Simon Blumenfeld
Simon Blumenfeld was a British columnist, novelist, playwright, theatre critic, editor and Communist.
Although he described himself as Jewish, he was born to a family of Sicilian refugees, who eventually settled in Whitechapel, in the East End of London. In the late 1930s he authored four books beginning with Jew Boy, "the first in what became a genre of East End-based 'proletarian novels".
During World War II he served in the Royal Army Ordnance Corps as an expert in German munitions, before becoming a scriptwriter for Stars in Battledress, an army talent show.
At the end of the war he founded the entertainment magazine Band Wagon, with Norman Kark. He adopted a number of pseudonyms for his writing, including Sidney Vauncez, CV Curtis, and Peter Simon. He founded the Weekly Sporting Review, which collapsed when sued for libel by the managers of Tommy Steele; and then Record Mirror with Benny Green.
Simon Blumenfeld died at Barnet Hospital in North London on 13 April 2005, at the age of 97. He had maintained his writing output until a few weeks before his passing, and his name was listed in the Guinness Book of Records as the 'World's Oldest Columnist'. He was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium, where a memorial plaque remains in the 'communist corner'.
Works
Novels
- Jew Boy - published in the US as The Iron Garden
- Phineas Kahn: Portrait of an Immigrant
- Doctor of the Lost
- They Won't Let You Live
- The Catalones Bandit
Plays
- ''The Battle of Cable Street''
Editor and columnist
- Band Wagon
- Weekly Sporting Review
- Record Mirror
- ''The Stage''
Personal