Simon Anthony Lee BrettOBEFRSL (born 28 October 1945 in Worcester Park, Surrey, England) is a British writer of detective fiction and a radio producer.
Personal life[edit]
The son of chartered surveyor John Brett and Margaret (née Lee), a teacher,[1][2] he was educated at Dulwich College and Wadham College, Oxford, where he gained a first-class honours degree in English. He is married with three children and lives in Arundel, West Sussex, England.
'So Much Blood,' Saturday Play (also known as Saturday Play: So Much Blood), BBC Radio 4, 1999. The Right Set: Court Manners and Etiquette and Tennis Personalities, BBC Radio 4, 1999. Season's Greetings, BBC Radio 4, 1999. 'The Art of Love,' Afternoon Play (also known as Afternoon Play: The Art of Love), BBC Radio 4, 2000. List of Doctor Who episodes (2005–present) ' Vincent and the Doctor ' is the tenth episode of the fifth series of British science fiction television series Doctor Who, first broadcast on BBC One on 5 June 2010. It was written by Richard Curtis and directed by Jonny Campbell and featured an uncredited guest appearance from actor Bill Nighy. Bill Nighy: For Their Finest. AVC: Many people now know you from film, but you did so much work in TV. So, you’re sitting in fake blood on leather seats in the very hot summer, and it. So originally it was kind of like, you’ve got this major make-up, and you’ve got A-list celebrities that probably don’t want to don that much make-up and be obliterated in the face, so the studio was thinking, we’ll get someone to physically pull it off, and we’ll get an A-list name that we can market with the film that’ll provide.
Brett was the president of the Detection Club from 2000 to 2015. He was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 2016 New Year Honours for services to literature.[3]
Radio and television career[edit]
After his graduation from Oxford University, Brett joined the BBC as a trainee and worked for BBC Radio and London Weekend Television. While with the BBC, Brett produced the pilot episode of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, as well as many episodes of the comedy series The Burkiss Way, as well as the comedy panel games I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue and Just a Minute and radio adaptations of Lord Peter Wimsey. In the mid-1990s, Brett wrote and hosted Foul Play, a radio panel game in which well-known writers of detective fiction were challenged to solve a dramatised mystery. When he moved into television, Brett was responsible for producing End of Part One (1979–80) and the television revival of The Glums (1979), both for LWT.
Brett wrote several sitcoms, including BBC Radio 4's After Henry, No Commitments, Semi Circles and Smelling of Roses. After Henry was later produced on television for ITV. He has written episodes of the BBC radio detective drama Baldi (2000).
In 1987, the Nigel Molesworth character created by Geoffrey Willans was reprised for a four-part BBC Radio 4 series Molesworth. Written by Simon Brett, the series portrayed Molesworth in middle age, still surrounded by many of the characters from his youth. Molesworth was played by Willie Rushton, with Penelope Nice as his wife Louise, and Clive Swift as the now aged ex-headmaster Grimes.
Mystery fiction[edit]
Brett has written four series of detective novels (Charles Paris, Mrs Pargeter, Fethering, and Blotto & Twinks). Most of these novels are in the 'Golden Age' tradition of detective fiction, entertaining the reader through humour, eccentric characters and intricate plot twists. He has also written several mystery plays and some non-series novels, of which A Shock to the System (1984) is probably best known because the filmed version starred Michael Caine as the business executive who takes revenge after being passed over for promotion.
Charles Paris[edit]
To date Brett has written 20 books about Charles Paris, an unhappily separated (but not divorced, more than 30 years on), moderately successful character[4] actor with a slight drinking problem who gets entangled in various crimes, and finds himself unwillingly in the role of amateur detective.
- Cast, In Order of Disappearance (1975)
- So Much Blood (1976)
- Star Trap (1977)
- An Amateur Corpse (1978)
- A Comedian Dies (1979)
- The Dead Side of the Mic (1980)
- Situation Tragedy (1981)
- Murder Unprompted (1982)
- Murder in the Title (1983)
- Not Dead, Only Resting (1984)
- Dead Giveaway (1985)
- What Bloody Man Is That? (1987)
- A Series of Murders (1989)
- Corporate Bodies (1991)
- A Reconstructed Corpse (1993)
- Sicken and So Die (1995)
- Dead Room Farce (1998)
- A Decent Interval (2013)
- The Cinderella Killer (2014)
- A Deadly Habit (2018)
Cast, In Order of Disappearance and So Much Blood were both adapted as serials for BBC Radio 2 with Francis Matthews in the lead role in the 1980s.
Bill Nighy has played Paris in a series of BBC Radio productions. The first, an adaptation of So Much Blood for The Saturday Play in 1999, was recorded on location at its Edinburgh Fringe setting. A Series of Murders followed as another Saturday Play in 2004, leading into a number of half-hour serials which began with Sicken and So Die (2006) and continued with Murder Unprompted (2007) and The Dead Side of the Mike (2008), with So Much Blood apparently happening between the last two serials. These serials have all been updated from the novels, and adapted to deal with continuity problems caused by the adaptations being made out of order in relation to the books, with later adaptations featuring more far-reaching changes to the central mysteries.
Cast, In Order of Disappearance, again starring Nighy as Paris, began airing on Friday 29 January 2010 on BBC Radio 4. From 26 February, its slot was taken for three weeks by an original series from Brett. A three-hour I Did It My Way programme featuring Brett's work was rebroadcast by BBC Radio 7 on Saturday 20 February 2010, including a repeat of A Series of Murders.
This was followed by Murder in the Title (2010) which aired weekly from 22 November to 13 December 2010. Nighy returned to the role in A Reconstructed Corpse (2012). Other recurring cast members include Jon Glover as Charles's agent Maurice, and Suzanne Burden as his estranged wife Frances. On 5 December 2012 a 4-part adaptation of An Amateur Corpse began on Radio 4; Nighy and Burden again played Charles and Frances. A tenth story starring Bill Nighy as Charles began broadcast on 25 June 2014; this 4-part adaptation of Corporate Bodies also stars Suzanne Burden as Frances.
List of radio adaptations with Bill Nighy as Charles:
Saturday plays
- So Much Blood (recorded on location at Edinburgh Fringe), 1999
- A Series of Murders, 2004
Half-hour 4-part serials
- Sicken and So Die, 2006
- Murder Unprompted, 2007
- The Dead Side of the Mic (So Much Blood set between last 2 serials), 2008
- Cast In Order of Disappearance, began 29 January 2010
- Murder in the Title, began 22 November 2010
- A Reconstructed Corpse, 2012
- An Amateur Corpse, began 5 December 2012
- Corporate Bodies, began 25 June 2014
- A Decent Interval, 9–30 March 2016
- The Cinderella Killer, began 2 December 2016
- Dead Room Farce, 23 February to 16 March 2018
- Star Trap, 6 March 2019
- A Doubtful Death, 22 May to 12 June 2020
Mrs Pargeter[edit]
Mrs Pargeter is a widow with a shadowy past who, with a little help from her dead husband's friends, is able to solve uncanny mysteries. The Mrs Pargeter novels include:
- A Nice Class of Corpse (1986)
- Mrs, Presumed Dead (1988)
- Mrs Pargeter's Package (1990)
- Mrs Pargeter's Pound of Flesh (1992)
- Mrs Pargeter's Plot (1996)
- Mrs Pargeter's Point of Honour (1999)
- Mrs Pargeter's Principle (2015)
- Mrs Pargeter's Public Relations (2017)
Fethering[edit]
Fethering is a fictitious village on England's south coast (adjacent to Tarring). It is the place of residence of amateur sleuths Carole Seddon, a retired civil servant, and her neighbour, Jude Nichols, whose origins are obscure. Twenty Fethering mysteries have been published so far:
- The Body on the Beach (2000)
- Death on the Downs (2001)
- The Torso in the Town (2002)
- Murder in the Museum (2003)
- The Hanging in the Hotel (2004)
- The Witness at the Wedding (2005)
- The Stabbing in the Stables (2006)
- Death Under the Dryer (2007)
- Blood at the Bookies (2008)
- Poisoning at the Pub (2009)
- The Shooting in the Shop (2010)
- Bones Under the Beach Hut (2011)
- Guns in the Gallery (2011)
- Corpse on the Court (2012)
- Strangling on the Stage (2013)
- The Tomb in Turkey (2014)
- The Killing In The Cafe (2015)
- The Liar In The Library (2017)
- The Killer In The Choir (2019)
- Guilt at the Garage (2020)
Since 2011, Brett's Fethering series has been published by Severn House.
Blotto and Twinks[edit]
Farcical whodunnits set just after the First World War and featuring the handsome and dim 'Blotto' and his beautiful and clever sister 'Twinks', both from a ducal family.
- Blotto, Twinks and the Ex-King's Daughter (2009)
- Blotto, Twinks and the Dead Dowager Duchess (2010)
- Blotto, Twinks and the Rodents of the Riviera (2011)
- Blotto, Twinks and the Bootlegger's Moll (2012)
- Blotto, Twinks and the Riddle of the Sphinx (July 2013)
- Blotto, Twinks and the Heir to the Tsar (July 2015)
- Blotto, Twinks and the Stars of the Silver Screen (2017)
- Blotto, Twinks and the Intimate Revue (2018)
- Blotto, Twinks and the Great Road Race (2019)
- Blotto, Twinks and the Maharajah's Jewel (2021)
Plays[edit]
- Murder in Play (1994)
- Mr Quigley's Revenge (1995)
- Silhouette (1998)
- The Tale of Little Red Riding Hood (1998)
- Sleeping Beauty (1999)
- Putting the Kettle on (2002)
- A Bad Dream (2005)
- Quirks (2009)
- Murder with Ghosts (2015)[5][6]
References[edit]
- ^Twelve Englishmen of Mystery, ed. Earl F. Bargainnier, Bowling Green University Popular Press, 1984, p. 303
- ^Contemporary Authors, New Revision Series no. 63, ed. Daniel Jones, Cengage Gale, 1998, p. 47
- ^'No. 61450'. The London Gazette (Supplement). 30 December 2015. p. N11.
- ^In Not Dead, Only Resting it is established that Charles Paris is in the character section of the Spotlights Directory (now defunct).
- ^Walberton Players stage Murder with Ghosts
- ^Murder with Ghosts - show report - NODA
External links[edit]
- Samuel French - London, publishers of plays[permanent dead link]
Heart Health
Q. My systolic blood pressure is high in the morning (about 165), but in the evening it drops to below 100. I am taking two blood pressure medications daily and still experiencing seriously low blood pressure at night. What would you suggest?
A. Everyone's blood pressure changes throughout the day, and it's often highest in the morning and lowest at night. You seem worried about the low pressure at night, but that would concern me only if it's accompanied by symptoms such as dizziness or fainting. A systolic (top number) pressure below the normal of 120 is usually not worrisome. In fact, studies show that low blood pressure while you are sleeping predicts low cardiovascular risk.
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