Robert Hichens (writer)
Robert Hichens was an English journalist, novelist, music lyricist, short story writer, music critic and collaborated on successful plays. He is best remembered as a satirist of the "Naughty Nineties".
Biography
Hichens was born in Speldhurst in Kent, the eldest son of the Rev. Frederick Harrison Hichens, and his wife Abigail Elizabeth Smythe. He was educated at Clifton College, the Royal College of Music and early on had a desire to be a musician. Later in life he would be a music critic on the World, taking the place of George Bernard Shaw. He studied at the London School of Journalism. Hichens was a great traveller. Egypt was one of his favourite destinations – he first went there in the early 1890s for his health. For most of his later life he lived outside England, in Switzerland and the Riviera. Hichens was a homosexual; he never married.Hichens first novel, The Coastguard's Secret, was written when he was only seventeen. He first became well known among the reading public with The Green Carnation, a satire of Hichens's friends Oscar Wilde and Lord Alfred Douglas; since the work made clear Wilde was homosexual it was withdrawn from publication in 1895, but not before helping set the stage for Wilde's public disgrace and downfall.
Hichens was also friends with several other writers, including E. F. Benson and Reggie Turner, as well as the composer Maude Valérie White.
Hichens's first big success was An Imaginative Man ; set in the city of Cairo, Egypt, a place which fascinated Hichens, it is a study of insanity, in which the hero has a number of sexual adventures and then smashes his head against the Great Sphinx. Other early fiction includes The Folly of Eustace, a collection of stories including some supernatural; Flames, a story resembling Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde; The Londoners, a satire about decadent London; The Slave, a fantasy about an amazing emerald; Tongues of Conscience, a collection of five horror stories including "How Love Came to Professor Guildea". "How Love Came to Professor Guildea" was not initially well-received, with Frederic Taber Cooper calling the story "a hideous bit of morbidity" and Edmund Wilson dismissing the story as "trash". Later reviews of the story were more positive; J. A. Cuddon called it "outstanding" and compared it with "The Horla" by Guy de Maupassant and "The Beckoning Fair One" by Oliver Onions. Brian Stableford described the story as an "authentic masterpiece of horror fiction", and Jason Colavito called it "possibly one of the greatest stories of its age".
Hichens's Felix, is an early fictional treatment of hypodermic morphine addiction, while The Garden of Allah sold well internationally, and was made into a film three times.
Hichens published his memoirs in 1947, Yesterday.
Selected bibliography
Novels- The Coast Guard's Secret
- The Green Carnation – at Wikisource
- An Imaginative Man
- The Slave
- The Garden of Allah, elaborately presented as a play in New York City and filmed thrice, in 1916, 1927 and 1936
- The Woman with the Fan
- The Call of the Blood
- Barbary Sheep
- A Spirit in Prison
- Bella Donna, in which Alla Nazimova starred on Broadway in 1912, filmed in 1915, in 1923 with Pola Negri and in 1934 with Mary Ellis and Conrad Veidt.
- The Fruitful Vine
- The Dweller on the Threshold
- The Way of Ambition
- In the Wilderness
- Snake-Bite
- Mrs. Marden
- Spirit of the Time
- December Love
- The Last Time
- After the Verdict
- The Bracelet
- The First Lady Brendon
- Mortimer Brice
- The Paradine Case – film version directed by Alfred Hitchcock in 1947
- The Power To Kill
- The Pyramid
- The Sixth of October
- Daniel Airlie
- Secret Information
- The Journey Up
- That Which Is Hidden
- The Million
- A New Way of Life
- Veils
- Harps in the Wind
- Beneath the Magic
- Bye-Ways
- Snake-Bite: And Other Stories
- The Return of the Soul and Other Stories
- The Spell of Egypt
- Yesterday
- Great Short Stories of Detection, Mystery and Horror 1st Series
- Alfred Hitchcock Presents
- The 2nd Fontana Book of Great Ghost Stories
- Medley Macabre
- Black Water
- I Shudder at Your Touch
- 4 Classic Ghostly Tales
- "How Love Came to Professor Guildea"
- "Demetriadi's Dream"
Plays
- The Law of the Sands
- Black Magic
Filmography
- Bella Donna, directed by Edwin S. Porter and Hugh Ford
- The Garden of Allah, directed by Colin Campbell
- Barbary Sheep, directed by Maurice Tourneur
- Flames, directed by Maurice Elvey
- The Slave, directed by Arrigo Bocchi
- Hidden Lives, directed by Maurits Binger and B. E. Doxat-Pratt
- The Call of the Blood, directed by Louis Mercanton
- The Woman with the Fan, directed by René Plaissetty
- The Fruitful Vine, directed by Maurice Elvey
- The Voice from the Minaret, directed by Frank Lloyd
- Bella Donna, directed by George Fitzmaurice
- The Lady Who Lied, directed by Edwin Carewe
- The Garden of Allah, directed by Rex Ingram
- After the Verdict, directed by Henrik Galeen
- Bella Donna, directed by Robert Milton
- The Garden of Allah, directed by Richard Boleslawski
- Temptation, directed by Irving Pichel
- The Paradine Case, directed by Alfred Hitchcock
- Call of the Blood, directed by John Clements and Ladislao Vajda