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Leslie Charteris
1907-1993
name in full:
Leslie Charles Bowyer Yin
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American mystery-adventure writer, born in Singapore. Charteris
is best-known for his highly popular " The Saint" stories, depicting
adventures of Simon Templar, hero outside the law, who preyed criminals
and con artist that the law could not or would not touch. First
screen adaptation was made in 1938, tv series started 1963 with
Roger Moore as the Saint. Simon Templar's retun in big screen was
seen in 1997, this time Val Klimer in the title role.
"It is truly said that adventures are to the adventurous.
Simon had about him that indefinable atmosphere of romance and
adventurousness which is given to some favoured men in every age,
and it attracted adventure as inevitably as a magnet attracts
iron filings."
(from Enter the Saint, 1930)
Leslie
Charteris was born Leslie Charles Bowyer Yin. His father was Dr.
S.C. Yin and mother Florence Bowyer. He learned Chinese and Malay
from native servants before he could speak English. Charteris was
educated at private schools and run eagerly school magazines. At
the age of seventeen Charteris sold his first fiction story. He
attended the Cambridge University, where he studied law. After the
success of his first books, X ESQUIRE (1927) and Simon Templar story,
MEET THE TIGER (1927), the young author dropped his studies, and
changed his name to Leslie Charteris. Experiments with other detective-protagonist
were not fruitful, and he brought back the Saint in his sixth book,
ENTER THE SAINT (1930). "We Saints are normally souls of peace
and goodwill towards men. But we don't like crooks, bloodsuckers,
traders in vice and damnation..."
Despite the Saint's growing popularity in Great Britain, Charteris'
income was meagre. He worked at odd jobs in England, France and
Malaya until 1935. He wrote syndicated comic strip Secret Agent
X-9 in the mid-1930s, and Saint from 1945 to 1955. In the 1930s
Charteris moved to the United States and worked for many years as
a Hollywood scriptwriter. THE SAINT IN NEW YORK (1935) became a
worldwide sensation, making its author an international celebrity.
The film adaptation of the book was made in 1938, starring Louis
Hayward, who was replaced by George Sanders in the second film.
The 1940s saw Simon Templar in several versions, interpretations,
and adaptations at the same time - books, movies, comic books, newspaper
strip, and radio. In 1942 Charteris became an US citizen. World
War II created a new Saint, sardonic, and more mature. With his
marriage with the movie beauty Audrey Long and focusing on short
stories, Charteris wrote tales that played upon the Saint's self-referential
history. A new Simon Temlar novel, VENDETTA FOR THE SAINT, co-written
by Harry Harrison, appeared in 1964. TV series, which started in
1963, did not first impress Charteris, but when the shows improved,
the author started to change his attitude.
From 1947 to 1948 Charteris was edited Suspense Magazine,
and The Saint Detective Magazine (later The Saint Mystery
Magazine) from 1953 to 1967. He also wrote for Gourmet Magazine
(1966-968, published a Spanish grammar book, and as a devoted fan
of bull-fighting translated Juan Belmonte's Autobiography of
a Matador. After his retirement in the 1970s Charteris lived
in England and France. He was married four times. Charteris died
on April 16, 1993.
As a world traveller in luxury surroundings with a new hotel, a
new heroine, and a new adventure,The Saint preceded Ian Fleming's
James Bond, but as an outlaw The Saint was a relative of Robin Hood,
Maurice Leblanc's gentleman thief Arsène Lupin, or Mickey Spillane'
fascist Mike Hammer. Generally The Saint was carefree and full of
humor, but in THE SAINT IN NEW YORK (1935) Charteris presented more
hard-edged side of his personality, when he is basically hired an
assassin to kill mobsters who killed a millionaire's son. Many critics
consider The Saint's pre-war adventure books more stylish than the
hero's later appearances in movies, television, radio, and comic
books. Charteris' first credited collaborator was Fleming Lee, others
succeeding him were Peter Bloxsom, Graham Weaver, and Christopher
Short. Following Charteris's death his estate authorized Burl Barer
to write new Saint adventures. CAPTURE THE SAINT (1997) was well
received by the critics.
For further reading: The Saint and Leslie Charteris by
W.O.G. Lofts and Derek Adley (1971); The Durable Desperadoes by
William Vivian Butler (1973); The Saint: A Complete History in
Print, Radio, and Television of Leslie Charteris' Robin Hood of
Modern Crime, Simon Templar by Burl Barer (1992); World Authors
1900-1950 (vol. 1), ed. by Martin Seymour-Smith and Andrew C.
Kimmens (1996); The Saint by Paul Simper (1997).
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Selected works:
- X ESQUIRE, 1927
- (first Simon Templar novel) MEET THE TIGER, 1927 - - film 1943,
dir. by Paul Stein, starring Hugh Sinclair
- THE WHITE RIDER, 1928
- DAREDEVIL, 1929
- THE BANDIT, 1929
- THE LAST HERO, 1930
- ENTER THE SAINT, 1930
- KNIGHT TEMPLAR, 1930
- FEATURING THE SAINT, 1931
- ALIAS THE SAINT, 1931
- WANTED FOR MURDER, 1931
- SHE WAS A LADY, 1931
- ENTER THE SAINT, 1931
- THE SAINT MEETS HIS MATCH, 1931
- WANTED FOR MURDER, 1931
- THE HOLY TERROR, 1932
- GETAWAY, 1932 - film The Saint's Vacation, dir. Leslie Fenton,
starring Hugh Sinclair
- ONCE MORE THE SAINT, 1933
- THE BRIGHTER BUCCANEER, 1933
- BOODLE, 1934
- THE MISFORTUNES OF MR. TEAL, 1934
- THE SAINT GOES ON, 1934
- THE SAINT IN NEW YORK, 1935 - film 1938, dir. Ben Holmes, starring
Louis Hayward
- THE SAINT OVERBOARD, 1936
- THE ACE OF KNAVES, 1937
- THIEVES' PICNIC, 1937
- translation: JUAN BELMONTE, KILLER OF BULLS, 1937
- PRELUDE FOR WAR, 1938
- SHE WAS A LADY, 1938 - film 1939, dir. John Farrow, starring
George Sanders
- FOLLOW THE SAINT, 1938
- THE HAPPY HIGHWAYMAN, 1939
- THE FIRST SAINT OMNIBUS, 1939
- (The Saint and his friend move in Unites States) THE SAINT
IN MIAMI, 1940 -
- THE SAINT GOES WEST, 1942
- THE SAINT STEPS IN, 1943 THE SAINT ON GUARD, 1944
- LADY ON A TRAIN, 1945
- THE SAINT SEES IT THROUGH, 1946
- SAINT ERRANT, 1948
- CALL FOR THE SAINT, 1948 -
- ARREST THE SAINT, 1951
- THE SAINT IN EUROPE, 1953
- THE SAINT ON THE SPANISH MAIN, 1955
- THANKS TO THE SAINT, 1957
- THE SAINT AROUND THE WORLD, 1957
- CONCERNING SAINT, 1958
- SEÑOR SAINT, 1958
- THE SAINT TO THE RESCUE, 1959
- THE SAINT CLEANS UP, 1959
- TRUST THE SAINT, 1962
- THE SAINT IN THE SUN, 1963
- SPANISH FOR FUN, 1964
- VENDETTA FOR THE SAINT, 1964 - tv film, dir. Jim O'Connor,
starring Roger Moore
- THE SAINT ON TV, 1968 (with Fleming Lee)
- THE SAINT RETURNS, 1968
- THE SAINT AND THE FICTION MAKERS, 1969 - tv film 1970, dir.
Roy Baker, starring Roger Moore
- THE SAINT ABROAD, 1969
- (last, novelization of comic strip) THE SAINT IN PURSUIT, 1970
- THE SAINT AND THE PEOPLE IMPORTERS, 1971
- PALENEO: A UNIVERSAL SIGN LANGUAGE, 1972
- SAINTS ALIVE, 1974
- CATCH THE SAINT, 1975
- THE SAINT AND THE HAPSBURG NECLACE, 1976
- SEND FOR THE SAINT, 1976
- THE SAINT IN TROUBLE, 1978
- THE SAINT: GOOD AS GOLD, 1979
- THE SAINT AND THE TEMPLAR TREASURE, 1979
- COUNT ON THE SAINT, 1980
- THE FANTASTIC SAINT, 1982
- THE SAINT: FIVE COMPLETE NOVELS, 1983
- SALVAGE FOR THE SAINT, 1983
- CAPTURE THE SAINT, 1997 (written by Burl Barer)
Film scripts:
- MIDNIGHT CLUB, 1933 (with Seton I Miller)
- THE SAINTS DOUBLE TROUBLE, 1940 (with Ben Holmes, dir. Jack
Hively, starring George Sanders)
- THE SAINT'S VACATION, 1941 (with Jeffrey Dell, dir. Leslie
Fento, starring Hugh Sinclair )
- THE SAINT IN PALM SPRINGS, 1941 (with Jerry Cady, dir. Jack
Hively, starring George Sanders)
- LADY ON A TRAIN, 1945 (with Edmund Beloin and Robert O'Brien)
- RIVER GANG, 1945 (with others)
- TWO SMART PEOPLE, 1946 (with others)
- TARZAN AND THE HUNTRESS, 1947 (with Jerry Grushkind and Rowland
Leigh)
Other Saint films: The Saint in London (1939); The Saint's
Return / The Saint's Girl Friday (1953); Le Saint mène la danse
(1960, based on The Saint in Palm Springs)); Le Saint Prend
L'Affut (1965, starring Jean Marais); The Saint and the Brave
Goose (tv film, 1978), The Saint (1997, dir. Phillip Noyce,
starring Val Kilmer) - Saint books from 1967, usually by
Fleming Lee and Norman Worker: The Saint on TV (1967); The
Saint Returns (1968); The Saint and the Fiction Makers (1968);
The Saint Abroad (1969); The Saint and the People Importers
(1970); Catch the Saint (1974); Send for the Saint (1977); The
Saint and the Templar Treasure (1978) - The Saint in television:
The Saint (1963-68), 114 episodes, 50 min., starring Roger Moore;
The Return of the Saint (1978), starring Ian Ogilvy, 24 episodes,
60 min., CBS pilot starring Simon Clarke; TV movies (1989),
six two-hour episodes.
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biblion This biography was written by Petri Liukkonen.
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