‘When I turned 80, I started boasting about it. If I get to 90, I will be unbearable,’ Hunter Davies declares happily.
He is 85 on 7th January – so he is halfway to being unbearable. He is practicing saying, ‘D’you know how old I am?’ to all and sundry – and he’s bound to tell his readers about it.
He is after all the inventor of solipsistic journalism. He invented ‘A Life in the Day’ on the last page of the Sunday Times Magazine. Another of his ideas – ‘Me and My Honeymoon’ in the Look! pages in 1969 – was the inspiration for Private Eye’s ‘Me and My Spoon’.
Hunter says, ‘Even as a little boy in Scotland, I was the same. I would stand at the front gate, aged four, and, when people came by, I would tell them who I was, and what was going on in the house. “My mummy and daddy are cooking chips!” And this has not stopped.’
His parents, Scottish despite the Welsh name, both left school at 13. His dad was an RAF clerk, and in 1940 five-year-old Hunter and his family were uprooted from Scotland to Carlisle.
The childish compulsion to share his life has persisted through his journalism: whether it’s buying a tent on eBay or being rushed to hospital (‘Oh goody – 2,000 words for the Mail’). Or frying his wife’s placenta when their second child was born. It tasted awful, he wrote in the Sunday Times.
Esta historia es de la edición February 2021 de The Oldie Magazine.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición February 2021 de The Oldie Magazine.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Travel: Retreat From The World
For his new book, Nat Segnit visited Britain’s quietest monasteries and islands to talk to monks, hermits and recluses
What is... a nail house?
Don’t confuse a nail house with a nail parlour. A nail house is an old house that survives as new building development goes on all around it.
Kent's stairway to heaven
Walter Barton May’s Hadlow Castle is the ultimate Gothic folly
Pursuits
Pursuits
The book that changed the world
On Marcel Proust’s 150th anniversary, A N Wilson praises his masterpiece, an exquisite comedy with no parallel
RIP the playboys of the western world
Charlie Methven mourns his dashing former father-in-law, Luis ‘the Bounder’ Basualdo, last of a dying breed
Arts
Arts
My film family's greatest hits
Downton Abbey producer Gareth Neame follows in the footsteps of his father, grandfather and great-grandmother, a silent-movie star
Books
Books
A lifetime of pin-ups
Barry Humphries still has nightmares about going on stage. He’s always admired the stars who kept battling on