Helen Fielding

Helen Fielding (19 February 1958) is an English novelist and screenwriter, best known as the creator of the fictional character Bridget Jones, and a sequence of novels and films beginning with the life of a thirty something singleton in London trying to make sense of life and love. Bridget Jones's Diary (1996) and Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (1999) were published in 40 countries and sold more than 15 million copies.[3] The two films of the same name achieved international success. In a survey conducted by The Guardian newspaper, Bridget Jones’s Diary was named as one of the ten novels that best defined the 20th century.[4]

Helen Fielding
Helen Fielding in 2009
Born (1958-02-19) 19 February 1958
Morley, West Yorkshire, England
OccupationNovelist, screenwriter
LanguageEnglish
ResidenceLondon, England
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
NationalityBritish
CitizenshipBritish
Alma materSt Anne's College, Oxford
GenreChick lit
Notable worksBridget Jones's Diary
PartnerKevin Curran [1] Died October[2] 2016
ChildrenDash Curran
Romy Curran

Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy was published in autumn 2013 with record-breaking first-day sales in the UK exceeding 46,000 copies.[5] It occupied the number one spot on The Sunday Times bestseller list for six months. In her review for The New York Times review, Sarah Lyall called the novel "sharp and humorous" and said that Fielding had "allowed her heroine to grow up into someone funnier and more interesting than she was before".[6] Late 2016 saw the release of the third movie: Bridget Jones's Baby.[7] On 11 October 2016, and the publication of Fielding's sixth novel, Bridget Jones' Baby: the Diaries based on Fielding's original columns in The Independent newspaper on which the movie — which broke UK box office records — was based.[8]

In a 2004 poll for the BBC, Fielding was named the 29th most influential person in British culture.[9][10] In December 2016, the BBC's Woman's Hour included Bridget Jones as one of the seven women who had most influenced British female culture over the last seven decades.[11]

Biography

Fielding grew up in Morley, West Yorkshire, a textile town on the outskirts of Leeds in the north of England. Her father was managing director of a textile factory, next door to the family home, that produced cloth for miners’ donkey jackets. He died in 1982 and her mother, Nellie, still lives in Yorkshire. Fielding attended Wakefield Girls' High School, one of the Grammar Schools in the Wakefield Grammar School Foundation. She has three siblings, Jane, David and Richard.

Fielding studied English at St Anne's College, Oxford and was part of the Oxford revue at the 1978 Edinburgh Festival, forming a continuing friendship with a group of comic performers and writers including Richard Curtis and Rowan Atkinson.[12]

Fielding began work at the BBC in 1979 as a regional researcher on the news magazine Nationwide. She progressed to working as a production manager on various children’s and light entertainment shows. In 1985 Fielding produced a live satellite broadcast from a refugee camp in Eastern Sudan for the launch of Comic Relief. She also wrote and produced documentaries in Africa for the first two Comic Relief fundraising broadcasts. In 1989 she was a researcher for an edition of the Thames TV This Week series "Where Hunger is a Weapon" about the Southern Sudan rebel war. These experiences formed the basis for her debut novel, Cause Celeb.

From 1990 - 1999 she worked as a journalist and columnist on several national newspapers, including The Sunday Times, The Independent and The Telegraph. Her best-known work, Bridget Jones's Diary, began its life as an unattributed column in The Independent in 1995. The success of the column led to four novels and three film adaptations. Fielding was part of the scriptwriting team for all three.

Bridget Jones

Fielding’s first novel, Cause Celeb, whose title derives from the expression cause célèbre, was published in 1994 to great reviews but limited sales. She was struggling to make ends meet while working on her second novel, a satire about cultural divides in a [fictional African country] when she was approached by London’s The Independent newspaper to write a column as herself about single life in London. Fielding rejected this idea as too embarrassing[13] and exposing and offered instead to create an imaginary, exaggerated, comic character.

Writing anonymously, she felt able to be honest about the preoccupations of single women in their thirties. It quickly acquired a following, her identity was revealed and her publishers asked her to replace her novel about the Caribbean by a novel on Bridget Jones’s Diary. The hardback was published in 1996 to good reviews but modest sales. The paperback, published in 1997, went straight to the top of the best-seller chart, stayed there for over six months and went on to become a worldwide best-seller.

Fielding continued her columns in The Independent, and then The Daily Telegraph until 1997, publishing a second Bridget novel Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason in November 1999. The film of Bridget Jones’s Diary was released in 2001 and its sequel in 2004. Fielding contributed the further adventures of Bridget Jones for The Independent from 2005. Fielding announced in November 2012 that she was now writing a third instalment in the Bridget Jones series.[14][15]

Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy was published in the UK by Jonathan Cape and in the US by Alfred A. Knopf in October 2013. It debuted at number one on The Sunday Times bestseller list, and number seven on The New York Times bestseller list. By the time the UK paperback was published on 19 June 2014, sales had reached one million copies. The novel was shortlisted for the 15th Bollinger Everyman Wodehouse Prize,[16] nominated in the Popular Fiction category of the National Book Award.[17] and has been translated into 32 languages.

A film adaptation of Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy has not yet been announced, but fans have speculated on who might play Roxster.[18]

Fielding credits Bridget’s success to the fact that, at heart, it is about “the gap between how we feel we are expected to be and how we actually are” which she has described as an alarming symptom of the media age.

Personal life and honours

Fielding divides her time between London and Los Angeles. She and Kevin Curran, a writer/executive producer on The Simpsons, began a relationship in 2000 and Fielding had two children with him: Dashiell, born in February 2004, and Romy, born in July 2006.[19][20] Kevin Curran died from cancer complications on 26 October 2016.

In 2014, Fielding was one of twenty writers on The Sunday Times list of Britain's 500 Most Influential[21] and was also featured on the London Evening Standard's 1,000 Most Influential Londoners list.[22]

Awards and nominations

Bibliography

  • Who's Had Who, in Association with Berk’s Rogerage, an Historical Rogister Containing Official Lay Lines of History from the Beginning of Time to the Present Day (1987; 1990 in US with first subtitle omitted) (with Simon Bell and Richard Curtis)
  • Cause Celeb (1994) is a satire, based on the relationship between celebrities and refugees set in a camp in a fictional country in East Africa.
  • Bridget Jones's Diary (1996)
  • Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason (1999)
  • Olivia Joules and the Overactive Imagination (2003) a comic spy novel set in Miami, Los Angeles, England and the Sudan.
  • Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy (2013)
  • Bridget Jones's Baby: The Diaries (2016)
Short stories
  • Ox-tales (2009) a collection of short stories in aid of Oxfam[23]

Film adaptations

gollark: Water is also free.
gollark: Cobble is basically free given a cheap machine for its production.
gollark: Don't earn at the Sellshop. It is a bad deal. Unless the prices were tweaked a lot.
gollark: But if you don't, more people will löse möney.
gollark: Complain to the Ädmïnïsträtörs.

References

  1. erroneous tabloid report
  2. Helen Fielding
  3. "Helen Fielding: Beyond Bridget". The Independent. 5 October 2003. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  4. Crown, Sarah (2 June 2007). "1984 'Is Definitive Book Of The 20Th Century'". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 4 May 2010.
  5. Page, Benedicte (14 October 2013). "Bridget Jones: first-day sales 'topped 46,000". The Bookseller. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  6. Lyall, Sarah (18 October 2013). "Will Have Small Glass of Wine". The New York Times. Retrieved 17 September 2016.
  7. "Bridget Jones's Baby (2016)". IMDb. Archived from the original on 19 September 2016. Retrieved 28 August 2016. In theaters September 16
  8. "Bridget Jones's Baby: The Diaries". amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 28 August 2016.
  9. "iPod designer leads culture list". BBC. 17 November 2016.
  10. "iPod's low-profile creator tops cultural chart". The Independent. 18 March 2017.
  11. "Radio 4's Woman's Hour Power List 2016 revealed". BBC. 19 March 2017.
  12. Jack Boozer (2008) Authorship in film adaptation p.286. University of Texas Press, 2008
  13. "Independent Columns 1995". bridgetarchive.altervista.org. Retrieved 9 July 2017.
  14. "Helen Fielding begins Edge of Reason follow-up". BBC News. 9 November 2012. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
  15. Capon, Felicity (9 November 2012). "Helen Fielding to write new Bridget Jones novel". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 12 November 2012.
  16. "Bridget Jones on Wodehouse Prize shortlist". The Bookseller. Retrieved 14 November 2014
  17. "Bridget Jones up for National Book Awards". BBC News. Retrieved 17 November 2014
  18. "'Bridget Jones: Mad About The Boy' - Casting Roxster". Digital Spy. Retrieved 17 November 2014
  19. erroneous tabloid soure
  20. Hopkins, Kathryn; Hopkins, Kathryn (29 September 2017). "EXCLUSIVE: 'Bridget Jones's Diary' Author Helen Fielding on the Move in L.A." WWD. Retrieved 20 July 2019.
  21. "Britain's 500 Most Influential. The Sunday Times. Retrieved 19 November 2014
  22. "The 1000 - London's most influential people 2014: The Arts". London Evening Standard. 15 October 2014. Retrieved 17 November 2014.
  23. Ox-tales Archived 20 May 2009 at the Wayback Machine on the Oxfam website, retrieved December 2009

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