood
Roald Dahl was born in Llandaff, Wales, on
September 13, 1916, to Norwegian parents, Harald Dahl and Sofie
Magdalene Dahl (née Hesselberg). He was named after the explorer Roald
Amundsen, a great national hero in Norway at the time.
In 1920, when Roald was still only three
years old, his seven-year-old sister, Astrid Dahl, died from
appendicitis. A few weeks later his father Harald died of pneumonia at
the age of 57. Nevertheless, his mother was determined to keep the
family in Britain rather than head back to Norway and live with her
relatives, because of her husband's wish to have their children educated
in English schools.
Because the family still lived in Wales,
Roald first attended Llandaff Cathedral School.
At the age of eight, Roald and four of his
friends were caned by the headmaster after putting a dead mouse in a jar
of sweets at the local sweet shop owned by a loathsome, mean old woman
called Mrs Pratchett. Thereafter he was sent to several boarding
schools, which was an unpleasant experience for him.
When he was 9, Roald Dahl was sent to St
Peter's Preparatory school, a private school in the seaside town of
Weston-super-Mare, which he attended from 1923 to 1929. From 13 he was
educated at Repton School in Derbyshire, where he was a fag (personal
servant) for a prefect, became captain of the school Fives team and
developed an interest in photography. During his years at Repton,
Cadbury, a chocolate company, would occasionally send boxes of new
chocolates to the school to be tested by the pupils. Dahl himself
apparently used to dream of inventing a new chocolate bar that would win
the praise of Mr Cadbury himself, and this proved the inspiration for
him to write his second book for children, Charlie and the Chocolate
Factory.
Throughout his childhood and adolescent
years he spent his summer holidays in his parents' native Norway. His
childhood is the subject of his autobiographical work, Boy: Tales of
Childhood.
Though his mother expected him to attend
university after leaving school, Roald Dahl instead found a job with
Shell Petroleum, which sent him to other parts of the world.
Adult life
After finishing his schooling, he spent
three weeks hiking through Newfoundland with a group called the Public
Schools' Exploring Society. In July 1934 he joined the Shell Petroleum
Company. Following two years of training in the UK he was transferred to
Dar-es-Salaam, Tanganyika. Along with the only two other Shell employees
in the entire territory, he lived in luxury in the Shell House outside
Dar-es-Salaam, with a cook and personal servants. While supplying oil to
customers across Tanganyika, he faced mambas and lions, amongst other
wildlife.
In August 1939, as World War II was
imminent, plans were made to round up the hundreds of Germans in Dar-es-Salaam.
The fifteen or so Englishmen in Dar-es-Salaam, including Dahl, were made
officers each commanding a platoon of askaris of the King's African
Rifles. Dahl was uneasy about this and having to round up hundreds of
German civilians, but managed to complete his orders.
It was soon after this incident, in
November 1939, that he joined the Royal Air Force. After a 600-mile car
journey from Dar-es-Salaam to Nairobi, he was accepted for flight
training with 16 other men, 13 of whom would later die in air combat.
With 7 hours and 40 minutes experience in his De Havilland Tiger Moth he
flew solo, and hugely enjoyed watching the wildlife of Kenya during his
flights. He continued on to advanced flying training at RAF Habbaniya
(50 miles west of Baghdad) in Iraq. Following six months of flying
Hawker Harts he was made a Pilot Officer and assigned to No. 80 Squadron
RAF, flying obsolete Gloster Gladiators. Dahl was surprised to find that
he would not be trained in aerial combat, or even how to fly the
Gladiator.
On September 19, 1940, Dahl was to fly his
Gladiator from Abu Suweir in Egypt, on to Amiriya to refuel, and again
to Fouka in Libya for a second refuelling. From there he would fly to 80
Squadron's forward airstrip 30 miles south of Mersah Matruh. On the
final leg, he could not find the airstrip and, running low on fuel and
with night approaching, he was forced to attempt a landing in the
desert. Unfortunately, the undercarriage hit a boulder and the plane
crashed, fracturing his skull, smashing his nose in, and blinding him.
He managed to drag himself away from the blazing wreckage and passed
out. Later, he wrote about the crash for his first published work (see
below). It was found in a RAF inquiry into the crash that the location
he had been told to fly to was completely wrong, and he had mistakenly
been sent instead to the no man's land between the British and Italian
forces.
Dahl was rescued and taken to a first-aid
post in Mersah Matruh, where he regained consciousness (but not his
sight), and was then taken by train to the Royal Navy hospital in
Alexandria. There he fell in love with a nurse, Mary Welland, who was
the first person he saw when he regained his sight after eight weeks.
The doctors said he had no chance of flying again, but in February 1941,
five months after he was admitted to the hospital, he was discharged and
passed fully fit for flying duties. By this time, 80 Squadron were at
Elevsis, near Athens, Greece, fighting alongside the British
Expeditionary Force against the Axis forces with no hope of defeating
them. Now upgraded to the Hawker Hurricane, in April 1941 Dahl flew one
across the Mediterranean Sea to finally join his squadron in Greece, six
months after becoming a member.
There he met a cynical Corporal who
questioned how long his brand-new aircraft would survive, along with
just 14 other Hurricanes and four Bristol Blenheims in the whole of
Greece, against around a thousand enemy aircraft. 80 Squadron's Squadron
Leader was similarly unenthusiastic about having just one new pilot.
However, he became friends with David Coke, who, had he not been killed
later in the war, would have become the Earl of Leicester.
Dahl saw his first action over Chalcis,
where Junkers Ju 88s were bombing shipping. With just his lone Hurricane
against the six bombers, he managed to shoot one down. He writes about
all these incidents in his amusing and touching autobiography Going
Solo.
He later saw service in Syria and then
worked for military intelligence. He ended the war as a Wing Commander.
He began writing when in 1942 he was
transferred to Washington as Assistant Air Attache. His first published
work, in the August 1, 1942 issue of the Saturday Evening Post was Shot
Down Over Libya, describing the crash of his Gloster Gladiator. His
original title for the work was A Piece of Cake - the title was changed
to sound more dramatic, despite the fact the crash had nothing to do
with enemy action.
He was married for 30 years (1953-83) to
American actress Patricia Neal (The Day the Earth Stood Still, Hud, The
Subject Was Roses, A Face in the Crowd and Breakfast at Tiffany's, a
rare comedy for Neal). They had five children, including author Tessa
Dahl, one of whom, Olivia Twenty Dahl, died of measles encephalitis at
the age of 7 in 1962. Theo, his only son, was involved in an accident as
an infant and went on to develop hydrocephalus: as a result his father
became involved in the development of what became known as the
*Wade-Dahl-Till (WDT) valve, a device to alleviate the condition.
Tessa's daughter and inspiration for the "helpmate" character in The BFG
is model and author Sophie Dahl. In 1983 he married Felicity Ann d'Abreu
Crosland, his former wife's former best friend.
He died of leukemia on November 23, 1990,
at his home, Gipsy House, in Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire, at the
age of 74,and is buried in the cemetery at the parish church of St Peter
and St Paul there. In his honour, the Roald Dahl Children's Gallery was
opened at Bucks County Museum in nearby Aylesbury. Dahl's charitable
commitments in the fields of neurology, hematology and literacy have
been continued after his death by his literary estate, through the Roald
Dahl Foundation. In June 2005 the Roald Dahl Museum and Story Centre
opened in Great Missenden to celebrate the work of Roald Dahl and
advance his work in literacy.
Writing
Inspired by a meeting with C. S. Forester,
Dahl's first published work was Shot Down Over Libya, a story about his
wartime adventures, which was bought by the Saturday Evening Post for
$1,000 and propelled him into a career as a writer.
His first children's book was The Gremlins,
about mischievous little creatures that were part of RAF folklore. The
book was commissioned by Walt Disney for a film that was never made, and
published in 1943. Dahl went on to create some of the best-loved
children's stories of the 20th century, such as Charlie and the
Chocolate Factory, Matilda and James and the Giant Peach.
He also had a successful parallel career as
the writer of macabre adult short stories, usually with a dark sense of
humour and a surprise ending. Many were originally written for American
magazines such as Ladies Home Journal, Harper's, Playboy and The New
Yorker, then subsequently collected by Dahl into anthologies, gaining
world-wide acclaim for the author. Dahl wrote more than 60 short stories
and they have appeared in numerous collections, some only being
published in book form after his death. See List of Roald Dahl short
stories.
One of his more famous adult stories, The
Smoker (also known as Man from the South), was filmed as an episode of
Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and also adapted into Quentin Tarantino's
segment of the 1995 film Four Rooms. His short story collection Tales of
the Unexpected was adapted to a successful TV series of the same name. A
number of his short stories are supposed to be extracts from the diary
of his (fictional) Uncle Oswald, a rich gentleman whose sexual exploits
form the subject of these stories.
For a brief period in the 1960s Dahl wrote
screenplays to make money. Two of his screenplays—the James Bond film
You Only Live Twice and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang—were adaptations of
novels by Ian Fleming, and he adapted his own work into Willy Wonka and
the Chocolate Factory (1971).
Memories with Food at Gipsy House, written
with his wife Felicity and published posthumously in 1991, is a mixture
of recipes, family reminiscences and Dahl's musings on favourite
subjects such as chocolate, onions, and claret.
Many of his children's books have
illustrations by Quentin Blake.
Anti-Semitism
Dahl has been subject to calls for boycotts
in Israel and elsewhere on account of his reputed anti-Semitism. In 1983
he wrote a book review for the Literary Review that was widely
considered anti-Semitic, and Dahl believed it was this that kept him
from being knighted. According to at least two biographers [1] when
defending his review he told a journalist that same year: "There's a
trait in the Jewish character that does provoke animosity . . . I mean
there is always a reason why anti-anything crops up anywhere; even a
stinker like Hitler didn't just pick on them for no reason."
Children's fiction
Dahl's works for children are usually told
from the point of view of a child, typically involve adult villainesses,
who hate and mistreat children, and feature at least one "good" adult to
counteract the villain(s). They usually contain a lot of black humor and
grotesque scenarios, including gruesome violence. The Witches and
Matilda are two examples of this formula. The BFG follows it in a more
analogical way with the good giant (the BFG or "Big Friendly Giant")
representing the "good adult" archetype and the other giants being the
"bad adults." This formula is also somewhat evident in Dahl's film
script for Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.
Children's stories
The Gremlins (1943)
James and the Giant Peach (1961) Made into
a live-action/animated film in 1996.
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory (1964)
Film versions: Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory (1971) and Charlie
and the Chocolate Factory (2005)
The Magic Finger (1966)
Fantastic Mr Fox (1970)
Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator (1972)
A sequel to Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
Danny the Champion of the World (1975) Made
into a live-action film, starring Jeremy Irons in 1989.
The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Six
More (1977)
The Enormous Crocodile (1978)
The Twits (1980)
George's Marvelous Medicine (1981)
The BFG (1982) Made into an animated film
in 1989.
The Witches (1983) Made into a film The
Witches starring Anjelica Huston in 1990.
The Giraffe and the Pelly and Me (1985)
Matilda (1988) Made into a live-action film
'Matilda' in 1996.
Esio Trot (1989)
The Minpins (1991)
The Vicar of Nibbleswicke (1991)
Children's poetry
Revolting Rhymes (1982)
Dirty Beasts (1983)
Rhyme Stew (1989)
Adult fiction
Novels
Sometime Never: A Fable for Supermen (1948)
My Uncle Oswald (1979)
Short story collections
Over to You: Ten Stories of Flyers and
Flying (1946)
Someone Like You (1953)
Kiss Kiss (1960)
Twenty-Nine Kisses from Roald Dahl (1969)
Switch Bitch (1974)
Tales of the Unexpected (1979)
More Tales of the Unexpected (1980)
The Best of Roald Dahl (1978)
Roald Dahl's Book of Ghost Stories (1983).
Edited with an introduction by Dahl.
Ah, Sweet Mystery of Life: The Country
Stories of Roald Dahl (1989)
The Collected Short Stories of Dahl (1991)
Two Fables (1986). "Princess and the
Poacher" and "Princess Mammalia".
The Great Automatic Grammatizator (1997).
(Known in the USA as The Umbrella Man and Other Stories).
The Mildenhall Treasure (2000)
See List of Roald Dahl short stories.
Non-fiction
Boy – Tales of Childhood (1984. An
autobiography up to the age of 16, looking particularly at schooling in
Britain in the early part of the 20th century)
Going Solo (1986). Continuation of his
autobiography, in which he goes to work for Shell and spends some time
working in Tanzania before joining the War effort and becoming one of
the last Allied pilots to withdraw from Greece during the German
invasion.
Memories with Food at Gipsy House (1991)
Roald Dahl's Guide to Railway Safety (1991)
My Year (1993)
Play
The Honeys (1955). Produced at the Longacre
Theater on Broadway.
Film scripts
You Only Live Twice (1967)
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (1968)
The Night Digger (1971)
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory
(1971)
****
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