MORTIMER, SIR JOHN


Meaning of MORTIMER, SIR JOHN in English

born April 21, 1923, Hampstead, London, Eng. in full Sir John Clifford Mortimer English barrister and writer who wrote plays for the stage, television, radio, and motion pictures, as well as novels and autobiographical works. Educated at Harrow and at Brasenose College, Oxford, Mortimer began writing before he was called to the bar in 1948. The following year he married Penelope Ruth Fletcher (the novelist Penelope Mortimer; divorced 1972). Mortimer began his writing career as a novelist, with Charade (1947). Several subsequent novels drew on his legal experience, but it was not until 1957, with the BBC's production of his radio play The Dock Brief, that his reputation was established. Mortimer wrote many other radio plays and several full-length plays for the stage, including The Wrong Side of the Park (performed 1960), Two Stars for Comfort (performed 1962), and The Judge (performed 1967). In 1965 he successfully adapted the farce A Flea in Her Ear from the French of Georges Feydeau. He later adapted for television several novels, including his own Paradise Postponed (1985; produced 1986) and Summer's Lease (1988; produced 1989). One of his finest works was an autobiographical play on his relationship with his blind father, A Voyage Round My Father (1970). Throughout his writing career Mortimer maintained a thriving law practice, and in the 1960s he was one of Great Britain's principal defenders in free-speech and civil-rights cases as a Queen's Counsel. As a writer, Mortimer had his greatest popular success in the late 1970s and '80s with Rumpole of the Bailey and other short stories and television programs featuring the crusty old British barrister Horace Rumpole and his comical adventures as a defense lawyer. Mortimer was knighted in 1998.

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