Jonathan Meades

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Jonathan Meades
Jonathan Meades reading on Sterne's grave 2012.jpg
Meades reading on the grave of Laurence Sterne
Born (1947-01-21) 21 January 1947 (age 77)
Salisbury, Wiltshire, England
Education King's College, Taunton
Alma mater Royal Academy of Dramatic Art
Occupation <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
  • Writer
  • Broadcast presenter
Television See TV works
Website www.jonathanmeades.com

Jonathan Turner Meades (born 21 January 1947) is a writer, food journalist, essayist and film-maker. Meades has written and performed in more than 50 television shows on predominantly topographical subjects. His books include three works of fiction and several anthologies.

Meades is an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society[1] and a Distinguished Supporter of the British Humanist Association.[2]

Education

Meades was born in Salisbury, Wiltshire, and educated at King's College, Taunton, which he described as "a dim, muscular Christian boot camp".[3] He studied at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in 1968.[4]

Writing

Meades wrote reviews and articles for The Times for many years, and was specifically its restaurant critic from 1986 to 2001.[5] He was voted Best Food Journalist in the 1999 Glenfiddich Awards.[6] Having given up writing about English cuisine in 2001 after being The Times' restaurant critic for fifteen years, Meades estimated, in an interview with Restaurant magazine, that he had put on 5 lb a year during his reviewing period, which works out around an ounce per restaurant. By his own statement in the series Meades Eats, after being pronounced 'morbidly obese' he subsequently managed to lose a third of his body weight over the course of a year.

His first collection of stories Filthy English was followed by Pompey (1993), which was widely praised and compared to Sterne, Scarfe, Steadman, Dickens and Joyce amongst other great stylists.[7][8][9]

Meades' An Encyclopaedia of Myself was published in May 2014 by Fourth Estate. It was long-listed for that year's Samuel Johnson Prize and won Best Memoir in the Spear's Book Awards 2014. Roger Lewis of the Financial Times said of the work that "If this book is thought of less as a memoir than as a symphonic poem about post-war England and Englishness - well, then it is a masterpiece."

Meades's book Museum Without Walls was published on the Unbound crowd-funding site, in both print and e-book editions.[10]

Meades contributes to the United Kingdom edition of The Huffington Post.

Television work

He is well known to British television audiences for his series about architecture Abroad in Britain and its sequels Further Abroad with Jonathan Meades, Even Further Abroad With Jonathan Meades, Abroad Again in Britain and Abroad Again.[11] These innovative, "slightly bonkers" documentaries[12] look at neglected forms of British architecture such as caravan parks and golf courses, and at the place that famous buildings hold in the British popular imagination. Meades's television work also includes two separate one-off documentaries about the architectural legacy of both the Third Reich, Jerry Building, and Joseph Stalin's Soviet Union, Joe Building.

Meades also wrote and presented a documentary called Surreal Film (2001) for BBC Two (although the onscreen title was "tvSSFBM EHKL", the words encoded in appropriately surreal fashion),[13] which sought to expound on surrealism in a manner that fitted the subject. Perhaps inevitably, given Meades' approach and his choice of topic, some found it bewildering and often psychedelic. However, it was nevertheless distinctive and humorous in a field often populated only by de rigueur and comme il faut offerings.

Jonathan Meades: Abroad Again in Britain was shown on BBC Two in May 2007.[14] It is a sequel to his 1990s series exploring British architecture. The film examines Salisbury Cathedral, Edinburgh Castle, Cragside, Brighton Pavilion and Portsmouth Dockyard. It uses his familiar style of jaunty camera angles often showing him from behind, going down escalators, sitting on walls or even not at all as he is walking away from the camera. He talks directly to the camera and often his speeches are split up from different angles or positions. There are times of silence or with only music where shots of the building he is talking about are shown. Equally he often uses scathing remarks to criticise other buildings such as an occasion when he refers to the Millennium Dome as a "Museum of Toxic Waste".[15]

In 2008 a two-part documentary, Magnetic North, was screened by BBC Four. In the programme, Meades celebrates the culture of Northern Europe, and wonders why the North suffers in the English popular imagination compared to the South. Meades travelled through the slag heaps of northern France, Belgian cities and to the redlight district of Hamburg, musing on the architecture, food and art of the places in which he finds himself.[16] The programme features the expected stylistic flourishes and quirks of presentation now associated with him. It was subsequently re-edited into four half-hour episodes and shown on BBC Two. Writing in The Daily Telegraph, James Walton praised the programme as "Sparkling, thought-provoking, constantly challenging the accepted view, Meades seemed at times inspired, at others deranged. The only thing he never was, thank heaven, was obvious."[16]

A 9-DVD box set collecting his various Abroad... series was due for release in April 2008 but was then reduced to a 3-Disc "Best of..." due to licensing problems and the expense of the music used in the programmes.[17]

In 2009, Meades toured Scotland in a three part BBC Scotland series Off Kilter. He visited the Granite City (Aberdeen), the Isle of Rust (Lewis and Harris) and a number of less-renowned Scottish footballing towns, guided by his "Scotnav".

In 2012, BBC4 screened Jonathan Meades on France, a series in which Meades visits what he calls his "second country". The first episode ("Fragments of an Arbitrary Encyclopaedia") focuses on the Lorraine region which is evoked through a miscellany of words starting with the letter V. The aim is to "explain why, although close to its eastern border, it has become the symbolic, or even mystical, heart of France and a stronghold of a romantic nationalism that is also expressed by such diverse means as typography, music, engineering, exquisite urbanism and, above all, a sensitivity to Germany's proximity." The second episode was entitled "A Biased Anthology of Parisian Peripheries" and focuses on Frenchness and its major traits. "Just a Few Debts France Owes to America" is the title of the third episode.

A one-off documentary, The Joy of Essex, examining the county's little-known history of utopian communities, aired in 2013.

Published works

TV works

  • The Victorian House (1986) Channel 4
  • Abroad in Britain with Jonathan Meades (1990) BBC Two
  • Further Abroad with Jonathan Meades (1994) BBC Two
  • Jerry Building – Unholy Relics of the Third Reich (1994) BBC Two
  • Without Walls: J'Accuse – Vegetarians (1995) Channel 4
  • Even Further Abroad with Jonathan Meades (1996) BBC Two
  • Heart By-Pass, Jonathan Meades in Birmingham (1998) BBC Two
  • Travels with Pevsner (1998) BBC Two
  • Victoria Died in 1901 and Is Still Alive Today (2001) BBC Two
  • tvSSFBM EHKL (2001) BBC Knowledge
  • Pevsner Revisited (2001) BBC Four
  • Meades Eats (2003) BBC Four
  • Abroad Again in Britain (2005) BBC Four
  • Joe Building: The Stalin Memorial Lecture (2006) BBC Four
  • Abroad Again (2007) BBC Two
  • Jonathan Meades: Magnetic North (2008) BBC Four
  • Jonathan Meades: Off Kilter (2009) BBC Four
  • Jonathan Meades On France (2011) BBC Four
  • Jonathan Meades: The Joy of Essex (2013) BBC Four[18]
  • Bunkers, Brutalism, Bloodymindedness: Concrete Poetry (2014) BBC Four[19]

DVD releases

  • The Jonathan Meades Collection DVD (2009) BBC

References

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  3. Sunday Times Culture, 27 April 2014
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  7. http://www.newstatesman.com/books/2014/06/bugging-device-boy-form-jonathan-meades-early-year
  8. http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/book-review-pyrotechnics-of-loathing-pompey-jonathan-meades-cape-pounds-1499-1457309.html
  9. http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/books/reviews/pompey-by-jonathan-meades-book-review-a-startlingly-filthy-read-that-shows-meades-on-top-form-8952758.html
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  11. Abroad Again in Britain
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  13. OFF THE TELLY: Reviews/2001/tvSSFBM EHKL Archived May 16, 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  14. Abroad Again in Britain BBC 2 Website Retrieved 14 December 2010
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  16. 16.0 16.1 Last Night on Television The Daily Telegraph, 16 May 2008. Retrieved 15 December 2010
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External links