Frederic Michael RaphaelFRSL (born 14 August 1931) is an American-born British novelist, biographer, journalist and
Oscar-winning screenwriter, known for writing the screenplays for
Darling, Far from the Madding Crowd,Two for the Road, and Stanley Kubrick's last film Eyes Wide Shut. Raphael rose to prominence in the early 1960’s with the publication of several acclaimed novels, but most notably with the release of the
John Schlesinger film Darling, starring Julie Christie and Dirk Bogarde, a romantic drama set in
Swinging London, for which he won the
Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1966. Two years later he was nominated again in the same category, this time for his work on Stanley Donen’s Two for the Road, starring Audrey Hepburn and Albert Finney. Since the death of screenwriter
D. M. Marshman Jr. in 2015, he is the earliest surviving recipient of the
Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay, and the sole surviving recipient of the now retired BAFTA category of
Best British Screenplay.
In addition to his work in film and television, he has written over 20 novels, and a number of non-fiction books, including biographies of
Lord Byron,
W. Somerset Maugham and
Flavius Josephus, as well as a memoir of his time working with
Stanley Kubrick, entitled Eyes Wide Open.[1]
His articles and book reviews have appeared in a number of newspapers and magazines, including the Los Angeles Times and The Sunday Times. He has published more than twenty novels, the best-known being the semi-autobiographical The Glittering Prizes (1976), which traces the lives of a group of
Cambridge University undergraduates in post-war Britain as they move through university and into the wider world. The original six-part BBC television series, from which the book was adapted, won him a
Royal Television Society Writer of the Year Award.[6] The sequel, Fame and Fortune, which continues the story to 1979, was adapted in 2007 and broadcast on
BBC Radio 4. In 2010, BBC Radio 4 broadcast a further sequel in a series entitled Final Demands, with
Tom Conti as Adam Morris, the central character, bringing the story to the late 1990s.
In 1999, Raphael published Eyes Wide Open, a memoir of his collaboration with the director
Stanley Kubrick on the screenplay of Eyes Wide Shut, Kubrick's final movie. Raphael wrote a detailed account of his working with Kubrick, based on his own journals, but upon its publication the book was publicly criticised by several of the director's friends and family members, among them
Christiane Kubrick,[8]Jan Harlan,[9] and
Michael Herr,[10] for its alleged unflattering portrayal of him. Referring to an article by Raphael about his book in The New Yorker,
Steven Spielberg and
Tom Cruise also professed criticism.[11][12]
He married Sylvia Betty Glatt, known as 'Beetle', on 17 January 1955, and they had three children and nine grandchildren. His daughter,
Sarah Raphael, was an English artist known for her portraits. She died in 2001.
CableACE Award for Best Writing a Dramatic Series Based on his short story collection Sleeps Six and other stories (1979) Also directed the episode "He'll See You Now"
^
abFrederic Raphael, Antiquity Matters (2017), "Introduction", p. ix: "I am an accidental classicist. Born in Chicago, Illinois, in 1931, with every expectation of growing up in America..."