Sybille Bedford
Sybille Bedford | |
---|---|
Born | Sybille Aleid Elsa von Schoenebeck 16 March 1911 Charlottenburg, Kingdom of Prussia, German Empire |
Died | 17 February 2006 London, England, United Kingdom | (aged 94)
Occupation | Novelist, journalist |
Period | 1953–2005 |
Sybille Bedford, OBE (16 March 1911 – 17 February 2006) was a German-born English writer of non-fiction and semi-autobiographical fiction books. She was a recipient of the Golden PEN Award.
Early life
[edit]She was born as Sybille Aleid Elsa von Schoenebeck in Charlottenburg, west of Berlin in the Kingdom of Prussia, to Maximilian Josef von Schoenebeck (1853–1925), a German aristocrat, retired lieutenant colonel and art collector, and his German Jewish wife, Elisabeth Bernhardt (1888–1937).[1] Sybille was raised in the Roman Catholic faith of her father at Castle Feldkirch in Baden. She had a half-sister by her father's first marriage to Elisabeth Marchesani, Maximiliane Henriette von Schoenebeck (later Baroness von Dincklage, aka Jacko or Catsy). Her parents divorced in 1918, and she remained with her father, under somewhat impoverished circumstances in the midst of his art and wine collection. He died in 1925, when she was 14 years old, and Sybille went to live in Italy with her mother and stepfather, an Italian architectural student.[2] During those years she studied in England, lodging in Hampstead.[3]
In the early 1920s, Sybille often travelled between England and Italy. With the rise of fascism in Italy, though, her mother and stepfather settled in Sanary-sur-Mer, a small coastal fishing village in Provence in the south of France, near Toulon and Marseille. Sybille herself settled there as a teenager, living near Aldous Huxley, with whom she became friends. Bedford interacted with and was influenced by many of the German writers who settled in the area during that time, including Thomas Mann and Bertolt Brecht. Meanwhile, her mother became addicted to morphine, which had been prescribed by a local physician, and became increasingly dysfunctional.[3]
In 1933, Sybille published an article critical of the Nazi regime in Die Sammlung, the literary magazine of Klaus Mann, the son of Thomas Mann. When her Jewish ancestry was subsequently discovered by the Nazis, her German bank accounts were frozen.[4] At this time it was difficult for her to renew her German passport, and staying in Italy without a valid passport or a source of income carried the risk of being deported to Germany. Aldous Huxley's wife Maria came up with a solution in 1935. Maria is known to have said, on the question of who should marry Sybille, "We need to get one of our bugger friends." Sybille entered a marriage of convenience with an English Army officer, Walter "Terry" Bedford (an ex-boyfriend of a former manservant of W. H. Auden's), whom she described as a friend's "bugger butler",[5] and obtained a British passport.[6] The marriage ended shortly thereafter, but Sybille took her husband's surname, publishing all of her later work as Sybille Bedford.
With assistance from Aldous and Maria Huxley, Bedford left France for America in advance of the German invasion of 1940. She followed the Huxleys to California and spent the rest of World War II in the United States.
Career as a writer
[edit]After the war, Bedford spent a year travelling in Mexico. Her experiences on that trip would form the basis of her first published book, a travelogue entitled The Sudden View: a Mexican Journey, which was published in 1953. Bedford spent the remainder of the 1940s living in France and Italy. During this time she had a love affair with an American woman, Evelyn W. Gendel,[7] who left her husband for Bedford and became a writer and editor herself.[8] In the 1950s Bedford became Martha Gellhorn's confidante. [citation needed]
A Legacy, Bedford's second book and first novel, was published in 1956 and successfully televised by the BBC in 1975. It was described by Francis King as "one of the great books of the 20th century". Evelyn Waugh wrote in a letter to Nancy Mitford, "I wondered who this brilliant 'Mrs Bedford' could be. A cosmopolitan military man, plainly, with a knowledge of parliamentary government and popular journalism, a dislike of Prussians, a liking for Jews, a belief that everyone speaks French in the home..."[9] Though outwardly a work of fiction, it was somewhat autobiographical – it presents a stylised version of her father's life in Germany, as well as some of the author's early childhood there. It was a success and enabled Bedford to continue writing.[10] In her lifetime, three more novels were published, as well as numerous works of non-fiction. In non-fiction she was best known as a travel writer and a legal reporter.[citation needed]
In 1945 she met Esther Murphy, who would become her lover. The relationship lasted only a few years, but they remained lifelong friends.[11]
Bedford spent the 1950s, the 1960s and the 1970s living in France, Italy, Britain and Portugal, and during that period had a twenty-year relationship with the American female novelist Eda Lord.[6][2] In 1979 she settled in Chelsea, London. In 1981 she was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire. She worked for PEN, was a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, and in 1994 became a Companion of Literature. Bedford's final work was Quicksands, a memoir published in 2005. A biography by Selina Hastings Sybille Bedford: An Appetite for Life was published in 2020.[12]
Awards and honours
[edit]- 1993 Golden PEN Award[13]
Works
[edit]- The Sudden View: a Mexican Journey, 1953 – a travelogue. It was republished by William Collins in 1960 as A Visit to Don Otavio: a Traveller's Tale from Mexico, then republished again, as A Visit to Don Otavio: a Mexican Odyssey, by Eland in 1982.
- A Legacy, 1956 – her first novel, inspired by the author's early years and the milieu in which she was raised. With wit and insight the novel traces the overlapping worlds of refined and idle German aristocrat Julius von Felden and the wealthy Jewish Merz family into which he marries. It is set in the south of France, Paris, Spain, Berlin and the German countryside at the beginning of the 20th century.
- The Best We Can Do: (The Trial of Dr Adams), 1958 – an account of the murder trial of suspected serial killer John Bodkin Adams
- The Faces of Justice: A Traveller's report, 1961 – a description of the legal systems of England, Germany, Switzerland, and France
- A Favourite of the Gods, 1963 – a novel about an American heiress who marries a Roman prince
- A Compass Error, 1968 – a sequel to the above, describing the love affairs of the daughter of that work's protagonist
- Aldous Huxley: A biography, 1973 – the standard, authorised biography
- Jigsaw: An Unsentimental Education, 1989 – a follow-up to A Legacy, inspired by the author's experiences living in Italy and France with her mother
- As It Was: Pleasures, Landscapes and Justice, 1990 – a collection of magazine pieces on various trials, including the censorship of Lady Chatterley's Lover, the trial of Jack Ruby, and the Auschwitz trial, as well as pieces on food and travel
- Pleasures and Landscapes: A Traveller's Tales from Europe – a reissue of the previous, removing the legal writings and including two additional travel essays
- Quicksands: A Memoir, 2005 – a memoir of the author's life, from her childhood in Berlin to her experiences in postwar Europe
References
[edit]- ^ Feldkirch in literarischen Zeugnissen
- ^ a b Obituary for Sybille Bedford in The Daily Telegraph, 21 February 2006.
- ^ a b Jane Jakeman: "Funerals in Berlin (and Sussex)", in The Independent on Sunday, 18 February 2000, archived from the original on 30 September 2007, retrieved 25 February 2018.
- ^ Her mother was a German Jew, with some English ancestry. "I don't know to this day the actual percentage or exact provenance of my Jewish blood", Bedford wrote in Quicksands: A Memoir.
- ^ Recounted by Victoria Glendinning in Sybille Bedford: In Memory (Eland, 2007), p. 41.
- ^ a b Joan Acocella: "Piecework. The writings of Sybille Bedford", in The New Yorker, 18 April 2005
- ^ Sybille Bedford: Papers 1911–2001 at the Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin.
- ^ "Evelyn Gendel, 61, Senior Editor With Bobbs-Merrill Since 1952", The New York Times, 20 December 1977.
- ^ Quoted in the author's introduction to the Penguin Modern Classics edition, 2005, p. xviii.
- ^ Author's introduction to Penguin Modern Classics edition.
- ^ "Eluding Magnificent Monuments: The Stylish Lives of Esther Murphy, Mercedes de Acosta, and Madge Garland". bookslut. Retrieved 11 January 2018.
- ^ Reviewed in The Spectator 7 November 2020
- ^ "Golden Pen Award, official website". English PEN. Archived from the original on 21 November 2012. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
Further reading
[edit]- Obituary for Sybille Bedford in The Telegraph, 21 February 2006.
- Louise Carpenter: "Sense and Sensuality", Good Weekend, 16 July 2005.
- Selina Hastings: Sybille Bedford: An Appetite for Life, London: Chatto & Windus, 2020 (ISBN 978 1 78474 113 6).
- Martin Mauthner: German Writers in French Exile, 1933–1940, London: Vallentine Mitchell, 2007 (ISBN 978 0 85303 540 4).
- Schwartz, Madeleine (5 April 2021). "Puzzling it out : the writer Sybille Bedford never pretended that her life cohered". The Critics. Books. The New Yorker. Vol. 97, no. 7. pp. 60–62.[a]
———————
- Notes
- ^ Online version is titled "Sybille Bedford and the unruly art of the origin story".
External links
[edit]- In German: Peter Brugger über "Die Baroness von Feldkirch", biografische Korrekturen, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Bilder und Zeiten, 5 June 2010
- Appearance on Desert Island Discs – 10 July 1998
- Sybille Bedford, 1911-2008 "This site is dedicated to the life and work of Sybille Bedford, writer."
- "Sybille Bedford, An Interview". The Paris Review (Interview). No. 126. Interviewed by Shusha Guppy. Spring 1993.
- "Sybille Bedford", Fellows Remembered, The Royal Society of Literature