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Justin Cartwright
Justin Cartwright
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Justin James Cartwright MBE FRSL (20 May 1943 – 3 December 2018)[1] was a British novelist, originally from South Africa.

Key Information

Biography

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Cartwright was born in Cape Town, South Africa,[2] but grew up in Johannesburg[3] where his father was the editor of the Rand Daily Mail newspaper. He was educated in South Africa, the United States and at Trinity College, Oxford. Cartwright worked in advertising and directed documentaries, films and television commercials. He managed election broadcasts, first for the Liberal Party and then the SDP-Liberal Alliance during the 1979, 1983 and 1987 British general elections. For his work on election broadcasts, Cartwright was appointed an MBE.

Australian Broadcasting Corporation presenter Ramona Koval described Cartwright's novels as being "based in contemporary settings but he’s able to suffuse them with the big questions that haunt us". Three of Cartwright's early novels feature a character named Timothy Curtiz, named partly for Kurtz from Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, and partly for Cartwright's own brother. In Interior, Curtiz is in Africa investigating the disappearance of his father in 1959 while on a trip for National Geographic. In Look at It This Way, Curtiz is a columnist for Manhattan magazine while he is living in London, has a daughter named Gemma, and by the end of the novel has a partner named Victoria. In Masai Dreaming, Curtiz is in Africa researching a film about Claudia Cohn-Casson, and his relationship with Victoria is having "complications." Look at It This Way was made into a three-part, 180-minutes drama by the BBC in 1992, starring Kristin Scott Thomas; Cartwright wrote the screenplay.

In Every Face I Meet was shortlisted for both the Booker Prize and the Whitbread Novel Award in 1995, and won a Commonwealth Writers Prize; Leading the Cheers won the Whitbread Novel Award in 1998; White Lightning was shortlisted for the Whitbread Novel Award in 2002. Masai Dreaming won the South African M-Net Literary Awards.

The Promise of Happiness was chosen as one of Richard and Judy's Book Club's titles for 2005 and was the winner of the 2005 Hawthornden Prize and the Sunday Times Fiction Prize of South Africa.

Cartwright lived in London with his wife, Penny, and two sons.

Bibliography

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from Grokipedia
Justin Cartwright was a South African-born British novelist known for his distinctive blend of sharp humor, social observation, and serious engagement with themes of displacement, identity, exile, and the lingering effects of history on personal lives. His work often drew on his own background while examining the absurdities and tragedies of middle-class existence, earning him consistent critical praise and commercial success as a distinctive voice in late 20th- and early 21st-century British fiction. Born in Cape Town in 1945 and raised in Johannesburg, Cartwright came from a family of journalists before moving to Britain, where he studied English and then PPE at Trinity College, Oxford. He initially built a career in advertising—creating notable campaigns—and in filmmaking, including directing documentaries and one feature film, before turning to full-time writing in the late 1980s. His novels frequently reflected elements of his South African roots, Oxford education, and life in London, where he became a respected figure in literary circles. Among his most acclaimed works are In Every Face I Meet (1995), shortlisted for the Booker Prize; Leading the Cheers (1998), which won the Whitbread Novel Award; and The Promise of Happiness (2004), recipient of the Hawthornden Prize and a popular selection that significantly broadened his readership. Other key titles include Interior (1988), White Lightning (2002), Other People’s Money (2011), and his final novel Up Against the Night (2015). Cartwright published more than a dozen novels in total and remained active in his craft until illness curtailed his work in his final years; he died in 2018.

Early Life and Background

Birth and Family

Justin Cartwright was born on 20 May 1943 in Cape Town, South Africa. He was the son of Nancy Cartwright (née McAllister) and Alan Patrick Cartwright, known as Paddy, both of whom worked as journalists. His father served as editor of the Rand Daily Mail, an anti-apartheid newspaper based in Johannesburg. The family moved to Johannesburg in 1953 when his father took the editor position. Cartwright grew up in a family with strong South African roots tied to the country's journalistic and political landscape during the apartheid era. He was South African by birth and later relocated to the United Kingdom.

Education and Early Influences

Cartwright attended boarding school in Cape Town and later graduated from the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg. As a teenager, he spent one year attending high school in Michigan, United States. In the late 1960s, he moved to England on a Rhodes scholarship and studied English at Trinity College, Oxford, later converting to PPE (Philosophy, Politics and Economics). His father's role as editor of the Rand Daily Mail exposed him to journalism, writing, and South Africa's political tensions from a young age, fostering interests in narrative and public affairs. Notable experiences included witnessing the attempted assassination of Prime Minister Hendrik Verwoerd in Johannesburg in 1960 from close proximity. His diverse educational path across South Africa, the United States, and England contributed to a broad perspective that informed his later literary work.

Early Professional Career

Advertising

Justin Cartwright launched his professional career in advertising after completing his education at Oxford University. Upon returning to London from a brief experience working on a film production in the United States, he joined a major advertising agency as a copywriter. In this role, he rapidly achieved recognition by creating a television campaign for Pal dog food, which he conceived in about 20 minutes and centered on the humorous idea that the product was so superior that humans would jealously watch dogs eat it before turning to their own baked beans. The campaign earned several awards, including a Lion d'Or at the Cannes Lions International Festival of Creativity. His success as a copywriter soon translated into an opportunity to direct television commercials at a production company. He spent roughly two years specializing in pet food advertisements, filming dogs and cats consuming various products, though he later developed an aversion to the work due to the repetitive nature and his allergy to cats. During this period in advertising, Cartwright also directed party political broadcasts for the Liberal Party and subsequently the SDP-Liberal Alliance during the United Kingdom general elections of 1979, 1983, and 1987, for which he was appointed MBE in 1988. No records from biographical accounts indicate that Cartwright pursued a career in journalism during this early phase, in contrast to his father, who served as editor of the Rand Daily Mail in South Africa. His professional focus remained firmly within the advertising industry before he began transitioning toward other creative pursuits.

Transition to Film and Media

Justin Cartwright's experience in advertising as a copywriter provided a natural progression into directing television commercials during the late 1960s and 1970s. His creative work in advertising, particularly award-winning campaigns for pet-food products, established him as a prominent figure in commercial production and earned him a reputation for innovative visual storytelling. Building on these skills, Cartwright expanded into broader media formats, directing his feature film Rosie Dixon – Night Nurse (1978), corporate films and increasingly documentaries while continuing to produce television commercials. This period marked his shift from purely advertising-based work to a more diverse involvement in film and television production. He also applied his expertise to managing election broadcasts for political parties, further bridging his advertising background with media direction. By the 1970s, Cartwright had fully transitioned into professional film and media work, combining his earlier copywriting talents with hands-on directing across commercials, corporate projects, and documentary formats. This phase represented a key evolution in his career toward more substantial visual narrative projects.

Film and Television Career

Directing and Writing Credits

Justin Cartwright's directing and writing credits in film and television are relatively limited compared to his extensive literary career, focusing mainly on a single feature film, one documentary, and select television projects. He directed and wrote the 1978 British sex comedy Rosie Dixon - Night Nurse, which remains his primary feature film work and is frequently noted as his sole directing credit in that format. Cartwright also directed and wrote The Secrets of the Dead Sea Scrolls, a documentary video that examines scientific investigations into the ancient texts, their authenticity, and origins. In television, he directed one episode of the current affairs series Dispatches in 1990. His writing credits include the screenplay for Rosie Dixon - Night Nurse (1978), the 1980 TV movie Daisy, and the adaptation of his own novel for the 1992 TV mini-series Look at It This Way, where he handled both the source material and screenplay. These screen works reflect his earlier involvement in media production before he shifted focus predominantly to fiction writing.

Notable Productions and Style

Justin Cartwright's filmmaking career included a brief foray into narrative comedy alongside more extensive work in documentaries and political media. His most notable production is the 1978 feature film Rosie Dixon – Night Nurse, which he both wrote and directed. This British sex comedy, styled in the vein of the Carry On series and described as a bawdy farce or sub-Sid James epic, featured actors such as Arthur Askey as a lecherous patient, Beryl Reid as the matron, John Le Mesurier as a hospital consultant, and Patricia Hodge as a night sister. The film achieved particular commercial success as one of the early hits of the home video market. Cartwright's comedic approach in this work embraced risqué humor, slapstick, and farcical situations characteristic of late-1970s British sex comedies. Following this feature, Cartwright shifted toward political and documentary filmmaking. He directed election broadcasts for the Liberal Party beginning in 1979 under David Steel and later for the Social Democratic Party. This political media work contributed to his appointment as a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 1988. He also directed episodes for television, including one for the current affairs series Dispatches in 1990, and the documentary The Secrets of the Dead Sea Scrolls. Earlier in his media career, he produced and directed various television documentaries. Overall, his style spanned light-hearted, genre-driven comedy in his sole feature film to factual and politically oriented documentary formats in his subsequent output.

Literary Career

Major Novels and Themes

Justin Cartwright produced 16 novels that frequently reflect his South African birth and subsequent life in England, often examining themes of displacement, exile, and the lingering influence of cultural origins on personal identity. The main themes of his books were often centered on South Africa, with some directly set there and others exploring the broader consequences of its history through characters navigating alienation and belonging. His breakthrough works in the 1990s garnered critical attention, starting with Masai Dreaming (1993), followed by In Every Face I Meet (1995), which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize and centers on one intense, comic, and horrifying day in the life of a melancholic Londoner named Anthony Northleach. Leading the Cheers (1998) won the Whitbread Novel Award, while White Lightning (2002) was shortlisted for the same prize. The Promise of Happiness (2004) received the Hawthornden Prize, highlighting his ability to blend personal introspection with broader social observations. Later novels continued to engage with themes of family, loss, and cultural dislocation, including The Song Before It Is Sung (2007), To Heaven By Water (2009), Other People's Money (2011), Lion Heart (2013), and Up Against the Night (2015), which particularly addresses exile, Englishness, home, alienation, achievement, and loss in the context of South African heritage. Earlier novels such as Interior (1988) and Look at It This Way (1990) established his satirical and observational style, which evolved to incorporate more explicit reckonings with identity and historical legacy in his mature work.

Awards and Recognition

Justin Cartwright's novels received considerable acclaim through major literary prizes and nominations over several decades. His work Interior was shortlisted for the Whitbread Novel Award in 1988. Masai Dreaming won the South African M-Net Literary Award in 1994. In Every Face I Meet earned a shortlisting for the Booker Prize in 1995 and for the Whitbread Novel Award the same year, before winning the Commonwealth Writers' Prize in 1996. Cartwright secured the Whitbread Novel Award in 1998 for Leading the Cheers. White Lightning was shortlisted for the Whitbread Novel Award in 2002. The Promise of Happiness won the Hawthornden Prize in 2005. Other People’s Money received the Spears Novel of the Year award in 2011. In addition to these literary honors, Cartwright was appointed a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 1988 for his contributions to political election broadcasts. He later served as a judge for the Costa Novel Award and for the Man Booker International Prize in 2011.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Justin Cartwright was married to Penny, to whom he remained devoted throughout his life. This personal steadiness, including his commitment to teetotalism, stood in contrast to the often chaotic or dissolute lives of characters in his fiction. The couple lived in north London with their two sons, though the sons were sometimes absent, likely due to their own independent lives. Cartwright occasionally referenced elements of his wife's background, such as a wooden chair from her family's house in Lancashire that he used in his writing space. He reflected on his earlier family relationships in personal essays, particularly his complex feelings toward his mother, whom he described as a lonely and unsettled woman. Cartwright expressed regret that he had never fully entered her life and had not done more to alleviate her isolation. These reflections suggest that his family experiences, especially from his South African childhood, informed the emotional depth in his writing.

Later Years and Interests

In his later years, Justin Cartwright resided in north London, where he was a prominent figure in the city's literary circles. He maintained a disciplined daily routine, working at the London Library—which he treated as his personal office—to write his novels, continuing this practice actively until roughly the final 18 months of his life. Cartwright occasionally rode his motorbike across town to meet his literary agent for discussions about ongoing projects and ideas. He remained committed to fiction, publishing several novels in the 2000s and 2010s, including White Lightning (2002), The Promise of Happiness (2004)—which won the Hawthornden Prize in 2005 and sold more than 200,000 copies after selection for the Richard and Judy Book Club—Other People’s Money (2011), a satire addressing the global financial crisis, and his final novel Up Against the Night (2015), which explored themes drawn from his South African ancestry and Oxford background. Beyond writing, his interests included engagement with broader literary institutions; he served as a judge for the 2011 Man Booker International Prize, where he notably advocated for Philip Roth as the winner amid panel debates. A lifelong teetotaller, Cartwright led a relatively private, family-centered life devoted to his wife and sons.

Death and Legacy

Death

Justin Cartwright died on 3 December 2018 at the age of 75 in a nursing home in London. The cause of his death was pneumonia, and he had also been diagnosed with dementia. His son Serge announced the cause of death. In the last 18 months of his life, Cartwright withdrew from public view following the onset of an illness that affected his cognitive function. He died peacefully, and a private family funeral was held, to be followed by a memorial service to celebrate his life and work.

Posthumous Recognition

Following his death in 2018, Justin Cartwright was the subject of several prominent obituaries that reflected on his contributions to contemporary British fiction. The Guardian described his work as combining comedy with serious engagement with human tragedy, noting his distinctive style in exploring themes of displacement and identity. Fellow writers and critics paid tribute to his humane perspective and satirical edge, with observations on family dynamics and cultural shifts in his later works. Cartwright's legacy endures through the continued appreciation of his novels for their intellectual depth and accessibility, though no major posthumous awards or reissues were recorded in the immediate years following his passing. His body of work remains valued for its nuanced exploration of personal and societal tensions in an increasingly globalized world.

References

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