Wife Anthea Gamble Carew
Queer Places:
Lancing College, Lancing BN15 0RW, UK
Dudley Charles Carew (born 1903; died on 22 March 1981 at Cuckfield, Sussex aged 77) was an English journalist, writer, poet and film critic. He was a special correspondent of The Times in the 1920s and 1930s, and reported on cricket matches for the paper. From 1945 until his retirement in 1963 he was the paper's film critic. Almost all his articles for The Times were written anonymously, as was the paper's policy until William Rees-Mogg became its editor in 1967.
Carew was educated at Lancing College, where he was the best friend of Evelyn Waugh.[1] Later in life, Waugh spurned Carew, but in spite of this Carew continued to be Waugh's loyal supporter, including denying the allegations of youthful homosexuality that had been made against him.[2]
In 1928 he married Anthea Gamble. The marriage was not a success, and they divorced just five years later.[2]
John Arlott wrote of him:
It was, perhaps, unfortunate for Dudley Carew that his entry into cricket writing should have coincided with the rise of Neville Cardus. If there had never been a Cardus, how highly should we have ranked one who wrote: "At the other end Gunn batted much as a man potters about a garden, digging his fork into a bed with an abstracted and absent-minded air..."
Arlott also rated highly Carew's cricket novel, Son of Grief, saying: "It has its darknesses, but it is convincing, and its characters are rounded and credible." The title, as with another of Carew's cricket books, was taken from the poetry of A. E. Housman. Housman's A Shropshire Lad contains the lines:
Now in Maytime to the wicket
Out I march with
bat and pad:
See the son of grief at cricket
Trying to be
glad.
Some of Carew's own poetry appeared in Selections from Modern Poets, two anthologies compiled by J. C. Squire and published in 1921 and 1924.
My published books: