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Birth
Douglas Noel
Adams was born on March 11, 1952 in Cambridge. His
mother, Janet Adams, born Donovan, was a nurse at
Addenbrooke's and his father, Christopher Douglas Adams,
was a postgraduate theology student at Ridley Hall. He
later became a teacher of theology, but this was
obviously not his final goal and he became a probation
officer and later even a lecturer on probationary theory
and practice.
Family
Douglas parents got divorced when he was five and he
moved to Brentwood with his mother and two years younger
sister Sue. In 1962 his father married again and had
another child in 1965, a half-sister to Douglas, who now
teaches English in the Canaries. His mother married Ron
Thrift in 1964 and that resulted in Douglas' half-sister
Jane in 1966 and half-brother James in 1968. Jane went
on to become a zoologist, and James works
here. James' wife gave birth to their first
born, a girl named Ella, in May 2004. Ron Thrift died of
cancer in 1991.
School
From 1959 until 1970 Douglas attended Brentwood
School in Essex, at which time he was still more
interested in the field of science than in the arts. The
moment he thought seriously about writing for the first
time was at the age of ten, when he got "ten out of
ten" for a composition in Frank Halfords class -
reportedly the first and only time Mr. Halford has ever
given "ten out of ten".
By his essay on the
revival of religious poetry he won himself an exhibition
to study English at Cambridge. Douglas was eager to go
to Cambridge as he wanted to join Footlights, a comedy
revue group there. But in his first term he found them
"aloof and rather pleased with themselves" and
he joined CULES (Cambridge University Light
Entertainment Society) instead.
Before and while he
studied at Cambridge he decided to hitch-hike to
Istanbul and all over Europe and in order to make the
money for his travels he worked as a chicken-shed
cleaner, barn builder and hospital porter (in the X-ray
department of Yeovil General Hospital; he was not
unfamiliar with this kind of job as he had worked in a
mental hospital while he was still at school).
Footlights
In his second term he joined Footlights on the
strength of Simon Jones, who was "friendly and
helpful, all the things the others weren't, a completely
nice guy". But as his ideas were not accepted by
the rest, he ended up forming the 'guerilla' revue group
Adams-Smith-Adams together with Adams and Smith. They
hired a theatre for a week and with them he had his
first considerable hit. In summer 1974 Douglas left
Cambridge and had finally decided to become a writer and
was confident he would.
None of his several
first attempts as a comedy writer brought him the great
success. He eventually worked together with Graham
Chapman (a member of Monty Python) and John Lloyd, but
most of the projects never saw the light of day and the
few that did were not worth mentioning.
Jane
& Polly
On February 4 1977 he met Simon Brett, who then was
doing Radio 4’s ‘The Burkiss Way’. They agreed to
produce a science fiction comedy show on radio. This was
the birth of the Hitch-hikers Guide to the Galaxy.
Douglas
married Jane Belson on November 24 1991 (they had been
introduced to each other in the early 80:s by a mutual
friend) and they have a daughter by the name Polly Jane,
born on June 22, 1994. They lived in Islington, London,
UK but in 1999 they moved to Santa Barbara, California,
USA. In 1997 Douglas had signed a deal with Disney to
make a feature movie of Hitchhiker, and he immediately
started working on the screenplay. Jay
Roach, of Austin Powers fame, was signed as
director.
Douglas
co-founded the company The Digital Village, now extinct
and divided into h2g2.com and Phase3 Studios (Which in
its turn became extinct in spring 2002). TDV:s business
was to produce nearly everything that has to do with
media; TV, movies, computer games a.s.o. Douglas was one
of the creators of Starship Titanic, a combined book
(written by Terry Jones of the Monty
Python-bunch) and computer game. Douglas also
wrote the Dirk Gently novels and a non fiction book,
"Last chance to see", about endangered species
(with Mark
Carwardine).
Death
"He had a narrowing of the arteries in the
heart, which is hard to detect, and an arrhythmic
heartbeat, which is usually benign. This could have
happened any time, and I'm glad it wasn't when he was
driving." - Douglas' wife Jane.
On the
morning of May 11 2001, Douglas went to the local gym to
work out. He had been walking the treadmill and went on
for some aerobics. Peter, his trainer, examined Douglas
and found his heart rate quite normal, round 130. After
aerobics it was time for some gym workout. First up was
stomach crunches, and Douglas lay down on the bench. The
trainer turned to get Douglas' towel, and when he turned
back to hand it over, Douglas rolled off the bench,
suffering a massive heart attack. All attempts to revive
him were unsuccessful. Peter got on the phone and called
Jane, saying Douglas had fainted and had been taken to
the hospital.
Douglas
was dead. He left his 6 year old daughter Polly, his
wife Jane, his mother Jan Thrift and countless other
family members and friends, not to mention thousands and
thousands of fans all over the world, in shock and
mourning. By the time of his death he had just finished
a draft of the screenplay to a feature movie of
Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy.
Douglas
was cremated in Santa Barbara and is buried in Highgate
Cemetery (East), Highgate, London, England, plot: Square
74, Plot 52377. Jane and Polly have moved back to
Islington, London together with their cats.
Scattered
information
I'm
not sure if Douglas was a sports fan. We all know he
went to the gym every once in a while, and one time too
many. I once asked him if he played golf or had tried
it, since he was a Wodehouse fan and since Wodehouse
wrote many funny golf related stories. He said:
"I
love the Wodehouse stories about golf, as you might
imagine. My one experience of it was many, many years
ago, when a friend of mine offered to introduce me to
the sport, and we played a round at a local golf course.
My friend wasn't a great player, but he was a goodish
player and he took it very seriously. The inevitable
happened and he found himself playing rather badly, and
fluffing easy shots, as a result of which he became
rather tense and morose. I, as complete beginners often
do, hit one or two lucky shots. By the end of the game
my friend was such a clenched knot of self hatred that
the whole thing was unbearable. I thought I'd give it a
rest for twenty or thirty years to wait for the memories
of that hideous day to wear off, but they haven't really
subsided yet."
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