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'''A. J. Alan''', born Leslie Harrison Lambert (1883-1941), was an English magician, intelligence officer, short story writer and radio broadcaster.
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'''A. J. Alan''' (1883-1941), born Leslie Harrison Lambert (1883-1941), was an English magician, intelligence officer, short story writer and radio broadcaster.
 
   
 
   
 
== Biography ==
 
== Biography ==

Latest revision as of 09:10, 2 September 2014

A. J. Alan
BornLeslie Harrison Lambert
November 11, 1883
Nottingham, England
DiedDecember 13, 1941 (age 58)
Norwich, England
NationalityEnglish

A. J. Alan (1883-1941), born Leslie Harrison Lambert (1883-1941), was an English magician, intelligence officer, short story writer and radio broadcaster.

Biography

Lambert, son of Thomas Harrison Lambert and his wife Kate, was born in Nottingham and went to Rugby School before training to be a surveyor. He then learned to be a magician and became a successful member of The Magic Circle, performing especially at society events. From about 1909 he joined the Foreign Office and little is known of his civil service activities before World War II. At that time he was part of the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park and had become a senior official in naval military intelligence. At Bletchley Park he was a cryptographer in Hut 8 and he was known to R V Jones who said that "in contrast to his outrageously unconventional stories" that he led his life on "a monotonously regular timetable".

Lambert married but had no children. He lived at Holland Park, London and had a second home at Potter Heigham for sailing his boat on the Norfolk Broads.He was an amateur radio operator using call sign G2ST and authority on food and wine.

Magic

Lambert played St. George's Hall in 1908, leaving magic around 1913. [1] He served as Vice-President of the Magic Circle.[2][3]

Radio broadcaster

Lambert contacted a member of the then British Broadcasting Company to suggest he might tell one of his own short stories on the radio. This was accepted and so, as A. J. Alan, he broadcast My Adventure in Jermyn Street, on 31 January 1924. Following his immediate success, he quickly became one of the most popular broadcasting personalities of the time. He went to considerable trouble over writing each story, taking a couple of months over each one, and only broadcasting about five times a year. He carefully constructed an apparently conversational style making his stories seem like anecdotes concerning strange events that had happened to him. The endings were whimsical and unexpected.

Contrary to the common belief that his stories were told "off the cuff", Lambert took immense care over his broadcasts which were, of course, live. He used cards rather than papers to avoid rustling noises and kept a candle lit in case the lights failed. He always wore a dinner jacket and Stuart Hibberd described him as "a neat figure in perfectly cut evening dress, with eye glass and a slim black brief case". It was known that "A. J. Alan" was not his true name but only once, in 1933, was his identity guessed when an old school friend, by then living in Jamaica, recognized his voice. Many of his stories were subsequently printed in newspapers and magazines and were included in anthologies of short stories. Three collections of his stories have been published.

From 1937 his health was not good so he reduced his radio work and made his last broadcast on 21 March 1940.

Bibliography

  • Good Evening, Everyone!, Hutchinson (1928).
  • A.J. Alan's Second Book, Hutchinson (1933).
  • The Best of A.J. Alan (edited by Kenelm Foss), Richards Press (1954).
  • Stories by A J Alan at Project Gutenberg Australia (note, might still be copyright in other countries)

References

  1. Magic Circular Jan. 1942
  2. Magic Circular Feb. 1942
  3. The Complete Rich Cabinet of Magical Curiosities by Edwin Dawes (2005)
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