Difference between revisions of "Ray Bradbury"
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(August 22, 1920 – May 6, 2012) | (August 22, 1920 – May 6, 2012) | ||
− | + | Considered one of the [[Big Three]], and one of the most celebrated writers of the 20th century, [[author]] '''Ray Bradbury''' was [[goh]] at the 1986 [[Worldcon]], [[Confederation]]. He first became interested in [[SF]] when he read an [[A. Hyatt Verrill]] Ant story in ''[[Amazing]]'' at age 9. He continued to read and got hooked on ''[[Astounding]]'' in 1937. Born in Waukegan, [[Illinois]], Bradbury spent his childhood alternating between there and [[Tucson]], [[Arizona]], finally moving with his family to [[Los Angeles]] at age 14. | |
+ | ==Fan== | ||
In the fall of 1937, he met a member of [[LASFS]] in a bookstore, and when [[T. Bruce Yerke]] heard there was another reader around, he invited him to the [[club]]. Bradbury went to a meeting where he met [[Henry Kuttner]] and [[Forry Ackerman]]. (This was also the week when the first issue of ''[[Voice of the Imagi-Nation]]'' was published.) He joined the following week and was soon club librarian and writing for various [[fanzines]]. He became a close friend of [[Ray Harryhausen]]’s. | In the fall of 1937, he met a member of [[LASFS]] in a bookstore, and when [[T. Bruce Yerke]] heard there was another reader around, he invited him to the [[club]]. Bradbury went to a meeting where he met [[Henry Kuttner]] and [[Forry Ackerman]]. (This was also the week when the first issue of ''[[Voice of the Imagi-Nation]]'' was published.) He joined the following week and was soon club librarian and writing for various [[fanzines]]. He became a close friend of [[Ray Harryhausen]]’s. | ||
He was a member of [[Apa-F]], [[WAFFF]] and the [[Sacred Order of FooFoo]]. He was a founding member of The [[National Fantasy Fan Federation]]. | He was a member of [[Apa-F]], [[WAFFF]] and the [[Sacred Order of FooFoo]]. He was a founding member of The [[National Fantasy Fan Federation]]. | ||
− | In ''[[Memoirs of a Superfluous Fan]]'', [[Yerke]] describes the teenaged Bradbury: "This fantastic creature became endeared to all of us henceforth, and though often the victim of assaults with trays and hammers by infuriated victims of his endless pranks and disturbances, remained a primary figure in the club all through 1938, 1939, 1940, and 1941." | + | In ''[[Memoirs of a Superfluous Fan]]'', [[Bruce Yerke]] describes the teenaged Bradbury: "This fantastic creature became endeared to all of us henceforth, and though often the victim of assaults with trays and hammers by infuriated victims of his endless pranks and disturbances, remained a primary figure in the club all through 1938, 1939, 1940, and 1941." |
− | + | In 1939, he attended the [[first Worldcon]] in [[New York]], with funds from his friends [[Forry Ackerman]] and [[Morojo]]. Also funded by [[Ackerman]], Bradbury started a [[fanzine]], ''[[Futuria Fantasia]]'', in 1939, and wrote most of its four issues. | |
− | He later became a [[filthy pro]]. | + | ==Pro== |
+ | Bradbury began to publish [[science fiction]] stories in [[fanzines]] in 1938. His first published story was "Hollerbochen's Dilemma", which appeared in the fanzine ''[[Imagination!]]'' in January, 1938. | ||
+ | |||
+ | He later became a [[filthy pro]]. His first paid work, "Pendulum", written with fellow LASFan [[Henry Hasse]], was published in the [[pulp magazine]] ''[[Super Science Stories]]'' in November 1941; he earned $15. | ||
+ | |||
+ | His best known works include the [[novel]] ''Fahrenheit 451'' (1953) and his short-story collections ''The Martian Chronicles'' (1950) and ''The Illustrated Man'' (1951). | ||
+ | |||
+ | ''The Ray Bradbury Theater'', an anthology TV series by Bradbury, with 65 episodes based on his [[fiction]], ran 1985–92. | ||
+ | |||
+ | He was a member of the [[West Coast Writers Group]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ===Legacy === | ||
+ | In 1971, Apollo 15 astronauts named an impact crater on the [[Moon]] "Dandelion" in honor of Bradbury's 1957 novel, ''Dandelion Wine.'' An asteroid discovered in 1992 was named "9766 Bradbury" in his honor. A digitized copy of ''The Martian Chronicles'' was sent to the Red Planet in 2008, aboard NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Ray Bradbury Park was dedicated in Waukegan, IL, in 1990. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Critic]] Christopher Isherwood compared Bradbury’s work to that of [[Edgar Allan Poe]]'s. The [[Ray Bradbury Award for Outstanding Dramatic Presentation]] was named in his honor. | ||
In 2010, comedian Rachel Bloom wrote a salacious song about him, “Fuck Me, Ray Bradbury”; her [https://youtu.be/e1IxOS4VzKM music video] was a finalist for the [[2011 Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form Hugo]], and Bloom [https://youtu.be/NgrA9gT6gbo performed the song] at the 2011 [[Worldcon]], [[Renovation]]. | In 2010, comedian Rachel Bloom wrote a salacious song about him, “Fuck Me, Ray Bradbury”; her [https://youtu.be/e1IxOS4VzKM music video] was a finalist for the [[2011 Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form Hugo]], and Bloom [https://youtu.be/NgrA9gT6gbo performed the song] at the 2011 [[Worldcon]], [[Renovation]]. | ||
Other [[filksongs]] he inspired include [http://web.archive.org/web/20140812052406/http://www.sccs.swarthmore.edu/org/swil/FILKS/filkbook2.html#8 “The Bradbury Hate Song”] by [[Ray Beam]], [[Jack Natkin]], [[Lewis Forbes]], [[Jerry Hunter]] and others (1952). | Other [[filksongs]] he inspired include [http://web.archive.org/web/20140812052406/http://www.sccs.swarthmore.edu/org/swil/FILKS/filkbook2.html#8 “The Bradbury Hate Song”] by [[Ray Beam]], [[Jack Natkin]], [[Lewis Forbes]], [[Jerry Hunter]] and others (1952). | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Personal Life== | ||
+ | Bradbury was married to Marguerite “Maggie” McClure (January 16, 1922–November 24, 2003) from 1947 until her death; she was the only woman he ever dated. He lived at home until he was 27 and married. they had four daughters: Susan, Ramona, Bettina and Alexandra. | ||
===See:=== | ===See:=== | ||
+ | * [https://raybradbury.com/ Official website. ] | ||
* {{SFE|name=bradbury_ray}}. | * {{SFE|name=bradbury_ray}}. | ||
* Early short biography in {{WhosWho1940|page=4}}. | * Early short biography in {{WhosWho1940|page=4}}. | ||
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*[https://youtu.be/VWZhYzLgjYk Bradbury in a classic Stan Freberg commercial for Sunsweet Prunes.] | *[https://youtu.be/VWZhYzLgjYk Bradbury in a classic Stan Freberg commercial for Sunsweet Prunes.] | ||
* ''[[Bradbury: An Illustrated Life]]'' by [[Jerry Weist]] (2002). | * ''[[Bradbury: An Illustrated Life]]'' by [[Jerry Weist]] (2002). | ||
+ | * [https://lithub.com/on-maggie-bradbury-the-woman-who-changed-literature-forever/ “On Maggie Bradbury, the woman who ‘changed literature forever’”] by Emily Temple, LitHub, August 30, 2022. | ||
+ | * [https://liberalarts.iupui.edu/centers/bradbury-center/ Ray Bradbury Center] at Indiana University. | ||
+ | * [https://raybradburyexperiencemuseum.org/ Ray Bradbury Experience Museum], Waukegan, [[Illinois]]. | ||
{{fanzines}} | {{fanzines}} | ||
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{{recognition}} | {{recognition}} | ||
+ | * 1947 -- O. Henry Award | ||
* 1950 -- [[Invisible Little Man Award]], [[N3F]] [[Laureate Award]] for Best Professional Writer | * 1950 -- [[Invisible Little Man Award]], [[N3F]] [[Laureate Award]] for Best Professional Writer | ||
* 1952 -- [[Sou-Westercon]] | * 1952 -- [[Sou-Westercon]] | ||
* 1966 -- [[Forry Award]] | * 1966 -- [[Forry Award]] | ||
− | *1974 -- [[Inkpot Award]] | + | * 1974 -- [[Inkpot Award]] |
+ | * 1977 -- [[World Fantasy Award]] for Life Achievement | ||
* 1979 -- [[Coveted Balrog Award]] | * 1979 -- [[Coveted Balrog Award]] | ||
* 1980 -- Lifetime Achievement [[Gandalf Award]] | * 1980 -- Lifetime Achievement [[Gandalf Award]] | ||
+ | * 1984 -- [[Prometheus Award]] | ||
* 1986 -- '''[[Confederation]]''' | * 1986 -- '''[[Confederation]]''' | ||
− | * 1989 -- [[SFWA Grand Master]] | + | * 1989 -- [[SFWA Grand Master]], [[Bram Stoker Award]] for Lifetime Achievement |
+ | * 1994 -- Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award fromthe Tulsa Library Trust, Emmy Award for the screenplay ''The Halloween Tree'' | ||
* 1996 -- [[Archon 20]], [[First Fandom Hall of Fame award]] | * 1996 -- [[Archon 20]], [[First Fandom Hall of Fame award]] | ||
+ | * 1999 -- [[Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame]] | ||
+ | * 2002 -- Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame | ||
+ | * 2004 -- National Medal of Arts | ||
+ | * 2006 -- [[Conflux 3]] Honoured Guest | ||
+ | * 2007 -- [[Sir Arthur Clarke Award]] Special Award | ||
* 2008 -- [[SFPA Grand Master]] | * 2008 -- [[SFPA Grand Master]] | ||
− | |||
* 2012 -- [[First Fandom Hall of Fame award]] | * 2012 -- [[First Fandom Hall of Fame award]] | ||
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One of the more distinguished [[fans]]-turned-[[pro]], had made a reasonably good name for himself in [[fanzine]] work before [[America]]'s entry into [[World War II]], tho his [[neoish]] characteristics were not loveable. But, [[pro-crasher|crashing the pros]], he began to turn out [[fantasy]] and [[science-fantasy]] which, tho in a quasi-mystical style not representative of the best modern [[SF]], gained much praise and popularity in the late 40s and early 50s either in spite of or because of its close resemblance to modern "arty" writing. (During this period of [[Fifth Fandom]] we were undergoing all sorts of soulsearching about [[stf]] not being Literature, and welcomed a Real Artistic Writer.) From this output derived Bradburyism as a descriptive of the gentleman's attitude toward the world; it's merely another department of that Anti-Materialist cult which keens over the grave of home handicrafts and proclaims the Evil of dirty old mechanistic science's trampling on Higher Spiritual Values. | One of the more distinguished [[fans]]-turned-[[pro]], had made a reasonably good name for himself in [[fanzine]] work before [[America]]'s entry into [[World War II]], tho his [[neoish]] characteristics were not loveable. But, [[pro-crasher|crashing the pros]], he began to turn out [[fantasy]] and [[science-fantasy]] which, tho in a quasi-mystical style not representative of the best modern [[SF]], gained much praise and popularity in the late 40s and early 50s either in spite of or because of its close resemblance to modern "arty" writing. (During this period of [[Fifth Fandom]] we were undergoing all sorts of soulsearching about [[stf]] not being Literature, and welcomed a Real Artistic Writer.) From this output derived Bradburyism as a descriptive of the gentleman's attitude toward the world; it's merely another department of that Anti-Materialist cult which keens over the grave of home handicrafts and proclaims the Evil of dirty old mechanistic science's trampling on Higher Spiritual Values. | ||
}} | }} | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | [[File:1939ConeyCar.jpeg|frame|center|upright|'''During the [[first Worldcon]], [[fans]] took the opportunity to visit Coney Island, where this [[foto]]-op took place. '''''Front:''''' [[Mark Reinsberg]], [[Jack Agnew]], [[Ross Rocklynne]].''' ''Rear:'' '''[[V. Kidwell]], [[Robert A. Madle]], [[Erle Korshak]], Ray Bradbury, July 4, 1939.''' ''Courtesy of Robert Madle.'']] | ||
Revision as of 06:14, 11 October 2022
(August 22, 1920 – May 6, 2012)
Considered one of the Big Three, and one of the most celebrated writers of the 20th century, author Ray Bradbury was goh at the 1986 Worldcon, Confederation. He first became interested in SF when he read an A. Hyatt Verrill Ant story in Amazing at age 9. He continued to read and got hooked on Astounding in 1937. Born in Waukegan, Illinois, Bradbury spent his childhood alternating between there and Tucson, Arizona, finally moving with his family to Los Angeles at age 14.
Contents
Fan[edit]
In the fall of 1937, he met a member of LASFS in a bookstore, and when T. Bruce Yerke heard there was another reader around, he invited him to the club. Bradbury went to a meeting where he met Henry Kuttner and Forry Ackerman. (This was also the week when the first issue of Voice of the Imagi-Nation was published.) He joined the following week and was soon club librarian and writing for various fanzines. He became a close friend of Ray Harryhausen’s.
He was a member of Apa-F, WAFFF and the Sacred Order of FooFoo. He was a founding member of The National Fantasy Fan Federation.
In Memoirs of a Superfluous Fan, Bruce Yerke describes the teenaged Bradbury: "This fantastic creature became endeared to all of us henceforth, and though often the victim of assaults with trays and hammers by infuriated victims of his endless pranks and disturbances, remained a primary figure in the club all through 1938, 1939, 1940, and 1941."
In 1939, he attended the first Worldcon in New York, with funds from his friends Forry Ackerman and Morojo. Also funded by Ackerman, Bradbury started a fanzine, Futuria Fantasia, in 1939, and wrote most of its four issues.
Pro[edit]
Bradbury began to publish science fiction stories in fanzines in 1938. His first published story was "Hollerbochen's Dilemma", which appeared in the fanzine Imagination! in January, 1938.
He later became a filthy pro. His first paid work, "Pendulum", written with fellow LASFan Henry Hasse, was published in the pulp magazine Super Science Stories in November 1941; he earned $15.
His best known works include the novel Fahrenheit 451 (1953) and his short-story collections The Martian Chronicles (1950) and The Illustrated Man (1951).
The Ray Bradbury Theater, an anthology TV series by Bradbury, with 65 episodes based on his fiction, ran 1985–92.
He was a member of the West Coast Writers Group.
Legacy[edit]
In 1971, Apollo 15 astronauts named an impact crater on the Moon "Dandelion" in honor of Bradbury's 1957 novel, Dandelion Wine. An asteroid discovered in 1992 was named "9766 Bradbury" in his honor. A digitized copy of The Martian Chronicles was sent to the Red Planet in 2008, aboard NASA’s Phoenix Mars Lander.
Ray Bradbury Park was dedicated in Waukegan, IL, in 1990.
Critic Christopher Isherwood compared Bradbury’s work to that of Edgar Allan Poe's. The Ray Bradbury Award for Outstanding Dramatic Presentation was named in his honor.
In 2010, comedian Rachel Bloom wrote a salacious song about him, “Fuck Me, Ray Bradbury”; her music video was a finalist for the 2011 Best Dramatic Presentation, Short Form Hugo, and Bloom performed the song at the 2011 Worldcon, Renovation.
Other filksongs he inspired include “The Bradbury Hate Song” by Ray Beam, Jack Natkin, Lewis Forbes, Jerry Hunter and others (1952).
Personal Life[edit]
Bradbury was married to Marguerite “Maggie” McClure (January 16, 1922–November 24, 2003) from 1947 until her death; she was the only woman he ever dated. He lived at home until he was 27 and married. they had four daughters: Susan, Ramona, Bettina and Alexandra.
See:[edit]
- Official website.
- Entry in The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction.
- Early short biography in Who's Who in Fandom 1940, page 4.
- N3F profile in December, 2016 National Fantasy Fan.
- Bradbury with Groucho Marx on You Bet Your Life (1955).
- Video of Bradbury speaking at NASA.
- Bradbury in a classic Stan Freberg commercial for Sunsweet Prunes.
- Bradbury: An Illustrated Life by Jerry Weist (2002).
- “On Maggie Bradbury, the woman who ‘changed literature forever’” by Emily Temple, LitHub, August 30, 2022.
- Ray Bradbury Center at Indiana University.
- Ray Bradbury Experience Museum, Waukegan, Illinois.
Awards, Honors and GoHships:
- 1947 -- O. Henry Award
- 1950 -- Invisible Little Man Award, N3F Laureate Award for Best Professional Writer
- 1952 -- Sou-Westercon
- 1966 -- Forry Award
- 1974 -- Inkpot Award
- 1977 -- World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement
- 1979 -- (Coveted) Balrog Award
- 1980 -- Lifetime Achievement Gandalf Award
- 1984 -- Prometheus Award
- 1986 -- Confederation
- 1989 -- SFWA Grand Master, Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement
- 1994 -- Peggy V. Helmerich Distinguished Author Award fromthe Tulsa Library Trust, Emmy Award for the screenplay The Halloween Tree
- 1996 -- Archon 20, First Fandom Hall of Fame award
- 1999 -- Science Fiction and Fantasy Hall of Fame
- 2002 -- Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame
- 2004 -- National Medal of Arts
- 2006 -- Conflux 3 Honoured Guest
- 2007 -- Sir Arthur Clarke Award Special Award
- 2008 -- SFPA Grand Master
- 2012 -- First Fandom Hall of Fame award
Retro Hugos:
- 2004 -- 1954 Best Novel Retro Hugo
- 2014 -- 1939 Best Fan Writer Retro Hugo
- 2016 -- 1941 Best Fan Writer Retro Hugo, 1941 Best Fanzine Retro Hugo
- 2019 -- 1944 Best Short Story Retro Hugo
- 2020 -- 1945 Best Short Story Retro Hugo
From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959 |
One of the more distinguished fans-turned-pro, had made a reasonably good name for himself in fanzine work before America's entry into World War II, tho his neoish characteristics were not loveable. But, crashing the pros, he began to turn out fantasy and science-fantasy which, tho in a quasi-mystical style not representative of the best modern SF, gained much praise and popularity in the late 40s and early 50s either in spite of or because of its close resemblance to modern "arty" writing. (During this period of Fifth Fandom we were undergoing all sorts of soulsearching about stf not being Literature, and welcomed a Real Artistic Writer.) From this output derived Bradburyism as a descriptive of the gentleman's attitude toward the world; it's merely another department of that Anti-Materialist cult which keens over the grave of home handicrafts and proclaims the Evil of dirty old mechanistic science's trampling on Higher Spiritual Values. |
Person | 1920—2012 |
This is a biography page. Please extend it by adding more information about the person, such as fanzines and apazines published, awards, clubs, conventions worked on, GoHships, impact on fandom, external links, anecdotes, etc. See Standards for People and The Naming of Names. |