Guy McCrone

Scottish author
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroScottish author
PlacesUnited Kingdom Scotland
wasAuthor
Work fieldLiterature
Gender
Male
Birth13 September 1898, Birkenhead, United Kingdom
Death30 May 1977Windermere, United Kingdom (aged 78 years)
Star signVirgo
Education
Pembroke College
The details

Biography

Guy Fulton McCrone (13 September 1898 – 30 May 1977) was a Scottish author active from the late 1930s onwards. He was born in Birkenhead to Scottish parents. After the family returned to their native Glasgow, McCrone was educated at The Glasgow Academy, then went on to read for a degree in Modern Languages at Pembroke College, Cambridge, after which he travelled to Vienna, where he studied singing. Returning to Scotland, he organised the first British performance of Berlioz's Les Troyens and was a founding member of the Glasgow Citizen's Theatre, together with his cousin, the playwright Osborne Henry Mavor.

Glasgow provided the setting for many of his novels, including the most widely read, Antimacassar City, The Philistines and The Puritans, begun in 1940 and which were later published as Wax Fruit: the Story of the Moorhouse Family in 1947, It eventually sold one million copies. These were two sequels, Aunt Bel (1949) and The Hayburn Family (1952).

During World War II, he was an air raid warden.

McCrone retired to the Lake District in 1968, where he died at Windermere on 30 May 1977.

In October 2012, Antimacassar City was dramatised in ten parts by Clara Glynn for BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour, starring Natasha Watson, Ian Brennan, Juliet Cadzow and Robin Laing.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 23 May 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.