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Interview: Frederic Raphael

Glittering career, but still an outsider

March 4, 2010 14:26
Raphael says he was persecuted at public school. “It’s why the Jewish thing has persisted with me,” he says

ByAnthea Gerrie, Anthea Gerrie

3 min read

More than 35 years after he first wrote about the experience of being a Jewish Oxbridge scholarship boy adrift in a hostile Britain, Frederic Raphael is still battling outsider angst.

His semi-autobiographical protagonist of his book The Glittering Prizes, Adam Morris, morphed from Cambridge graduate to successful middle-aged writer in the sequel, Fame and Fortune. But success in Thatcher’s Britain did not dampen Morris’s suspicion that “Jewboy” cracks were being bandied just out of earshot, and at 78 Raphael still rails about the anti-Jewish and anti-Israel sentiment of the Britsh media.

“The Jewish thing is inexplicable,” he says. “I don’t go to synagogue, I’m not interested in any kind of community and I don’t care if the Chief Rabbi considers me a proper Jew, although Jonathan Sacks and I are friends in an informal sort of way. I don’t feel I owe anything to being Jewish. But I’m locked into it. One can’t disown one’s heritage, and I don’t take kindly to the suggestion that Israel is a criminal state. Ever since school I have been cautious about mixing with other people — I fear them. I don’t feel I was bullied at my public school, Charterhouse, so much as persecuted; it is why the Jewish thing has persisted with me.”

Morris, now a pensioner, reappears in the last book of the trilogy, Final Demands. Not that a trilogy was conceived when he wrote The Glittering Prizes, explains Raphael, who is still furious that the hit TV adaptation of 1976 which won him a Royal Television Society Writer of the Year award has never been repeated by the BBC. “At least not on TV — it was done for radio a few years ago. That’s when I was asked by the producer if I thought I could revisit those same characters 30 years on,” he says.