Sneha Girap (Editor)

Desmond MacCarthy

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Name
  
Desmond MacCarthy

Died
  
June 7, 1952, Cambridge

Children
  
Rachel MacCarthy

Role
  
Journalist

Spouse
  
Mary MacCarthy (m. 1906)

Desmond MacCarthy wwwleninimportscomdesmondmaccarthyphotojpg
Grandchildren
  
Jonathan Cecil, Hugh Peniston Cecil, Alice Laura Cecil

Books
  
Court Theatre - 1904‑1907, Leslie Stephen, Remnants, Charles Paine Pauli and Sam, Shaw's plays in review

Similar People
  
Clive Bell, Adrian Stephen, Lytton Strachey, Roger Fry, Leonard Woolf

Sir Charles Otto Desmond MacCarthy FRSL (1877–1952) was a British literary critic and journalist; he was a member of the Cambridge Apostles, the intellectual secret society, from 1896.

Contents

Early life and education

MacCarthy was born probably on 27 March 1878 in Plymouth, Devon, and educated at Eton College and Trinity College, Cambridge. At Cambridge he got to know Lytton Strachey, Bertrand Russell and G. E. Moore.

Career

Though often thought to be a member of the "Bloomsbury Group", MacCarthy in fact had a wider circle of friends, including Logan Pearsall Smith.

In 1903 he became a journalist, with moderate success.

During World War I he spent some time in Naval Intelligence.

In 1917 he joined the New Statesman as drama critic, and in 1920 became its literary editor. He wrote a weekly column under the pen-name "The Affable Hawk". During this time he recruited Cyril Connolly to the paper.

By 1928 he was losing interest in the New Statesman, and became the first editor of Life and Letters. Other periodicals he was associated with were New Quarterly and Eye Witness. MacCarthy became a literary critic for the Sunday Times, and several volumes of his collected criticism were published.

He was author of the short ghost story "Pargiton and Harby", reprinted in the Fourth Fontana Book of Great Ghost Stories.

Personal life

In 1906 MacCarthy married Mollie, the daughter of Francis Warre Warre-Cornish. She was a respected literary figure in her own right. Her sister Cecilia married William Wordsworth Fisher. The MacCarthys' daughter Rachel married the literary historian Lord David Cecil; their son was the actor Jonathan Cecil. He is buried at the Parish of the Ascension Burial Ground in Cambridge, with his wife.

Works

  • The Court Theatre (1907)
  • Portraits (1931)
  • Drama (1940)
  • Theatre(1955)
  • References

    Desmond MacCarthy Wikipedia