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  • Yay for Carol Ann Duffy
    by Rainstop at 10:05 on 01 May 2009
    Yay!

    Duffy the Manpoet Slayer.
  • Re: Yay for Carol Ann Duffy
    by NMott at 13:34 on 01 May 2009


    I got the following through from an indi bookshop. Not sure where they got it from, but there's an interesting pice half way down about the late UA Fanthorpe

    Carol Ann Duffy is the new Poet Laureate - the first female laureate in the post's 341-year history. Duffy succeeds Andrew Motion, who has held the post since 1999. She had been widely expected to take over the role and confirmed she had accepted the job during an interview on BBC Radio 4 today.

    Duffy told the programme she had thought "long and hard" before saying she would take the job. I look on it as a recognition of the great woman poets we have writing now," she said. "I've decided to accept it for that reason."

    The 53-year-old is the latest in a line of poets which began with John Dryden and has included such great names as William Wordsworth, Alfred Lord Tennyson and John Betjeman.

    Other names being circulated for the £5,000-a-year job included Simon Armitage, Roger McGough and Benjamin Zephaniah.

    The laureate is officially appointed by the Queen on the advice of the Government and until Tony Blair established a 10-year tenure in 1999, was a job for life.

    Part of the laureate's remit is to write poems to commemorate major state occasions and events involving the Royal Family - a task which Motion said he found extremely difficult.

    Before the new appointment was made, the Government sought advice on a replacement from academics, poetry specialists, as well as the public.

    Sadly, the news coincides with the announcement of the death of UA Fanthorpe, the sharp, witty poet equally admired by critics and the public. She was 79.

    Many felt that in 1999 she should have become the first woman poet laureate, but she was beaten to the position by Andrew Motion, who retires this month and whose successor will be announced tomorrow.
    Motion later chaired a panel of judges which recommended her for the Queen's gold medal for poetry <http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/poetry> .
    She was duly awarded the medal in 2003, only the fifth woman in 70 years to win it. She also became a CBE for services to literature in 2001, and in 1994 the first woman in 315 years to be nominated as professor of poetry at Oxford University. Her 1995 collection Safe as Houses is included on the A-level syllabus.

    "She was an extraordinary character," Richard Hendin, who had worked with her at Peterloo, said. "You might find yourself in some provincial English market town, and happen upon a member of the WI with a little stall selling marmalade, and that woman would look precisely like UA - but what she was selling was not marmalade. What you got from her was amazing poetry that quietly de-centred you and made you think."

    Her friend of 44 years, the academic and poet Rosie Bailey, said : "She was obviously incredibly gifted, quite exceptional. She had no side to her and she was very straight. She loved to laugh and loved writing to say what interested her and what mattered to her most."

    Fanthorpe published nothing until 1978, when she was almost 50. She was head of English at Cheltenham Ladies College when she decided on a radical change of career. Her time as a receptionist in a Bristol neurological hospital inspired her first collection, Side Effects. Her shrewd work immediately found both critical and popular acclaim, and she went on to publish eight more collections, all with Peterloo Poets, as well as audio-books and a volume of poems published by Penguin.

    She was amused by the campaign to make her poet laureate - she was the Guardian's top choice last time round - but resigned about never winning it, saying: "I never really thought I would. Andrew [Motion] has worked so hard - and I haven't got that much energy left in me."