English novelist, short-story writer, playwright and journalist,
whose novels treat moral issues in the context of political settings.
Greene is one of the most widely read novelist of the 20th-century, a
superb storyteller. Adventure and suspense are constant elements in his
novels and many of his books have been made into successful films.
Although Greene was a candidate for the Nobel Prize for Literature
several times, he never received the award. "The main
characters in a novel must necessarily have some kinship to the author,
they come out of his body as a child comes from the womb, then the
umbilical cord is cut, and they grow into independence. The more the
author knows of his own character the more he can distance himself from
his invented characters and the more room they have to grow in."
(Graham Greene in Ways of Escape, 1980) Graham Greene was born
in Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire, as the son of Charles Greene and Marion
Raymond Greene, a first cousin of the author Robert Louis Stevenson.
Greene's father had a poor academic record but became the headmaster of
Berkhamsted School, following Dr. Thomas Fry. Charles Greene had a
brilliant intellect. Originally he had intended to become a barrister.
However, he found that he had liking for teaching and he decided to
stay at Berkhamsted. Often his history lessons were less lessons than
comments on the crack-up of Liberalism. His brother Graham ended his
career as Permanent Secretary at the Admiralty. Greene was
educated at Berkhamstead School and Balliol College, Oxford. He had a
natural talent for writing, and during his three years at Balliol, he
published more than sixty poems, stories, articles and reviews, most of
which appeared in the student magazine Oxford Outlook and in the Weekly
Westminster Gazette. In 1926 he converted to Roman Catholicism, later
explaining that "I hand to find a religion... to measure my evil
against." When critics started to study the religious faith in his
work, Greene complained that he hated the term 'Catholic novelist'. In
1926 Geene moved to London. He worked for the Times of London
(1926-30), and for the Spectator, where he was a film critic and a
literary editor until 1940. In 1927 he married Vivien Dayrell-Browning.
After the collapse of their marriage, he had several relationships,
among others in the 1950s with the Swedish actress Anita Björk, whose
husband writer Stig Dagerman had committed suicide. During the 1920s
and 1930s Greene had, according to his own private reckoning, some sort
of of relationship with no less than forty-seven prostitutes. In 1938
Greene began an affair with Dorothy Glover, a theatre costume designer;
they were closely involved with each other until the late 1940s. She
started a career as a book illustrator under the name 'Dorothy Craigie'
and wrote children's books of her own, among them Nicky and Nigger and
the Pirate (1960). During World War II Greene worked "in a
silly useless job" as he later said, in an intelligence capacity for
the Foreign Office in London, directly under Kim Philby, a future
defector to the Soviet Union. One mission took Greene to West Africa,
but he did not find much excitement in his remote posting - "This is
not a government house, and there is no larder: there is also a plague
of house-flies which come from the African bush lavatories round the
house," he wrote to London. Greene returned to England in 1942. After
the war he travelled widely as a free-lance journalist, and lived long
periods in Nice, on the French Riviera. With his anti-American
comments, Greene gained access to such Communist leaders as Fidel
Castro and Ho Chi Minh, but the English writer Evelyn Waugh, who knew
Greene well, assured in a letter to his friend that the author "is a
secret agent on our side and all his buttering up of the Russians is
'cover'." Greene's agent novels were partly based on his own
experiences in the British foreign office in the 1940s and his lifelong
ties with SIS. As an agent and a writer Greene is a link in the long
tradition from Christopher Marlowe, Ben Johnson and Daniel Defoe to the
modern day writers John Le Carré, John Dickson Carr, Somerset Maugham,
Alec Waugh and Ted Allbeury. Greene's uncle Sir William Graham Greene
helped to establish the Naval Intelligence Department, and his oldest
brother, Herbert, served as a spy for the Imperial Japanese Navy in the
1930s. Graham's younger sister, Elisabeth, joined MI6, and recruited
his Graham into the regular ranks of the service. His old friend,
Philby, Greene met again in the late 1980s in Moscow. Greene
received numerous honours from around the world, and published two
volumes of autobiography, A SORT OF LIFE (1971), WAYS OF ESCAPE (1980),
and the story of his friendship with Panamanian dictator General Omar
Torrijos. - Greene died in Vevey, Switzerland, on April 3, 1991. In the
service the priest declared, "My faith tells me that he is now with
God, or on the way there." Two days before his death Greene signed a
note that gave his approval to Norman Sherry to complete an authorized
biography. The first part of the book appeared in 1989. As a
writer Greene was very prolific and versatile. He wrote five dramas and
screenplays for several films based on his novels. The Third Man (1949)
was developed from a single sentence: "I had paid my last farewell to
Harry a week ago, when his coffin was lowered into the frozen February
ground, so that it was incredulity that I saw him pass by, without a
sign of recognition, among the host of strangers in the Strand." To do
research for the film, Greene went to Vienna, where a reported told him
about the black market trade in watered-down penicillin. With the
£9,000 he had received from Alexander Korda, he bough a yacht and a
villa in Anacapri. Later he portryed Korda in LOSER TAKES ALL (1955) -
he was Dreuther, the business tycoon. In the 1930s and early
1940s he wrote over five hundred reviews of books, films, and plays,
mainly for The Spectator. Greene's film reviews are still worth reading
and often better than the films he praised or slashed. Hitchcock's
"inadequate sense of reality" irritated Greene, he compared Greta Garbo
to a beautiful Arab mare, and gave a warm welcome to a new star, Ingrid
Bergman. When Hitchcock had troubles with the screenplay of I Confess
(1953), Greene refused to help the director, saying he was interested
in adapting only his own stories for the screen. In the story a priest
is wrongfully accused of a murder. Although Greene knew that some
critics considered his novels entertainment, his own models were Henry
James, Joseph Conrad, and Ford Madox Ford. In his personal library was
a large collection of James's work. Greene's first published
book was BABBLING APRIL (1925), a collection of poetry. It was followed
by two novels in the style of Joseph Conrad. The title for THE MAN
WITHIN (1929) was taken from Sir Thomas Browne's (1605-1682) "There's
another man within me that's angry with me." Greene started to write it
after an operation for appending on his sick leave from The Times. The
film version of the book, starring Michael Redgrave and Richard
Attenborough, was made in 1947. Greene received a letter from Istanbul
in which the film was praised for its daring homosexuality. "In
Stamboul Train for the first and last time in my life I deliberately
set out to write a book to please, one which with luck might be made
into a film. The devil looks after his own and I succeeded in both
aims, though the film rights seemed at the time an unlikely dream, for
before I had completed the book, Marlene Dietrich had appeared in
Shanghai Express, the English had made Rome Express, and even the
Russians had produced their railway film, Turksib. My film came last
and was far and away the worst, though not so bad as a later television
production by the BBC." (from Introduction, in Stamboul Train, 1974) After
the unsuccessful attempts as a novelist, Greene was about to abandon
writing. His first popular success was STAMBOUL TRAIN (1932), a
thriller with a topical and political flavour. Greene wrote it
deliberately to please his readers and to attract filmmakers. One of
its characters, Quin Savory, was said to be a parody of J.B. Priestley
- Greene depicted nastily the writer as a sex offender. Priestley had
just published a novel, which led some reviewers to compare him with
Dickens. In Greene's story Savory was a popular novelist in the manner
of Dickens. Next year he attacked another well-loved writer, Beatric
Potter, in an article called 'Beatrix Potter: A Critical Estimate'.
Also the American actress, Shirley Temple, aged nine, got her share
when Greene wrote in the magazine Night and Day that "her admirers -
middle-aged men and clergymen - respond to her dubious coquetry, to the
sight of her well-shaped and desirable little body, packed with
enormous vitality..." This time Greene had to pay for his remark. THE
CONFIDENTIAL AGENT (1939) is a problematic work. In it the mysterious
Forbes/Furstein, a rich Jew, plans to destroy traditional English
culture from within. However, in 1981 the author was invited to Israel
and awarded the Jerusalem Prize. He had visited Israel in 1967 for the
first time, and spent some of the time lying against a sand dune under
Egyptian fire, and thinking that the Six Day War "was a bit of
misnomer. The war was too evidently still in progress." Greene's
religious convictions did not become overtly apparent in his fiction
until THE BRIGHTON ROCK (1938), which depicted a teenage gangster
Pinkie with a kind of demonic spirituality. Religious themes were
explicit in the novels THE POWER AND THE GLORY (1940), THE HEART OF THE
MATTER (1948), which Greene characterized as "a success in the great
vulgar sense of that term," and THE END OF THE AFFAIR (1951), which
established Greene's international reputation. The story, partly based
on Greene's own experiences, was about a lover, who is afraid of loving
and being loved. These novels were compared with the works of such
French Catholic writers as Georges Bernanos and François Mauriac. "At a
stroke I found myself regarded as a Catholic author in England, Europe
and America - the last title to which I had ever aspired," Greene later
complained. Greene returned constantly to the problem of grace. In his review of
The Heart of the Matter George Orwell attacked Greene's concept of 'the
sanctified sinner': "He appears to share the idea, which has been
floating around ever since Baudelaire, that there is something rather
distingué in being damned; Hell is a sort of high-class nightclub,
entry to which is reserved for Catholics only." The novel was set in
Sierra Leone where the author had spent a miserable period during the
war. Major Scobie, the hero of the story, dies saying: 'Dear God, I
love...' The rest is silence. The End of the Affair was drew
partly on Greene's affair with Catherine Walston, whom he had met in
1946. She was married to one of the richest men in England, Henry
Walston, a prominent supporter of the Labour Party. Catherine was the
mother of five children. Greene's relationship with her continued over
ten years and produced another book, AFTER TWO YEARS (1949), which was
printed 25 copies. Most of them were later destroyed. In The End of the
Affair Catherine was 'Sarah Miles' and the writer himself the popular
novelist 'Maurice Bendix', who narrates the story and tries to
understand why Sarah left him. Maurice discovers that when he was
injured in a bomb blast during the war, Sarah promised God that she
would end the affair if Maurice is saved. Sarah dies of a pneumonia.
Maurice's response to his divine rival is: "I hate you as though You
existed.' The Third Man is among Greene's most popular books.
The story about corruption and betrayal gave basis for the film classic
under the same title. Successful partners on The Fallen Idol (1948) and
Our Man in Havanna (1960), Graham Greene and the director Carol Reed
achieved the peak of their collaboration on this film. "I am getting
terribly bored with... everybody except Carol who gets nicer and nicer
on acquaintance," Greene wrote to Catherine Walston from Vienna in
1948. In The Third Man Holly Martin (Joseph Cotten) arrives in Vienna
to discover that his friend Harry Lime (Orson Welles) has died in a car
accident. It turns out that Lime was involved in criminal activities,
and Lime's girlfriend Anna Schmidt (Alida Valli) suspects that his
death may not have been accidental. A porter recalls a mysterious third
man at the scene of the death. One evening Martins sees a man obscured
by the shadows, who suddenly disappears - he is Lime. The meet and Lime
rationalizes his villainy in a speech at a fairground Ferris wheel: "In
Italy for 30 years the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder,
bloodshed. They produced Michelangelo, Leonardo Da Vinci and the
Renaissance. In Switzerland they had brotherly love, five hundred years
of democracy and peace. And what did that produce. The cuckoo clock."
Major Calloway (Trevor Howard) threatens to deport Anna and Martins
betrays Lime to secure her freedom. In a chase through the sewers
Martins kills Lime, and Anna leaves him after the funeral. - Music,
composed by Anton Karas, became highly popular. "The reader will notice
many differences between the story and the film, and he should not
imagine these changes were forced on an unwilling author : as likely as
not they were suggested by the author. The film in fact is better than
the story because it is in this case the finished state of the story."
(Greene in Ways of Escape) The character of Harry Lime inspired later a
series on American radio, performed by Welles, short stories published
by the News of the World, and the TV series of The Third Man, starring
Michael Rennie. And in Peter Jackson's Heavenly Creatures (1994) Kate
Winslet fantasized about Harry. Greene's ability to create
debate and his practical jokes brought him often into headlines. He
recommended Vladimir Nabokov's Lolita as his 'Book of the Year' in the
Sunday Times and praised the men involved in the Great Train Robbery.
In a letter to the Spectator he proposed a scheme to bankrupt the
British postal system. In the 1950s Greene's emphasis switched from
religion to politics. He lived at the Majestic hotel in Saigon and made
trips to Hong Kong and Singapore. In 1953 he was in Kenya, reporting
the Mau Mau upraising, and in 1956 he spent a few weeks in Stalinist
Poland, and tried to help a musician to escape to the West. In Ways of
Escape Greene told a story about the Other, who called himself Graham
Greene, but whose real name was perhaps John Skinner or Meredith de
Varg. In the 1950s the Other lost his passport in India, and was
sentenced to two years rigorous imprisonment. A decade later he was
photographed in a Jamaican paper with "Missus drink", an attractive
woman. "Some years ago in Chile, after I had been entertained at lunch
by President Allende, a right-wing paper in Santiago announced to its
readers that the President had been deceived by an impostor. I found
myself shaken by a metaphysical doubt. Had I been the impostor all the
time? Was I the other? Was I Skinner? Was it even possible that I might
be Meredith de Varg?" The Asian setting stimulated Greene's
THE QUIET AMERICAN (1955), which was about American involvement in
Indochina. The story focuses on the murder of Alden Pyle (the American
of the title). The narrator, Thomas Fowler, a tough-minded,
opium-smoking journalist, arranges to have Pyle killed by the local
rebels. Pyle has stolen Fowler's girl friend, Phuong, and he is
connected to a terrorist act, a bomb explosion in a local café. The
Quit American was considered sympathetic to Communism in the Soviet
Union and a play version of the novel was produced in Moscow. OUR MAN
IN HAVANNA (1958) was born after a journey to Cuba, but Greene had the
story sketched already much earlier. On one trip he asked a taxi driver
to buy him a little cocaine and got boracic powder. The novel was made
into a film in 1959, directed by Carol Reed. During the filming Greene
met Ernest Hemingway, and was invited to his house for drinks. THE
COMEDIANS (1966) depicted Papa Doc Duvalier's repressive rule in Haiti,
and THE HONORARY CONSUL (1973) was a hostage drama set in Paraguay. THE
HUMAN FACTOR (1978) stayed on the New York Times bestseller list for
six months. In the story an agent falls in love with a black woman
during an assignment in South Africa. The book did not satisfy Greene
and he planned to leave it in a drawer - it hung "like a dead
albatross" around his neck. Interested to hear what his friend Kim
Philby thought of it he sent a copy to Moscow, but denied that his
double agent Maurice Castle was based on Philby. TRAVELS WITH MY AUNT
(1969), which was filmed by George Cukor, took the reader on on journey
round the world with an odd couple, a retired short-sighted bank
manager and his temperamental Aunt Augusta, whose two big front teeth
gives her "a vital Neanderthal air."
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