Simon Hattenstone Explained

Birth Date:1962 12, df=y
Birth Place:Salford, England
Occupation:Journalist and writer
Alma Mater:Leeds University
Employer:The Guardian

Simon Hattenstone (born 29 December 1962 in Salford, England) is a British journalist and writer. He is a features writer and interviewer for The Guardian.[1] He has also written or ghost-written a number of biographical books.

Life

Hattenstone grew up in a Jewish family.[2] [3] He was severely ill with encephalitis for three years as a child, and became an ambassador for The Encephalitis Society.[4] He reported lifelong changes as an aftermath of his illness.[5]

He studied English at Leeds University and trained to be a teacher, then moved to London to work as a journalist. On The Guardian, he wrote a sports column for three years, in which he described the vicissitudes of being a die-hard Manchester City supporter long before it was revived after being acquired by the wealthy ruling family of Abu Dhabi. He also became assistant arts editor and film editor.

Works

Journalism

Hattenstone is among the few journalists to have interviewed the anonymous graffiti artist Banksy.[6] People he has interviewed include George Michael, Paul McCartney, Dolly Parton, Debbie McGee, Tom Jones, Stevie Wonder, Serena Williams, Katie Price, Desmond Tutu, and Penélope Cruz.[7] Hattenstone's phone interview of Judi Dench was deemed an example of entertaining feature writing, yielding "an unconventional but, ultimately, satisfying profile".[8] He also writes about crime and justice, and has covered many miscarriages of justice.[9] He was highly commended in the Interviewer of the Year category in The Press Awards for 2014.[10]

Other works

Books by Hattenstone include Out of It: The Story of a Boy who Went to Bed with a Headache and Woke Up Three Years Later, about his childhood illness,[11] [12] and The Best of Times, about the lives of members of England's 1966 football world cup team.[13] He has ghost-written books for the snooker player Ronnie O'Sullivan[14] and for Duwayne Brooks, who was attacked with Stephen Lawrence on the night Lawrence was murdered.[15]

Film and television

Hattenstone co-wrote the television documentary series Brits Abroad (2000).[16]

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.theguardian.com/profile/simonhattenstone Simon Hattenstone (profile)
  2. News: Simon. Hattenstone. 2010-07-16 . Growing pains: my journey into adulthood . 2022-12-19 . The Guardian . en.
  3. News: 2022-08-15 . Dear Liz Truss: I'm woke, not business-minded and a leftwinger. Am I not your type of Jew? . Simon. Hattenstone . 2022-12-19 . The Guardian . en.
  4. Foreword by Hattenstone, in Book: Ava Easton. Ava Easton. Life After Encephalitis: A Narrative Approach. 26 February 2016. Routledge. 978-1-317-53837-0.
  5. News: Hattenstone . Simon. Simon Hattenstone. 'I have a hunch I was left damaged': what would a scan reveal about my brain? . The Guardian . 13 March 2023 .
  6. Web site: Who is Banksy? Suspected sightings of the elusive street artist. The Week. 14 October 2021. 28 March 2024.
  7. News: Simon. Hattenstone. Simon Hattenstone: the unpredictable and the unpublishable. The Guardian. 4 July 2015.
  8. Book: Pape, Susan. Sue Featherstone. Feature Writing: A Practical Introduction. 2006. SAGE Publications. 978-1-84787-813-7. 83–86.
  9. http://www.wronglyaccusedperson.org.uk/tag/simon-hattenstone/ Simon Hattenstone
  10. http://www.pressawards.org.uk/page-view.php?pagename=Winners-2014 The Press Awards
  11. Book: Simon Hattenstone. Out of it: The Story of a Boy who Went to Bed with a Headache and Woke Up Three Years Later. 1999. Hodder and Stoughton. 978-0-340-71869-8.
  12. Mike. Horsfall. Out Of It - Simon Hattenstone (book review)]. Police Journal Online. 79. 11. November 1998. The Police Association of South Australia.
  13. Simon Hattenstone (2006), The Best of Times: what became of the heroes of '66?. Guardian Newspapers Limited. .
  14. Book: O'Sullivan, Ronnie. Running: The Autobiography. 10 October 2013. Orion. 978-1-4091-1224-2.
  15. Book: New Statesman. 2003. New Statesman, Limited.
  16. https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1795851/bio?ref_=nm_ov_bio_sm Simon Hattenstone: Biography