Entertainment & Arts
Clive James: Australian broadcaster and author dies aged 80
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James
died "peacefully and at home, surrounded by his family", his agents
said
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Clive James, the Australian writer and broadcaster known around the
world for his dry wit, has died at the age of 80.
Diagnosed with leukaemia in 2010, the author and critic had movingly
written about his terminal illness during the final years of his life.
Born Vivian James in 1939, he moved to England in 1961 and rose to
prominence as a literary critic and TV columnist.
He went on to deliver wry commentary on international programming in
such shows as Clive James On Television.
The show saw him introduce amusing and off-beat TV clips from around the
world, most famously from Japanese game show Endurance.
According to a statement from his agents, he died at home
in Cambridge on Sunday. A private funeral was held on Wednesday in the chapel
at Pembroke College.
"Clive died almost 10 years after his first terminal diagnosis, and
one month after he laid down his pen for the last time," the statement read.
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Clive
James pictured on the set of Saturday Night Clive in 1989
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"He endured his
ever-multiplying illnesses with patience and good humour, knowing until the
last moment that he had experienced more than his fair share of this 'great,
good world'.
"He
was grateful to the staff at Addenbrooke's Hospital [in Cambridge] for their
care and kindness, which unexpectedly allowed him so much extra time.
"His
family would like to thank the nurses of the Arthur Rank Hospice at Home team
for their help in his last days, which allowed him to die peacefully and at
home, surrounded by his family and his books."
Singer
Alison Moyet was among many to pay tribute to a man she described as a "bright, beaming boy".
Ex-tabloid
editor Piers Morgan remembered him as "a
brilliantly funny man", while presenter Gaby Roslin said he had been "incredibly kind
"We
were lucky to have him for so long after his diagnosis," wrote
actor Samuel West. "We were lucky to have him at all."
Reverend
Richard Coles said he was "the best telly critic that ever
there was",
while Margarita Pracatan - the Cuban singer James helped make a household name
- paid tribute to his "intelligence... talent and beautiful way of
living".
James
was "unquestionably the greatest Australian poet of his time", said
George Brandis, Australia's High Commissioner to the UK, adding to tributes in
the writer's beloved homeland.
Tony
Hall, the BBC's director general, said the "irreplaceable" James was
"a clever, witty and thought-provoking broadcaster".
"He
had a huge range of talents and everything he did was essential listening or
viewing," Lord Hall continued.
'Condom full of walnuts'
James
was renowned for his pithy turns of phrase. He once likened Arnold
Schwarzenegger to "a brown condom full of walnuts" and said motor
racing commentator Murray Walker sounded "like a man whose trousers are on
fire".
He
was equally waspish when describing Dame Barbara Cartland, whose eyes he said
"looked like the corpses of two small crows that had crashed into a chalk
cliff".
"Common
sense and a sense of humour are the same thing, moving at different
speeds," was another of his famous quotes.
He
also had advice for his future obituarists, telling them "shorter is
better, and that a single line is best".
"Any
encounter with James, either in print or in person, left you desperate to go
and open a book, watch a film or a TV show, or hunt down a recording,"
said Don Paterson, poetry editor at James's publisher Picador.
"With
Clive's passing we lose the wisest and funniest of writers, a loyal and kind
friend, and the most finely-stocked mind we will ever have the fortune to
encounter."



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