- William Donaldson
Charles William Donaldson (4 January 1935 - 22 June 2005) was an English satirist, writer, rake and
playboy , author of "The Henry Root Letters".Donaldson enjoyed a privileged upbringing in
Sunningdale ,Berkshire as the son of ashipping magnate. He was educated atWinchester College , and during hisnational service he metJulian Mitchell who introduced him to art galleries. Donaldson discovered prostitutes himself. While studying English atMagdalene College, Cambridge , he was orphaned and inherited a substantial fortune. He spent some of that inheritance supporting young writers such as his contemporariesTed Hughes andSylvia Plath .On graduation, Donaldson became associated with the set surrounding
Princess Margaret, Countess of Snowdon and worked as atheatrical producer . He marriedSonia Avory in 1957 and she bore him his only child, Charlie. However, a sequence ofaffair s followed, including liaisons withSarah Miles and Jacki Ellis, the wife ofJeffrey Bernard . He established himself as a central player in the UKsatire boom of the early 1960s as co-producer, withDonald Albery , of "Beyond the Fringe " (1960), and of dramatisations ofJ. P. Donleavy 's "The Ginger Man " (1959) andSpike Milligan 's "The Bed-Sitting Room " (1963). The pair earned a weekly £2,000 from "Fringe" when the principal performers,Peter Cook ,Dudley Moore ,Alan Bennett andJonathan Miller , were earning only £75.However, he managed, not for the last time, to squander his fortune. Apart from supporting a debauched lifestyle of prostitutes and
recreational drug use , he underwroteBob Dylan 's disastrous British debut at Peter Cook's Establishment Club. He abandoned Sarah Miles forCarly Simon whom he described as "the answer to any sane man's prayers; funny, quick, erotic, extravagantly talented" but this did not prevent him from jilting her once they were engaged. In 1968, he inherited another fortune and marriedClaire Gordon , the couple becoming the epitome of 1960sSwinging London . Donaldson later remembered "Sex, whether in company or not, has been the only department in life in which I have demanded from anyone taking part the very highest standards of seriousness."In 1971, Donaldson left for
Ibiza where he imprudently spent his last £2,000 on a glass-bottomed boat. Before long he was scavenging for food on the beach. Returning to London, he found refuge with a former girlfriend who was running abrothel on theFulham Road . His experiences there formed the basis of his first novel "Both the Ladies and the Gentlemen" (1975).However, it was to be his fictional correspondent Henry Root that made him a final fortune. Root's satirical lampooning of the wealthy, famous and influential was retold in the books:
*"The Henry Root Letters" (1980),
*"The Further Letters of Henry Root" (1980),
*"Henry Root’s World of Knowledge" (1982),
*"Henry Root’s A-Z of Women: "The Definitive Guide" (1985),
*"The Soap Letters" (1988),
*"Root into Europe" (1992), and
*"Root about Britain" (1994).He lived at Elm Park Mansions on Park Walk, Chelsea, from which all the Root letters were sent.
His biographical survey of roguish Britons through the ages, "
Brewer's Rogues, Villains and Eccentrics " (2002) has been described as a triumph of misdirected scholarship.Fact|date=August 2008The phenomenal success of the books, especially the first, enabled Donaldson to resume his chaotic lifestyle and in the 1990s he became addicted to
crack cocaine . He was survived by his third wife Cherry Hatrick.External links
*Obituaries:
** [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,60-1670546,00.html "The Times"]
** [http://books.guardian.co.uk/obituaries/story/0,11617,1514207,00.html "The Guardian"]
** [http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/william-donaldson-754905.html "The Independent"]
** [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/1492841/William-Donaldson.html "The Telegraph"]Biography
*cite book | title=You Cannot Live as I Have Lived and Not End Up Like This: The Thoroughly Disgraceful Life and Times of Willie Donaldson | author=Blacker, T. | publisher=Ebury Press | year=2007 | id=ISBN 0091913861
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