Andrea Newman


Andrea Newman was an English author. Her name was a pseudonym, she chose not to make public her birth name.
Newman was born in Dover, Kent, the daughter of a reporter on the Kentish Mercury and a mother who worked in an office during World War II. An only child, she taught at a grammar school after graduating with a degree in English from the Westfield College, University of London. A film version of her novel Three into Two Won't Go, with a screenplay by Edna O'Brien, was released in 1969. It starred Rod Steiger and Claire Bloom, and was directed by Peter Hall.
She adapted one of her short stories "The Night of the Stag" for The Frighteners, an anthology series produced by London Weekend Television. Helen: A Woman of Today was another LWT drama recounting the side of a wronged wife for which Newman wrote two episodes. Having been commissioned by Tony Wharmby for both projects, Newman sent hims a copy of A Bouquet of Barbed Wire as a present; the book was by then out of print.
Newman adapted what was her sixth novel. Broadcast from early January 1976, Bouquet of Barbed Wire as a seven-part serial, it had audiences of 20 million. Newman recalled her work in 2010 at the time when it was being remade: "I never set out to shock, just to tell a story about an imaginary family, but I imagine most people would still disapprove of hitting your pregnant wife and having sex with her mother." Its sequel, Another Bouquet, followed in 1977.
Another novel, Mackenzie, was dramatized by the BBC in 1980, starring Jack Galloway, Lynda Bellingham and Tracey Ullman. This adaptation was followed by Alexa, A Sense of Guilt, and An Evil Streak. In 2001, Newman was the writer for the television drama Pretending to Be Judith.
Her other novels included A Share of the World, Mirage, The Cage and A Gift of Poison. Triangles, a book of 15 short stories, was published in 1990. It was remarked that a frequent theme in Andrea Newman's novels was that with the advent of a baby, the family disintegrates.
Newman married Terence Nolan in 1959 while studying at university, though the couple later divorced. She died in London in November 2019, aged 81, after suffering from breast cancer since 2004.