Ernest Gébler
Quick Facts
Biography
Ernest Gébler (31 December 1914 – 26 January 1998), sometimes credited as Ernie Gebler, was an Irish writer of Czech origin. He was a member of Aosdána.
Early and personal life
Gébler was born in Dublin, one of five children of Adolf (or Adolphe) Gébler, a shopkeeper and musician of Czech Jewish origin who had married a Dublin theatre usherette. The family moved to Wolverhampton in 1925. In 1930 Adolf got a job with a Dublin light opera company and Ernest followed the rest of the family there in 1931. Ernest worked backstage in the Gate Theatre in the 1930s. He was first married to Leatrice Gilbert, daughter of the actors John Gilbert and Leatrice Joy, whom he met on a trip to Hollywood. The couple moved to Ireland, got married and had a son John Karl (called Karl by Ernest but John by his mother). They were divorced in 1952, and mother and baby returned to America. In Dublin in 1952 Gébler met future novelist Edna O'Brien, then working in a pharmacist's shop. After opposition from O'Brien's family, they moved to England, married in 1954, and had two sons, Karl (later Carlo) and Sasha, who became respectively a writer and an architect. O'Brien's literary career eclipsed Gébler's after her debut novel The Country Girls in 1960. The couple separated in 1964 and divorced in 1968, with O'Brien eventually getting sole custody of the children. Both O'Brien and Carlo Gébler later wrote about Ernest's cruelty to the family. Gébler returned to Dublin in 1970, and died there in 1998 of a bronchial infection, after several years with Alzheimer's disease.
Works
Title | Type | Year | Notes | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|
He Had My Heart Scalded | novel | 1946 | ||
The Voyage of the Mayflower | novel | 1950 | Historical novel based on the 1620 Mayflower voyage. Sold five million copies. Filmed in 1952 as Plymouth Adventure starring Spencer Tracy | |
She Sits Smiling | play | 1954 | Premièred at the Pike Theatre | |
A Week in the Country | novel | 1957 | ||
The Love Investigator | novel | 1960 | ||
Eileen O'Roon | play | |||
Why Aren't You Famous? | teleplay | 1966 | For the BBC. Adapted from his play Eileen O'Roon. A German version was broadcast in 1969. | |
Where Will I find what will Change my Life? | teleplay | 1966 | ||
Call Me Daddy | teleplay | 1967 | "Armchair Theatre" episode on ABC broadcast 8 April 1967. Edited by Terence Feely and directed by Alvin Rakoff. Won the 1968 International Emmy for Entertainment. Expanded into his novel Shall I Eat You Now?. A German version was broadcast in 1970. Staged at the Project Arts Centre in 1975. | |
The Old Man and the Girl | novel | 1968 | ||
A Little Milk of Human Kindness | teleplay | 1968 | For London Weekend Television | |
Women Can be Monsters | teleplay | 1968 | "The Wednesday Play" on BBC One, 27 November 1968. Produced by Thames Television | |
Shall I Eat You Now? | novel | 1969 | Based on his teleplay Call Me Daddy. Released in the USA as Hoffman, and filmed in 1970 also as Hoffman. | |
Hoffman | screenplay | 1970 | Based on his novel Shall I Eat You Now? | |
A Cry for Help | play | 1975 | Premièred at the Peacock Theatre, Dublin | |
The Spaniards in Galway | play |
Further readings
- Carlo Gébler: **The projectionist : the story of Ernest Gébler, Stillorgan, County Dublin, Republic of Ireland : New Island Books, 2015, ISBN 978-1-84840-457-1