Christopher IsherwoodChristopher William Bradshaw-Isherwood (August 26, 1904 - January 4, 1986), Anglo-American novelist, was born at Disley, Cheshire in the north west of England. The son of landed gentry, his army officer father was killed in the First World War. At school he met W H Auden who became his lifelong friend. Rejecting his upper-class background and attracted to boys, he moved to Berlin, the capital of the young Weimar Republic, drawn by its reputation for sexual freedom. He worked as private tutor while writing the novel Mr. Norris Changes Trains and a series of short stories collected under the title Goodbye to Berlin. These provided the inspiration for the play I Am a Camera and subsequently the musical Cabaret. Auden and Isherwood travelled first to China in 1938, then emigrated to the United States in 1939. Isherwood settled in California where he embraced Hinduism. Together with Swami Prabhavananda he produced several Hindu scriptural translations, Vedanta essays, the biography Ramakrishna and his Followers, and novels, plays and screenplays, all imbued with themes and characters of Vedanta, karma, reincarnation and the Upanishadic quest. Arriving in Hollywood in 1939, he first met Gerald Heard, the mystic-historian who founded his own monastery at Trubaco Canyon that was eventually gifted to the Vedanta Society. Through Heard, who was the first to discover Swami Prabhavananda and Vedanta, Isherwood joined an extraordinary band of mystic explorers that included Aldous Huxley, Bertrand Russell, Chris Wood, John Yale and J. Krishnamurti. Through Huxley, Isherwood befriended the Russian composer Igor Stravinsky. From 1953 until his death, Isherwood lived with the portrait artist Don Bachardy. Isherwood died in Santa Monica, California.
Categories: 1904 births | 1986 deaths | British writers | Gay writers | Novelists |
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