Description
Deric Longden was an English writer and autobiographer.
Longden was born at Chesterfield, Derbyshire. He married Diana Hill in 1957 and had two children. After various jobs he took over a small women's lingerie factory, but began writing and broadcasting in the 1970s for programmes like Does He Take Sugar? and Woman's Hour on BBC Radio 4. Most of his work was based on his own experience. His wife Diana's illness, subsequently believed to be a form of ME, forced him to sell the factory. Afterwards, he worked as a full-time writer, broadcaster and speaker.
The bestselling Diana?s Story, published in 1989, was followed by Lost for Words, The Cat Who Came in from the Cold, I?m a Stranger Here Myself, Enough to Make a Cat Laugh, A Play On Words and Paws in the Proceedings.
Deric Longden's first two books were adapted for television, the first retitled Wide-Eyed and Legless. The second, Lost for Words, was screened in January 1999 and won the Emmy for best foreign drama and a BAFTA for Thora Hird as best actress.
After the death of Diana, he married writer Aileen Armitage in 1990 and they moved to Huddersfield, West Yorkshire.
Born
November 29th, 1936 in Chesterfield (Age 87)
Films
Last Changes
2015/03/30
Address Removed: Available to members only
2009/10/31
New Address: Available to members only
2007/04/26
New Address: Available to members only