Deborah Moggach

Deborah Moggach
Born Deborah Hough
(1948-06-28) 28 June 1948
Occupation Novelist, Screenwriter
Genre Contemporary, Historical
Website
www.deborahmoggach.com

Deborah Moggach (born Deborah Hough; 28 June 1948) is an English writer. She has written eighteen novels including The Ex-Wives, Tulip Fever, These Foolish Things which was made into the hit movie The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel and Heartbreak Hotel.

Biography

Early life and career

Moggach is one of four daughters of writers Charlotte Hough (née Woodyadd) and Richard Hough. Moggach was brought up in Hertfordshire and London, and was educated at Camden School for Girls and Queen's College, London. She graduated from the University of Bristol in 1971 with a degree in English and trained as a teacher before going to work at the Oxford University Press. She lived in Pakistan for two years in the mid 1970s and in the United States.

Novelist

Most of her novels are contemporary, tackling family life, divorce, children and the confusions and disappointments of relationships. She has an ear for comedy but has also written a dark thriller set in America, The Stand-In; a bleak story of incest set near London Heathrow Airport, Porky; and a novel pitting Muslim versus English family values, Stolen.

Her two historical novels are Tulip Fever, set in Vermeer’s Amsterdam, and In The Dark, set in a boarding house during the First World War. Her latest novel, Something To Hide, is set in Beijing, Texas, London and West Africa. The Indian subcontinent, too, has featured frequently in her work.

Screenwriter

She has adapted many of her novels as TV dramas and has also written acclaimed adaptations of other people’s work, among them Nancy Mitford’s Love in a Cold Climate, for instance, and The Diary of Anne Frank. Her script of the film Pride and Prejudice, starring Keira Knightley, was nominated for a BAFTA award, and Goggle-Eyes, from Anne Fine’s novel, won a Writers Guild Award. These Foolish Things, her comic novel about elderly people moving to India to obtain affordable care, was made into the successful film The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel. Tulip Fever has also been made into a film.

Other work

Her other work includes a great deal of journalism, a stage play and two collections of short stories.

Honours

In 2005 she was awarded an honorary doctorate by the University of Bristol; she is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, a former Chair of the Society of Authors and was on the executive committee of PEN.

Personal life

At Oxford University Press she met her husband Tony, from whom she is now divorced. For ten years, her partner was the cartoonist Mel Calman.[1] After his death in 1994, she lived for seven years with Hungarian painter Csaba Pasztor. She currently lives in the Welsh border town of Presteigne with the husband she married in 2014, Mark Williams, a journalist, editor and magazine publisher. They also have a maisonette in Kentish Town, north London.

She has two adult children: Tom, a teacher, and Lottie, a journalist and novelist. In 1985 her mother was sent to prison for helping a terminally ill friend kill herself.[2] Moggach is a patron of Dignity in Dying and campaigns for a change in the law on assisted suicide.[3]

Works

Novels

Short story collections

Screenplays

Teleplays

Stage play

References

  1. http://www.lambiek.net/calman_mel.htm
  2. Sabine Durrant. "Deborah Moggach talks to Sabine Durrant about her mother's dementia". the Guardian. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  3. "Patrons - Dignity in Dying". Dignity in Dying. Retrieved 5 June 2015.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, February 21, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.