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David Rayvern Allen

Cricket writer and broadcaster From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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David Leonard Rayvern Allen (5 February 1938 – 9 October 2014)[1] was a cricket writer and historian, as well as a radio producer and presenter, a speaker and a musician.[2][3][4] His radio productions won awards including the 1991 Prix Italia for Who Pays the Piper, a collaboration with Richard Stilgoe.[5] He died aged 76 in 2014.[6]

Quick Facts Born, Died ...
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Life and career

Allen was born in Streatham, London, and went to school at Sir Walter St John's School, Battersea.[1] He gained external music diplomas from the Royal Academy of Music and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London.[1]

Allen spent his working life as a radio producer with the BBC, working on a wide range of programmes before retiring in 1993.[7] Later, as a member of the MCC's Arts and Library committee, he was largely responsible for the club's Audio Archive Project, a collection of several hundred interviews with cricket people; he conducted more than a hundred of the interviews himself.[7]

He won several awards for his cricket biographies.[1] His Wisden obituary said of them that he was "conscientious, readable, judicious" and that he "did not flinch from the less agreeable aspects of his subjects' characters".[7]

He married Rosemary Clark in 1966. They had two daughters.[1]

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Works

Radio

With Richard Stilgoe

  • Used Notes[9]
  • Music on the Brain[9]
  • The Singing Wheelchair[9]
  • Hamburger Weekend (1984)[9]
  • Who Pays the Piper (1991)[9][10]
  • A Song for Cricket (1981) ISBN 978-0720712872
  • The "Punch" Book of Cricket (1985) ISBN 978-0246123848
  • Cricket on the Air: A Selection from Fifty Years of Radio Broadcasts (1985) BBC Books ISBN 978-0563203438
  • Arlott on Wine (1987) ISBN 978-0006370611 (with John Arlott)
  • Peter Pan and Cricket (1988) Constable & Co ISBN 0 09 467630 5
  • Sir Aubrey: A Biography of C. Aubrey Smith - England Cricketer, West End Actor, Hollywood Film Star (1st 1982), J. W. McKenzie, (2nd 1987), ISBN 978-0947821197;[11] augmented edition: limited to 150 (2005),[12] 2010: ISBN 0947821198[13]
  • The Guinness Book of Cricket Extras (1988) (with Honor Head), Guinness Publishing ISBN 978-0851124858
  • Arlott: The Authorised Biography (2004) ISBN 978-1845130022
  • Jim: The Life of E. W. Swanton (2004) ISBN 978-1854109002
  • The Second Lord's Cricket Ground: Home of MCC, 1811-1813 (2006) MCC[14]
  • Songs of Cricket (2011) mentor for this Signum CD by cantabile - the London Quartet with guests Rory Bremner, Tim Rice, Richard Stilgoe, Alex L'Estrange, Eliza Lumley and Chris Hatt

Other

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References

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