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Hallam Tennyson (radio producer)

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Name
  
Hallam Tennyson



Born
  
10 December 1920 (age 85), Chelsea, London, United Kingdom

Died
  
21 December 2005 (aged 85), Highgate, London, United Kingdom

Similar
  
Jonathan Tennyson (physicist), Poet laureate, Richard Evans (radio presenter)
collectionimages.npg.org.uk/std/mw58872/Hallam-...

Beryl Hallam Augustine Tennyson (10 December 1920 – 21 December 2005) was a British radio producer.

He was born in Chelsea, the son of Sir Charles Tennyson and his wife Lady Ivy (née Pretious), and the great-grandson of the Poet Laureate Alfred, Lord Tennyson. He was educated at Eton College and Oxford University.

He married Margot Wallach in Kensington, London in 1946. She was born 30 March 1921 in Mönchengladbach, Germany, and died 19 April 1999 in Highgate, London.

He was homosexual, a fact known to his wife at the time they married. He was convinced by a therapist that his homosexuality would be cured if he married a woman. He and his wife Margot had satisfactory sexual relations, and they had a son, Jonathan Tennyson (born 1955), and a daughter. He was stabbed to death in his bed, at home in Highgate, in 2005.

Hallam joined the BBC World Service in 1956, working as a radio producer and becoming assistant head of drama. His own radio play The Spring of the Beast, an account of the friendship between Henry James and author Constance Fenimore Woolson, was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 as the Monday Play [1] on 26 May and repeated as Afternoon Theatre on 31 May 1986. James is depicted as unable to overcome his inhibitions against loving either a woman or another man.

References

Hallam Tennyson (radio producer) Wikipedia