Jonathan Miller
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Sir Jonathan Wolfe Miller, CBE (born July 21, 1934) is a British physician, theatre and opera director and television presenter.
Miller grew up in Hampstead in a well connected Jewish family - his father Emanuel (1892-1970) was a psychiatrist specialising in child development, and his mother Betty (née Spiro) (1910-1965) was a novelist and biographer.
He studied natural sciences and medicine at St John's College at the University of Cambridge and University College London, graduating in 1959 and worked as a hospital doctor for the next two years. He was, however, also involved in the university drama society and the Cambridge Footlights and in 1960 he helped write and produce 'Beyond the Fringe' at the Edinburgh Festival which launched the careers of Alan Bennett, Peter Cook and Dudley Moore. Miller quit the show shortly after its move to New York and took over as editor and presenter of the BBC's flagship arts programme "Monitor". In 1966 he wrote, produced and directed a play of Alice in Wonderland for the BBC.
During the later 1960s, he had a major falling out with the magazine Private Eye that he accounts to implicit anti-semitism.
In the 1970s, he started directing and producing operas for the Kent Opera and Glyndebourne, with a new production of The Marriage of Figaro for English National Opera in 1978. He has now become one of the world's leading opera directors. At the same time he held a research fellowship in the history of medicine at University College, London.
Most of his work for television has been for the BBC, starting by producing a series of 12 Shakespeare plays between 1980-1982. He also wrote and presented several factual series drawing on his experience as a physician, for example The Body in Question (1978) (which caused some controversy for showing the dissection of a cadaver), States of Mind 1983, Who Cares and Born Talking.
In 2004, he wrote and presented a series on atheism, Atheism: A Rough History of Disbelief (on-screen title; but more commonly referred to as Jonathan Miller's Brief History of Disbelief) for BBC Four TV, exploring the roots of his own atheism and investigating the history of atheism in the world. Individual conversations, debates and discussions for the series that could not be included, due to time constraints, were individually aired in a six-part series entited The Atheism Tapes. He is also an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society.
He is a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (1983), a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in London and Edinburgh, and a Foreign Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was knighted in 2002.
In the film for television Not Only But Always about the careers of Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, Jonathan Aris played Jonathan Miller as a young man.
Miller is a currently a resident of Camden.
Bibliography
Country of publication is the UK, unless stated otherwise
As writer, contributor or editor
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- Template:Cite book (The Applause Acting Series)
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- Template:Cite book — Contributors Jonathan Miller with Stephen Jay Gould, Daniel J Kevles, RC Lewontin, Oliver Sacks
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- Template:Cite book — Essays by Jonathan Miller Geoffrey O'Brien, Charles Rosen, Tom Stoppard and Garry Wills
- Template:Cite book Jonathan Miller appears on the Puccini and Bach DVDs of this BBC series.
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Introduction or foreword contributed
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Books about Miller
Miller and the satire boom
External links
- Jonathan Miller: Theatre & Opera Director, Physician and Author
- Jonathan Miller biographical pack from Miller's agents
- A Brief History of Disbelief on Freethought Filter Wiki
- Jonathan Miller radio series Self Made Things on the origin of life
- Jonathan Miller on a 6-part the history of Public Health in England. Also includes a spill-over interview series al a Atheism Tapes
- Jonathan Miller Interview on Desert Island Discs
- Jonathan Miller's Brief History of Disbelief View Clips from documentary