John Le Carré


About

Also Known As
David John Moore Cornwell, John Lecarré
Birth Place
Poole, Dorset, England, GB
Born
October 19, 1931

Biography

One of the world's most respected authors of spy fiction, John le Carré is a writer who gives his work added authenticity due to his time spent working for British intelligence agencies. Recruited by MI5 when he was still known as David Cornwell, he was still in college when he began spying on leftist groups that might have Soviet associations. He eventually joined the agency full-time a...

Biography

One of the world's most respected authors of spy fiction, John le Carré is a writer who gives his work added authenticity due to his time spent working for British intelligence agencies. Recruited by MI5 when he was still known as David Cornwell, he was still in college when he began spying on leftist groups that might have Soviet associations. He eventually joined the agency full-time and began moonlighting as a novelist, later transferring to MI6. After the success of his initial espionage books, which included Call for the Dead (1961) and A Murder of Quality (1962), le Carré shifted his career entirely to writing, and it wasn't long before adaptations of his stories hit the silver screen, beginning with director Martin Ritt's lauded "The Spy Who Came In from the Cold" (1965). Reliably producing a novel every few years - sometimes featuring his most famous protagonist, George Smiley, as with Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1974) - le Carré remained perennially popular, though his profile was elevated during the new millennium, thanks in part to the acclaimed movies "The Constant Gardener" (2005) and "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" (2011), as well as his continued and consistently exceptional literary output.

Born David John Moore Cornwell, John le Carré grew up learning a thing or two about deception from his father, who frequently dabbled in shady business schemes and associated with known gangsters. Rather than follow his dad's trouble-prone path, he became an outstanding student and worked for the British Secret Service (MI5) while still at university, monitoring any possible Soviet influence at Oxford's Lincoln College. By the late 1950s, he was a full MI5 operative and regularly participated in various highly classified activities, including conducting interrogations and setting up surveillance. Inspired by fellow spy-turned-author John Bingham, he started writing espionage novels under the le Carré nom de plume, with his first outing, Call for the Dead (1961), marking the debut of the keenly perceptive intelligence operative George Smiley. The inquisitive protagonist returned to track down a killer in A Murder of Quality (1962), but in le Carré's third novel, The Spy Who Came In from the Cold (1963), Smiley appeared as only a supporting character, with the focus changing to Alec Leamas, a conflicted secret agent contending with Cold War tensions.

Not long after its publication, The Spy Who Came In from the Cold was made into a Hollywood film starring Richard Burton and Claire Bloom. Given its warm reception, the movie paved the way for future le Carré adaptations, including "The Deadly Affair" (1966), which featured James Mason and was based on Call for the Dead. By this point, le Carré's aesthetic was firmly established, with his deliberately unfolding espionage tales rooted in moral dilemmas and realism, unlike Ian Fleming's cavalier and adventurous James Bond novels. Although he briefly detoured from the spy world for the romance-gone-wrong story The Naïve and Sentimental Lover (1971), which was influenced by his own divorce at the time, le Carré returned to form for Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1974), a complex cloak-and-dagger novel that brought Smiley back to the fore. Five years later, the BBC turned the book into an esteemed miniseries that featured the legendary Alec Guinness in the lead role.

After two more Smiley-centric books, The Honourable Schoolboy (1977) and Smiley's People (1979), which rounded out the "Karla Trilogy," the latter novel compelled Guinness to return for another TV stint, once again winning over audiences and critics with his quietly powerful take on Smiley. Shortly thereafter, le Carré turned to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict for The Little Drummer Girl (1973), which was swiftly adapted into a 1974 movie by George Roy Hill that starred Diane Keaton and Klaus Kinski, but met with a notably lackluster reception. A Perfect Spy (1986) followed, allowing le Carré to explore his own issues with his father in the themes of the book, resulting in an espionage story with strong emotional undercurrents. Praised by numerous critics, the novel quickly received the BBC miniseries treatment, with Peter Egan playing the central role of double agent Magnus Pym. Subsequent le Carré books The Russia House (1989) and The Tailor of Panama (1996) both led to well-received Hollywood adaptations and provided interesting overlaps with the Bond series, due to the presence of their respective stars, Sean Connery and Pierce Brosnan.

Around the same time that "The Tailor of Panama" (2001) hit the screens, le Carré unveiled The Constant Gardener (2001), a novel that followed a mild-mannered English diplomat desperate to solve the murder of his wife, a headstrong activist abroad in Kenya. Four years later, the book became an award-winning thriller starring Ralph Fiennes and Rachel Weisz, who won a Best Supporting Actress Oscar for her emotive role. Meanwhile, still operating at the peak of his powers with tense novels such as A Most Wanted Man (2008) and Our Kind of Traitor (2010), le Carré, who was never big on media attention to begin with, announced in 2010 that he was done with television interviews, preferring to spend his time and effort on writing, a reasonable declaration given that the prolific author was pushing 80 at the time. The next year, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy was revisited in feature-film form with Gary Oldman portraying Smiley, backed by an impressive ensemble cast that included John Hurt and Colin Firth, as well as young up-and-comers Tom Hardy and Benedict Cumberbatch. In a stamp of approval, le Carré both executive produced the movie and briefly appeared in a party scene, giving the project a vaguely valedictory mood. However, not one to rest on his considerable laurels, he pressed ahead writing his next spy story, A Delicate Truth (2013), while another le Carré movie thriller, "A Most Wanted Man" (2013), carried on the author's prominent cinematic presence.

Life Events

1950

Joined Intelligence Corps of the British Army, working as a German language interrogator in Austria

1952

While studying at Lincoln College in Oxford, worked covertly for British Security Service MI5

1958

Promoted to MI5 officer

1960

Transferred to foreign-intelligence service MI6

1961

Published first novel, Call for the Dead; introduced popular recurring character George Smiley

1962

Published second novel, A Murder of Quality

1963

Third novel, The Spy Who Came In from the Cold, became a worldwide bestseller

1964

Left the service to work full-time as a novelist

1965

The Spy Who Came In from the Cold adapted into feature film starring Richard Burton

1966

Call for the Dead adapted into the Sidney Lumet thriller "The Deadly Affair"

1974

George Smiley returned for Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy, inspired by his experiences with British double agent Kim Philby

1979

Novel inspired BBC miniseries "Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy" with Alec Guinness as George Smiley

1982

"Smiley's People," again starring Alec Guinness, became another BBC hit

1986

Published most autobiographical novel A Perfect Spy

1990

Feature release of "The Russia House," starring Sean Connery and Michelle Pfeiffer and based on the 1989 novel

2001

Made feature producing debut with feature adaptation "The Tailor of Panama"

2005

The Constant Gardener (2001) adapted into a feature by Fernando Meirelles and starring Ralph Fiennes and Rachel Weisz

2011

Executive-produced feature adaptation of Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy (1974), starring Gary Oldman as George Smiley; also made cameo as a party guest

Videos

Movie Clip

Deadly Affair, The -- (Movie Clip) Our Eyes Were Dewy Delight for John Le Carre fans, opening scenes with James Mason (as Dobbs), Robert Flemyng (as Fennan) and Harriet Andersson (as Ann), from The Deadly Affair, 1967, Sidney Lumet's faithful treatment of Le Carre's Call For The Dead.
Deadly Affair, The -- (Movie Clip) The Issues Were Clearer Every-straying wife Ann (Harriet Andersson) surprises husband Charles (James Mason) with the appearance of Austrian friend Dieter (Maximilian Schell), in Sidney Lumet's The Deadly Affair, 1967, from a John Le Carre novel.
Looking Glass War, The (1969) -- (Movie Clip) Finland Director and screenwriter Frank Pierson's opening, loosely from John Le Carre's novel, griping West German pilot Lansen (Frederick Jaeger) makes his delivery to British agent Taylor (Timothy West), for whom trouble awaits, in The Looking Glass War, 1969.
Looking Glass War, The (1969) -- (Movie Clip) Too Many Old People High ranking LeClerc (Ralph Richardson) joins fellow British intelligence officer Avery (Anthony Hopkins), visiting the seedy home of a slain colleague, Avery later ignoring guests and wife (Anna Massey), in Frank Pierson's film from the John Le Carre novel, The Looking Glass War, 1969.
Looking Glass War, The (1969) -- (Movie Clip) You Are Spies British secret service officers LeClerc (Ralph Richardson), Haldane (Paul Rogers) and Avery (Anthony Hopkins) pay a visit to incarcerated Polish refugee Leiser, in hopes he's the right man for a special job, in The Looking Glass War, 1969, from the John Le Carre novel.
Deadly Affair, The -- (Movie Clip) We Had No Option Elsa Fennan (Simone Signoret) receives Dobbs (James Mason) of the Home Office, whose earlier chat with her husband led to his apparent suicide, in The Deadly Affair, 1967, from John Le Carre's novel Call For The Dead.

Bibliography