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Peter O'Donnell

 
Actor: Peter O'Donnell
  • Active: '60s, 2000s
  • Major Genres: Comedy, Action
  • Career Highlights: Modesty Blaise, My Name Is Modesty
  • First Major Screen Credit: Modesty Blaise (1966)

Biography

For a time in the 1960s and '70s, Peter O'Donnell bid fair to be the next Ian Fleming, and although he didn't quite get there, he did alright with his best-known creation, Modesty Blaise. Born in 1920, O'Donnell began his writing career in 1936, and served in the British Army's Royal Signal Corps from 1938-1945. He resumed his writing career in 1946 by scripting comic strips, and later wrote for romance and women's magazines. In 1963, at just around the time that Fleming was succumbing to cancer, O'Donnell published his Modesty Blaise comic strip, which went Fleming's James Bond one better -- the Modesty Blaise books were filled with sex and violence, and featured a female protagonist. Raised in a gambling house by a man of many quasi-legal trades, Modesty is a hard-hitting, hard-loving heroine with a libido as big as Bond's and the martial arts skills to match. A series of novels followed in due course, all filled with liberal doses of sex and sadism, and there was a flawed film adaptation made of the character by director Joseph Losey. A proposed television series got as far as the pilot stage in the 1970s, but it wasn't until 2003 that an introductory film, My Name Is Modesty, was made, which may yet get the character to the big screen successfully. Oddly enough, O'Donnell has also written ten very successful romance novels under the name "Madeleine Brent." O'Donnell, who had been looking for someone to take over the writing of Modesty Blaise during the 1990s, retired from doing the comic strip in 2001. ~ Bruce Eder, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Peter O'Donnell
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Peter O'Donnell
Born 11 April 1920 (1920-04-11) (age 89)
London, England
Nationality British
Area(s) writer
Pseudonym(s) Madeleine Brent
Notable works Modesty Blaise
Romeo Brown

Peter O'Donnell (born 11 April 1920 in Lewisham, London), is a British writer of mysteries and of comic strips, best known as the creator of Modesty Blaise, a female action hero / undercover trouble-shooter / enforcer. He is also an historical romance novelist who wrote under the female pseudonym Madeleine Brent.[1]

Contents

Biography

O'Donnell began to write professionally prior to World War II at the age of 16. From 1938 and during the war he served as an NCO in mobile radio detachment (3 Corps) of Royal Signals Corps in 8th army in Persia in 1942. Afterwards his unit was moved to Syria, Egypt, the Western Desert, Italy, and Greece in October 1944.

After the war O'Donnell began to script comic strips, including the Daily Express adaptation of the James Bond novel, Dr. No. From 1953-1966 he wrote for Garth, and from 1956-1962 Romeo Brown (with Jim Holdaway as an artist).

In addition to the comic strips and graphic novels based on Modesty Blaise, O'Donnell published two collections of short stories and twenty novels. He wrote a play which was widely performed in the 1980s, "Mr. Fothergill's Murder," and wrote for television and film. He also wrote for women's magazines and children's papers early in his career.

His most famous creation, Modesty Blaise, was first published in 1963 in comic strip form. For the first seven years, the strip was illustrated by Holdaway until his death in 1970. Enrique Badia Romero then became the artist, and except for a seven-year period (1979-1986) he drew the strip until it ended in 2001.

In 1965, O'Donnell novelized his screenplay for a motion picture version (the final release of which in 1966 used virtually nothing of O'Donnell's original material), which was published as Modesty Blaise. This book was a huge success and O'Donnell would publish a dozen more novels and short story collections until 1996. Kingsley Amis said the novels were "endlessly fascinating"[1] and that Blaise and Garvin were "one of the great partnerships in fiction, bearing comparison with that of Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson." [2]

At the request of publisher Ernest Hecht, he began writing gothic romance and adventure novels under the pen name of Madeleine Brent. The novels are not a series, but feature a variety of strong female protagonists. They are written in first person, take place in the late Victorian era, and although every protagonist has connections to England, part of each book is set in various locations around the world—including China, Australia, Afghanistan, and Mexico. Identity—the need to discover who she really is—is often a major part of the protagonist's struggle.

In 2001, O'Donnell retired from writing the Modesty Blaise comic strip and is said to have retired from full-time writing. Since 2003 he has been writing the introductions for a series of Modesty Blaise comic strip reprint volumes published by Titan Books. He was also interviewed by director Quentin Tarantino for a special feature included on the DVD release of the 2002 film My Name Is Modesty, which was based on his creation.

O'Donnell is on record as stating it is his wish that no one else write any future Modesty Blaise stories, but it remains to be seen whether this will hold true.

In 2007, working with young women students at Bullers Wood and Newstead Wood schools, he established an official Web site, Modesty Blaise, Ltd.

References

  1. ^ Kingsley Amis letter
  2. ^ The Silver Mistress, Pan paperback edition, London, 1975.

Bibliography

The Modesty Blaise book series consists of:

O'Donnell has also written romance books and television (Take a Pair of Private Eyes) and movie (Revenge of She) scripts.

"Mr. Fothergill's Murder" first opened on 25 October 1982 at the Duke of York theatre, London, and was published by the English Theatre Guild. Among others, it was performed at the English Theatre of Hamburg in the 1987-88 season.

His other famous books are historical romances written under the pseudonym Madeleine Brent. The fact that Brent was O'Donnell was not made public until after the publication of the last of the Brent books.

Books written under the name Madeleine Brent:

  • Tregaron's Daughter (1971)
  • Moonraker's Bride (1973)
  • Kirkby's Changeling (1975) (also as Stranger at Wildings)
  • Merlin's Keep (1977)
  • The Capricorn Stone (1979)
  • The Long Masquerade (1981)
  • A Heritage of Shadows (1983)
  • Stormswift (1984)
  • Golden Urchin (1986)

References

External links


 
 
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Actor. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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