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Alexander Waugh (photo: Carey Marks) |
Alexander Waugh, "who throughout his varied career as a composer, columnist and historian bore lightly the weight of his literary inheritance--his father, Auberon, and his grandfather Evelyn were considered among the finest English writers of the 20th century," died July 22 , the New York Times reported. He was 60.
Noting that the Waugh family is one of Britain's greatest literary dynasties, the Times wrote that Alexander "followed their leads in style and attitude, though his oeuvre ranged much more widely. What he lacked in academic or professional credentials he made up for in writerly energy and general learnedness." Trained as a musician, he was an opera critic for the Mail on Sunday and then the Evening Standard. He and his brother, Nat, wrote an award-winning musical, Bon Voyage!, which they produced in 2000 in London.
Waugh went on to write book reviews for the Daily Telegraph. His own books include Time: From Micro-Seconds to Millennia; A Search for the Right Time (1999), a "biography" titled God (2004), and The House of Wittgenstein: A Family at War (2008). He also founded Travelman, a publishing company that specialized in short stories that could be folded like a map, and were sold around train stations for £1. In addition, Waugh hosted the annual Bad Sex in Fiction Awards, presented annually to writers for excellence in overwrought descriptions of sex in their works.
In 2016, he took over as chairman of the De Vere Society, a group committed to the proposition that "William Shakespeare" was actually a pseudonym for the real author of the plays and sonnets, Edward de Vere. When literary historians Paul Edmondson and Stanley Wells published Shakespeare Beyond Doubt in 2013, Waugh countered with his own book, Shakespeare Beyond Doubt?.
Politically conservative and "culturally contrarian," Waugh ran unsuccessfully for Parliament on the Brexit Party ticket in 2019 and opposed vaccine mandates during the Covid pandemic. But he could also be self-deprecatory regarding his positions, observing in Fathers and Sons: The Autobiography of a Family (2004): "My various solutions to the problems which beset the nation are intended as suggestions to be thrown around in pubs, clubs and dining rooms. If the government adopted even a tenth of them, catastrophe would surely result."
Waugh "was by all accounts well-adjusted, at peace with the onus of his ancestors' accomplishments and happy to keep any sibling rivalries on the tennis court," the Times wrote, citing a 2002 Independent article in which he had said: "We're very competitive at tennis, but it doesn't spill over into writing at all. But when it comes to tennis, I want to smash them all to smithereens."