Tuesday, 1 April 2025

2 April: Sir Alec Guinness

Sir Alec Guinness was born on this date in 1914. 10 things you might not know about him.

  1. He was born in Maida Vale, London, and was registered as Alec Guinness de Cuffe. His mother was Agnes de Cuffe; the name of his father was not recorded and has never been officially confirmed. One theory is that it was one of the sons of Edward Guinness, 1st Earl of Iveagh, who would have met Agnes while she was working as a barmaid at the Royal Yacht Squadron clubhouse at Cowes on the Isle of Wight. Members of the Guinness family claimed a "distinct resemblance" between Alec and members of the family, and one of the earl’s sons had a bit of a reputation as a womaniser. Also, why did his mother give him Guinness as a middle name? Alec himself preferred to believe that his father was a Scottish banker called Andrew Geddes, who he also resembled, and who occasionally visited, posing as an uncle.

  2. Before he started acting, Guinness worked at an advertising agency.

  3. He made his stage debut in 1934 as an extra at the King’s Theatre in Hammersmith, London. His screen role was as Pip’s friend Herbert Pocket in Great Expectations, an adaptation of the novel by Charles Dickens. Guinness was reluctant to appear on TV, but accepted the part of George Smiley in the serialisation of John le Carré's Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy after meeting the author.

  4. Guinness served in the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve in the Second World War, initially as a seaman before receiving a commission as a temporary Sub-lieutenant and later a promotion to Temporary Lieutenant. He commanded a Landing Craft Infantry at the Allied invasion of Sicily.

  5. He’s well known to many as Ben (Obi-Wan) Kenobi in Star Wars, and was the only person to receive a best acting nomination in any of the Star Wars movies. That said, he didn’t like the role at all. When he first saw the script for Star Wars he described it as “fairytale rubbish” although he did like the sense of morality in the movie, and the fact that the studio doubled his salary to get him on board no doubt helped. Even so, he only agreed on the strict condition that he would not be required to take part in any publicity. He later asked George Lucas to kill off his character, because “I just couldn’t go on speaking those bloody awful, banal lines. I’d had enough of the mumbo jumbo.” Talking of lines, he never uttered the line "May the force be with you" in any of the Star Wars films. "The force will be with you" was the nearest he got.

  6. He met James Dean, just days before his fatal car crash, and on seeing Dean’s new car, made the chilling prediction, "Get rid of that car, or you will be dead in a week!" Evidence of psychic powers? Not necessarily. In subsequent interviews, Guinness recalled that all Dean's friends had given similar warnings because Dean drove too fast.

  7. When working in theatre, Guinness preferred new plays to the classics, because he didn’t like having his performance compared to that of previous actors in those roles.

  8. While serving in the Royal Navy, Guinness planned to become an Anglican priest. He would eventually convert to Catholicism, influenced in part by having been mistaken for a real priest by a local child when playing one in a movie. Before he converted, the actor spent time in a monastery so as to experience the typical routines of practising Catholics. Every morning, Guinness recited verse eight from Psalm 143, "Cause me to hear your loving kindness in the morning".

  9. His name is an anagram of "genuine class".

  10. In his last book of memoirs, A Positively Final Appearance, he admitted to being a huge fan of the television series The Simpsons.




Beta

(Combat Team Series #2)


Steff was abducted by an evil alien race, the Orbs, at fourteen. Used as a weapon for years, he eventually escapes, but his problems are just beginning. How does a man support himself when his only work experience is a paper round and using an Orb bio-integrated gun?

Warlord is an alien soldier who knows little but war. When the centuries-old conflict which ravaged his planet ends, he seeks out another world where his skills are still relevant. There are always wars on Earth, it seems. However, none of Earth's powerful armies want him.

Natalie has always wanted to visit England and sees a chance to do so while using her martial arts skills, but there are sacrifices she must make in order to fulfil her dream. 

Maggie resorted to crime to fund her sister's medical care. She uses her genetic variant abilities to gain access to the rooms of wealthy hotel guests. The Ballards look like rich pickings, but they are not what they seem. When Maggie targets them, little does she know that she is walking into a trap.

Hotel owner Hamilton Lonsdale puts together a combat team to pit against those of other multi-millionaires. He recruits Warlord, Natalie, Maggie and Steff along with a trained gorilla, a probability-altering alien, a stockbroker whose work of art proved to be much more than he'd bargained for, a marketing officer who can create psionic forcefields, a teleporting member of the landed gentry, and a socially awkward fixer. This is Combat Team Beta.

Steff never talks about his time with the Orbs, until he finds a woman who lived through it, too. Steff believes he has finally found happiness, but it is destined to be short-lived. He is left with an unusual legacy which he and Team Beta struggle to comprehend; including why something out there seems determined to destroy it.


Paperback

1 comment:

  1. If you enjoy reading fact based espionage thrillers, of which there are only a handful of decent ones, do try reading Bill Fairclough’s Beyond Enkription. It is an enthralling unadulterated fact based autobiographical spy thriller and a super read as long as you don’t expect John le Carré’s delicate diction, sophisticated syntax and placid plots.

    What is interesting is that this book is so different to any other espionage thrillers fact or fiction that I have ever read. It is extraordinarily memorable and unsurprisingly apparently mandatory reading in some countries’ intelligence agencies’ induction programs. Why?

    Maybe because the book has been heralded by those who should know as “being up there with My Silent War by Kim Philby and No Other Choice by George Blake”; maybe because Bill Fairclough (the author) deviously dissects unusual topics, for example, by using real situations relating to how much agents are kept in the dark by their spy-masters and (surprisingly) vice versa; and/or maybe because he has survived literally dozens of death defying experiences including 20 plus attempted murders.

    The action in Beyond Enkription is set in 1974 about a real maverick British accountant who worked in Coopers & Lybrand (now PwC) in London, Nassau, Miami and Port au Prince. Initially in 1974 he unwittingly worked for MI5 and MI6 based in London infiltrating an organised crime gang. Later he worked knowingly for the CIA in the Americas. In subsequent books yet to be published (when employed by Citicorp, Barclays, Reuters and others) he continued to work for several intelligence agencies. Fairclough has been justifiably likened to a posh version of Harry Palmer aka Michael Caine in the films based on Len Deighton’s spy novels.

    Beyond Enkription is a must read for espionage cognoscenti. Whatever you do, you must read some of the latest news articles (since August 2021) in TheBurlingtonFiles website before taking the plunge and getting stuck into Beyond Enkription. You’ll soon be immersed in a whole new world which you won’t want to exit. Intriguingly, the articles were released seven or more years after the book was published. TheBurlingtonFiles website itself is well worth a visit and don’t miss the articles about FaireSansDire. The website is a bit like a virtual espionage museum and refreshingly advert free.

    Returning to the intense and electrifying thriller Beyond Enkription, it has had mainly five star reviews so don’t be put off by Chapter 1 if you are squeamish. You can always skip through the squeamish bits and just get the gist of what is going on in the first chapter. Mind you, infiltrating international state sponsored people and body part smuggling mobs isn’t a job for the squeamish! Thereafter don’t skip any of the text or you’ll lose the plots. The book is ever increasingly cerebral albeit pacy and action packed. Indeed, the twists and turns in the interwoven plots kept me guessing beyond the epilogue even on my second reading.

    The characters were wholesome, well-developed and beguiling to the extent that you’ll probably end up loving those you hated ab initio, particularly Sara Burlington. The attention to detail added extra layers of authenticity to the narrative and above all else you can’t escape the realism. Unlike reading most spy thrillers, you will soon realise it actually happened but don’t trust a soul.

    ReplyDelete