Alexander Evelyn Michael Waugh (30 December 1963 – 22 July 2024) was an English writer, critic, and journalist. Among other books, he wrote Fathers and Sons: The Autobiography of a Family (2004), about five generations of his own family, and The House of Wittgenstein: A Family at War (2008) about the Wittgenstein family. He was an advocate of the Oxfordian theory, which holds that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford was the real author of the works of William Shakespeare.
Waugh was the opera critic of The Mail on Sunday and then the Evening Standard in the 1990s.[4] His books on music include Classical Music: A New Way of Listening (1995)[5] and Opera: A New Way of Listening (1996).[6]
Waugh's biography Fathers and Sons: The Autobiography of a Family (2004),[7] written at the suggestion of Sir Vidia Naipaul after his father died, is a portrait of the male relations across five generations in his own family.[8][9] Described as "breezily irreverent" by John Banville in The New York Review of Books,[10] it formed the basis of a BBC Four television documentary, presented by the author, which was broadcast in 2006.[11] He was the general editor of The Complete Works of Evelyn Waugh (43 volumes planned), a project which began in 2009 with the first four volumes appearing in 2017 published by the Oxford University Press.[12]
Waugh's biography of the Wittgenstein family (The House of Wittgenstein: A Family at War[13]) was published in 2008. Terry Eagleton in a review for The Guardian found it an "eminently readable, meticulously researched account of the Wittgenstein madhouse". Although he thought Waugh wrote less about Ludwig Wittgenstein than he would desire, he "certainly casts some light" on the philosopher's "extraordinary contradictions."[14] Philosopher Ray Monk in his review for Standpoint magazine commented that Waugh, in his account of a substantial portion of the Wittgenstein family fortune ending up with the Nazis, uses "much hitherto unknown documentation" and "Waugh's version is more authoritative and fuller than previous accounts" and he wrote that concert pianist Paul Wittgenstein holds the largest share of the text and much of the book is written from his viewpoint.[15]
His other books include Time: From Microseconds to Millennia; A Search for the Right Time (1999)[16] and God (2002).[17][18][19] In Evelyn Waugh: Fictions, Faith and Family, Michael G. Brennan described Time as being "one of the most intriguing books produced by" any of his later family. "Ranging through religious, classical and renaissance scholarship, it blends past beliefs and theories, often in gently subversive ways, with more recent scientific thought."[20]
Oxfordian theory and Shakespeare
Waugh was an advocate of the Oxfordian theory, which contends that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, wrote the works of William Shakespeare. He discovered what he claimed to be surreptitious allusions embedded in 16th- and 17th-century works revealing that the name William Shakespeare was a pseudonym used by Oxford to write the Shakespeare oeuvre.[21][22] Of one example which gained coverage in October 2013, Shakespearean scholar Professor Stanley Wells told The Sunday Times: "I'm mystified that an intelligent person like Alexander Waugh can see any significance in this kind of juggling with letters."[21][23]
Waugh's book, Shakespeare in Court (2014) takes the form of a fictional trial which draws the conclusion that Shakespeare was a front for others but, on this occasion, does not propose another candidate.[24]
He was elected chairman of the De Vere Society in spring 2016 for a three-year term.[25]
^Lebrecht, Norman (24 July 2023). "Opera critic dies, 60". slippedisc.com. Retrieved 27 July 2024. he was opera critic of the Mail on Sunday and the Evening Standard in the 1990s...