Andrew Sinclair
Andrew Annandale Sinclair FRSL FRSA (21 January 1935 – 30 May 2019) was a British novelist, historian, biographer, critic, filmmaker, and publisher known for his prolific output across genres and his adaptations of literary works to film.[1][2] Educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge, where he earned a PhD in American history, Sinclair served in the Coldstream Guards before embarking on a multifaceted career that included writing the acclaimed Albion trilogy—Gog (1967), Magog (1973), and King Ludd (1975)*—historical novels blending myth and social critique.[3][4] As a filmmaker, he directed Under Milk Wood (1972), an adaptation of Dylan Thomas's play featuring Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor, among other projects like The Breaking of Bumbo (1970).[1][2] Sinclair also authored biographies of figures such as John Ford and Dylan Thomas, and histories exploring American social themes, reflecting his interdisciplinary approach that often intertwined fact and fiction.[5][6] His personal life featured multiple marriages and literary disputes, contributing to a reputation for a vibrant, unconventional path marked by intellectual versatility rather than singular mainstream acclaim.[7]Personal Background
Early life and education
Andrew Sinclair was born on January 21, 1935, in Oxford, England, to Stanley Charles Sinclair, who served in the British Colonial Service, and Hilary Sinclair, a writer.[8] His early childhood unfolded in an environment shaped by his father's administrative career abroad and his mother's literary pursuits, though specific details on formative family influences remain sparse in available records.[8] Sinclair received his preparatory education at the Dragon School in Oxford before attending Eton College in Berkshire as a King's Scholar from 1948 to 1953.[4] Following Eton, he completed two years of national service in the Coldstream Guards, enlisting around 1953.[9] This military stint, typical for young men of his class and era, preceded his university studies and provided early exposure to discipline and regimental life.[9] In 1955, Sinclair entered Trinity College, Cambridge, where he studied history, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree with double first-class honors in 1958.[4] His academic focus on history during this period laid the groundwork for his later scholarly pursuits, including a Ph.D. in American history from the same institution.[2] Cambridge's rigorous intellectual environment, combined with his prior experiences, honed his analytical approach evident in subsequent historical works.[2]Personal life and relationships
Sinclair married Marianne Alexandre, a French student and Marxist whom he met at Harvard, in 1960; the couple had one son, Timon Alexandre Sinclair, who later ran a business consulting firm in Abu Dhabi, and divorced later in the decade.[7][8] He wed Miranda Seymour, initially a debutante who later became an acclaimed biographer, on October 18, 1972; they had a son, Merlin George Sinclair, a published author, before divorcing on June 6, 1984.[7][8] On July 25, 1984, Sinclair married Sonia Melchett, a writer and socialite; the couple lived together for the subsequent three decades until his death, and he became stepfather to her three children from prior relationships—Peter (who died in 2018), Pandora, and Kerena.[7][8] During the filming of Under Milk Wood in 1971, Sinclair had a romantic liaison with actress Pat Kavanagh, who later married novelist Julian Barnes.[7] Sinclair died of bone cancer on May 30, 2019, at age 84.[7]Professional Career
Literary output
Sinclair's literary career began with satirical novels drawing from his military service and observations of British society. His debut, The Breaking of Bumbo, published in 1959, portrayed the disillusionment of a young Coldstream Guards officer navigating post-war upper-class ennui and institutional absurdities.[8] That same year, My Friend Judas explored themes of betrayal and moral ambiguity, earning Sinclair the Somerset Maugham Award for fiction in 1962.[8] Subsequent early works included Prohibited Area (1960), a tale of restricted zones and personal boundaries; The Project (1960), which depicted experimental social engineering and was later adapted into a film; The Hallelujah Bum (1963, published as The Paradise Bum in the US), focusing on itinerant life and spiritual quests; and The Rake (1964, also known as The Raker), blending adventure with social critique.[8] These novels established Sinclair's style of sharp wit, historical allusions, and examination of individual agency amid societal constraints.[9] Sinclair's most enduring literary contribution is the Albion trilogy, a sprawling fictional chronicle of British history and identity. Gog (1967) follows the titular giant tramp on a picaresque odyssey across England, encountering mythic and historical episodes from Stonehenge to modern decay.[9] Magog (1972) continues the narrative through female perspectives and wartime upheavals, while King Ludd (1988) culminates in industrial-era rebellion and technological disruption, weaving Luddite resistance into a broader meditation on progress's costs.[8] [9] Later novels shifted toward experimental and reflective forms, including The Surrey Cat (1976), A Patriot for Hire (1978, also Sea of the Dead), Beau Bumbo (1985, a sequel to his debut revisiting the protagonist's evolution), The Far Corners of the Earth (1991), and The Strength of the Hills (1992).[8] These works sustained his interest in wanderers, exiles, and the interplay of personal fate with national mythos, though many fell out of print by the late 20th century.[9]Filmmaking and screenplays
Sinclair wrote the screenplay for Before Winter Comes (1968), a comedy-drama set in a post-World War II displaced persons camp in Austria, directed by J. Lee Thompson and starring David Niven as a British major navigating tensions between Allied forces and refugees.[10] The film, based on a short story by Frederick L. Keefe, highlighted Sinclair's early ability to adapt literary material into narrative-driven scripts emphasizing human resilience amid geopolitical strain.[10] He transitioned to directing with The Breaking of Bumbo (1970), adapting his own 1959 novel about a young British officer's post-Suez Crisis disillusionment with military pomp and societal hypocrisy; the production starred Richard Warwick as the protagonist and Joanna Lumley in a supporting role.[11] Sinclair handled both writing and directing duties, infusing the film with satirical elements drawn from his personal experiences in the Royal Horse Guards.[1] In 1972, Sinclair directed and scripted Under Milk Wood, an adaptation of Dylan Thomas's 1954 radio play depicting a day in the life of the fictional Welsh village Llareggub, featuring Richard Burton as the Narrator alongside Elizabeth Taylor and Peter O'Toole.[12] The ensemble cast and poetic structure aimed to capture Thomas's lyrical whimsy, though the film's visual style and pacing drew comparisons to the more intimate audio original.[12] Blue Blood (1973) marked another self-adaptation, with Sinclair directing his novel into a gothic tale of aristocratic intrigue and moral decay in Edwardian England, starring Derek Jacobi, Anna Gaël, and Oliver Reed.[13] The production emphasized period authenticity through location shooting and costume design, reflecting Sinclair's interest in historical undercurrents of power.[13] His final feature directorial effort, Tuxedo Warrior (1982), adapted his novel about a 1920s bootlegger navigating Prohibition-era smuggling and romance, starring Michael York; Sinclair again wrote and directed, focusing on themes of entrepreneurial grit against regulatory overreach.[14] Beyond features, Sinclair contributed screenplays to television anthologies, including the episode "Tennis Court" for Hammer House of Mystery and Suspense (1984).[1]Publishing activities
Sinclair served as managing director of Lorrimer Publishing Ltd. in London from 1967 to 1984, overseeing a specialist imprint dedicated to film-related literature, including screenplays, scripts, and biographical works on filmmakers.[9] The company, co-founded in 1966 with filmmaker Peter Whitehead, emphasized original screenplays from classic and European films, often reconstructing or editing them for print to preserve cinematic texts. Key publications under Lorrimer during Sinclair's tenure included edited screenplays such as GWTW: The Screenplay (1979), a reconstruction of the Gone with the Wind script, and translations like Che Guevara's Bolivian Diary (1968). Sinclair also contributed directly, adapting Dylan Thomas's Under Milk Wood into a screenplay edition (1972) and authoring John Ford: A Biography (1979), reflecting his dual interests in film history and publishing. This venture bridged his filmmaking experience with scholarly output, producing over a dozen titles in film script series that catered to cinephiles and academics.[9]Historical Scholarship
Major historical themes
Sinclair's historical scholarship recurrently examined the clandestine transmission of knowledge and power through fraternal orders, positing their enduring impact on European and American events from the medieval period onward. In works such as The Secret Scroll (2001), he analyzed a medieval embroidered chart preserved in a Kirkwall, Orkney, Masonic lodge, interpreting it as a Templar artifact safeguarding esoteric secrets after the order's 1307 suppression by King Philip IV of France, with guardians fleeing to Scotland to evade persecution.[15] This theme extended to the Knights Templar's alleged survival as an underground network, evolving into modern Freemasonry while protecting relics tied to Crusader-era lore.[15] A core argument across Sinclair's writings involved pre-Columbian transatlantic contact, attributing it to Templar descendants rather than isolated Viking efforts. In The Sword and the Grail (2002), drawing on his own St. Clair lineage, he contended that Prince Henry Sinclair, a supposed Templar heir and Grand Master, led expeditions from Scotland to Nova Scotia and New England around 1398, establishing outposts with 300 colonists nearly a century before Columbus's 1492 voyage, evidenced by archaeological finds like Westford Knight carvings and family tombstones symbolizing the Grail as a historical rather than mythical object.[16] These claims linked Templar maritime prowess, honed during the Crusades, to a quest for a "new Jerusalem" in the Americas, blending naval records with rune stones and coastal fortifications.[16] Beyond esoteric brotherhoods, Sinclair addressed broader societal transformations, particularly in American history. His A Concise History of the United States (published circa 1970s) outlined the tension between rural agrarian roots and urban industrialization, the emergence of Democratic and Republican parties from Federalist-Antifederalist divides, and the pervasive Puritan ethic shaping national character, from moral rigor to exceptionalism.[17] In The Better Half: The Emancipation of the American Woman (1967), he chronicled women's evolving legal and social status from colonial dependencies to 20th-century suffrage gains, attributing progress to wartime necessities and industrial shifts rather than isolated reform movements.[2] These analyses underscored causal links between ideological inheritances and institutional developments, often critiquing romanticized narratives of progress. Sinclair also explored violence as a historical driver in The Anatomy of Terror: A History of Terrorism (1994), tracing patterns from ancient assassinations to modern ideological bombings, emphasizing how state responses inadvertently amplified fringe groups through overreaction or suppression failures.[18] Collectively, his themes privileged empirical artifacts—like scrolls, inscriptions, and migration records—over orthodox chronologies, challenging mainstream historiography on hidden actors' roles in exploration, governance, and conflict.[8]Interpretations of secret societies
Andrew Sinclair viewed secret societies, particularly Freemasonry, as successors to medieval orders like the Knights Templar, functioning to safeguard esoteric knowledge, symbols, and relics displaced by persecution. In The Secret Scroll (2001), he analyzed a large cloth artifact—18 feet by 5 feet—housed in a Kirkwall, Orkney, Masonic lodge since at least the 19th century, radiocarbon dated to the 15th century, which incorporates Templar crosses, Masonic tools, and diagrammatic maps of regions including Egypt, Palestine, and the Nile, interpreted as encoding navigational and initiatory lessons derived from Templar voyages.[19] Sinclair argued this scroll evidences the Templars' transmission of secrets to Scottish stonemason guilds post-1307, when the order faced dissolution by Pope Clement V and King Philip IV of France, with survivors allegedly fleeing to Britain and allying with Robert the Bruce, contributing around 6,000 fighters to his victory at Bannockburn on June 24, 1314, against an English army of about 20,000.[19] Central to Sinclair's thesis was the continuity of Templar traditions in Freemasonry via architectural and symbolic blueprints; the Kirkwall Scroll includes a layout mirroring elements of Rosslyn Chapel, constructed from 1446 under the patronage of William St. Clair (Sinclair's ancestral kin), which he described as a Gothic repository evoking Solomon's Temple and embedding Templar motifs like octagonal pillars and green men carvings to preserve pre-Reformation heretical lore amid Catholic-Protestant strife.[20] [19] He contended these societies encoded practical skills—geometry for cathedral-building, astronomy for navigation—alongside relic quests, positing Henry Sinclair's 1398 transatlantic expedition (evidenced by the Westford Knight petroglyph in Massachusetts and Newport Tower in [Rhode Island](/page/Rhode Island)) as a Templar-Freemason prelude to Columbus, funded by hidden treasures like the Grail or Ark potentially concealed in Scottish sites mapped on the scroll.[19] Sinclair tempered interpretations with evidentiary rigor, countering skeptics by prioritizing primary artifacts and carbon-14 testing over folklore, while critiquing overblown conspiracies in favor of familial and vocational transmission: the St. Clairs as hereditary Templar custodians evolving into Masonic patrons, not a shadowy global elite.[19] In Rosslyn: The Story Behind the Da Vinci Code (2005), as a direct descendant, he dismantled fictionalized narratives of perpetual bloodline guardians but upheld the chapel's 15th-century role as a post-Templar sanctuary for alchemical and chivalric symbols, reflecting causal chains from Crusader esotericism to Enlightenment-era lodges.[21] His The Brotherhood (1985) further portrayed Freemasonry's veiled operations as a fraternal network blending moral philosophy with historical arcana, though prone to insular rituals that obscured its operative origins in medieval operative masonry.[22]Reception and Legacy
Achievements and influence
Sinclair's most notable literary achievement was the Albion trilogy—comprising Gog (1967), Magog (1973), and King Ludd (1988)—which chronicled British history from ancient Druidic times to the modern era through allegorical, myth-infused narratives rich in historical detail.[3][23] These novels presented a baroque, revisionist vision of national identity, symbolizing archetypal forces of creation and destruction amid societal upheavals, and were praised for their ambitious scope in reinterpreting Britain's cultural and political evolution.[8] His early novels, such as The Breaking of Bumbo (1959), drew from personal military experiences and established his reputation for fluent, satirical prose blending autobiography with social critique.[2] In filmmaking, Sinclair directed the 1972 adaptation of Dylan Thomas's Under Milk Wood, featuring prominent actors including Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, and Peter O'Toole, which captured the play's dreamlike essence through experimental visuals and location shooting in Wales.[12][24] He also helmed The Breaking of Bumbo (1970), adapting his own novel into a film critiquing military life, contributing to his multifaceted career that bridged literature and cinema.[1] These efforts highlighted his versatility, though critical reception varied, with Under Milk Wood noted for its fidelity to Thomas's poetic rhythm despite challenges in translating radio drama to screen.[25] Sinclair's influence extended to historical scholarship, particularly in nonfiction works examining secret societies, American Prohibition, and biographical studies like Francis Bacon: His Life and Violent Times (1993), which synthesized archival evidence to portray the philosopher's turbulent era.[26] As a founding fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge, and director of history studies, he shaped academic discourse on modern history, emphasizing empirical patterns in social movements and esoteric traditions.[8] His prolific output—spanning over 30 books—earned recognition as a polymath whose works privileged undiluted historical causality over ideological narratives, influencing subsequent explorations of Britain's mythic undercurrents and transatlantic cultural exchanges.[4][6]Criticisms and controversies
Sinclair's novels received mixed critical reception, with some reviewers faulting works like Gog (1967) for being undisciplined, prolix, and overly focused on violence, while others dismissed it as an unsuccessful attempt at sophisticated satire.[8][27] His biographical The Available Man: The Life Behind the Masks of Warren Gamaliel Harding (1965) drew criticism for pervasive disapproval of its subject, with evaluations often appearing biased rather than balanced.[28] Literary feuds marked Sinclair's career, including sharp criticism from Auberon Waugh in The Spectator, which prompted Sinclair to largely withdraw from public literary disputes and publicity-seeking. He attributed his perceived neglect by critics and literary establishments to "bigoted critics" and institutional favoritism toward less deserving figures, though these claims remained personal grievances without broader substantiation.[7] In filmmaking, Sinclair encountered tensions during the production of Under Milk Wood (1971), where actress Elizabeth Taylor resented his academic background, viewing herself as undereducated by comparison, and demanded luxury accommodations including £600 nightdresses (equivalent to approximately £10,000 in modern terms). Co-star Richard Burton's heavy drinking further complicated the shoot, despite agreements limiting him to one bottle of vodka daily.[7] Sinclair's historical scholarship on secret societies, particularly in The Secret Scroll (2002), involved claims about a medieval Kirkwall Scroll he examined, purportedly linking Templars and Freemasons; however, subsequent radiocarbon dating by Oxford scientists dated the linen to the post-medieval period, undermining its authenticity and fueling skepticism toward his interpretive framework.[29] Personal life drew attention through multiple marriages: to Marianne Alexandre in the 1960s (producing son Timon; later divorced), Miranda Seymour in 1972 (son Merlin), and Sonia Melchett in later years (cohabiting for three decades until his 2019 death). Tensions arose, such as inviting his first wife on a trip with his second, exacerbating relational strains. These were portrayed in his obituary as "exotic" but reflected a pattern of serial monogamy amid professional demands.[7]Works
Bibliography
Sinclair's published books encompass novels, biographies, and historical studies, spanning from 1959 to the early 2000s.[2][30] Novels- The Breaking of Bumbo (1959)[7][30]
- My Friend Judas (1959)[30]
- The Project (1960)[2]
- The Hallelujah Bum (1963)[2]
- The Raker (1964)[2]
- Gog (1967)[31]
- Magog (1972)[2]
- The Surrey Cat (1976)[32]
- King Ludd (1988)[33]
- Prohibition: The Era of Excess (1962)[34]
- The Better Half: The Emancipation of the American Woman (1965)[2]
- Jack: A Biography of Jack London (1977)[35]
- Che Guevara (1991)[36]
- The Sword and the Grail: The Story of the Grail and the Templars and a True Discovery of America (1992)[36]
- The Secret Scroll: Secrets of the Knights Templar (2002)[37]
- Rosslyn: The Story of the Rosslyn Chapel and the True Story Behind the Da Vinci Code (2005)[21]
Filmography
Sinclair directed four feature films, all of which he also wrote or adapted.[1]| Year | Title | Role(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 1970 | The Breaking of Bumbo | Director, writer[11] |
| 1971 | Under Milk Wood | Director, writer[38][12] |
| 1973 | Blue Blood | Director |
| 1982 | Tuxedo Warrior | Director, writer[14] |