The Full Wiki

More info on Simon Blumenfeld

Simon Blumenfeld: Map

  

Wikipedia article:

Map showing all locations mentioned on Wikipedia article:

Simon Blumenfeld (25 November 190713 April 2005) was a Jewish columnist, author, playwright, theatre critic, editor and communist.

Although he described himself as Jewish, he was born to a family of Sicilian refugees, who eventually settled in Whitechapelmarker, in the East End of Londonmarker. During World War II he served in the Royal Army Ordnance Corps, before becoming a scriptwriter for Stars in Battledess.

At the end of the war he founded the entertainment magazine Band Wagon, with Norman Kark. He adopted a number of pseudonyms, including Sidney Vauncez (the Yiddish word for moustache), CV Curtis, and Peter Simon for his writing. He founded the Weekly Sporting Review, which collapsed when sued for libel by the managers of Tommy Steele; and then Record Mirror with Benny Green.

Simon Blumenfeld died at Barnet General Hospitalmarker at the age of 97, on 13 April 2005. Blumenfeld continued writing up until his death, and appeared in the Guinness Book of Records, as the World's Oldest Columnist. He was cremated at Golders Green Crematoriummarker, where a memorial plaque remains in the 'communist corner'.

Works

Novels
  • Jew Boy (The Iron Garden, 1932)
  • 'Western' novels, under the pseudonym Huck Messer (Yiddish: carving knife)
  • Phineas Kahn: Portrait of an Immigrant (1937), reprinted 1987 with an introduction by Steven Berkhoff
  • Doctor of the Lost (1938)
Plays
  • The Battle of Cable Street
Editor and columist


Notes

References




Embed code:






Got something to say? Make a comment.
Your name
Your email address
Message