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William Aubrey Darlington

British writer and journalist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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William Aubrey Cecil Darlington or W.A. Darlington (1890–1979), was a British writer and journalist who worked for many years as the drama critic of the Daily Telegraph newspaper.

Life and career

Darlington was primarily a journalist, working as a drama critic for the New York Times and The Daily Telegraph.[1]

Darlington also wrote novels, most successfully with his 1920 comic work Alf's Button which was adapted into several films.[2] He wrote an autobiography, I Do What I Like.

He was educated at Shrewsbury School and St John’s, Cambridge, before joining the army during the First World War.[3]

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Works

  • Alf's Button (1920)
  • Egbert (1925)
  • Carpet Slippers (1931)
  • I Do What I Like (MacDonald, 1947)
  • The World of Gilbert and Sullivan (1950)
  • Six Thousand and One Nights: Forty Years a Drama Critic (1960)

References

Further reading

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