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Martin Short (author)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Martin Short
Born(1943-09-22)22 September 1943
Wookey, Somerset, England
Died27 August 2020(2020-08-27) (aged 76)
England
NationalityBritish
Occupation(s)Author, television producer

Martin John Short (22 September 1943 – 27 August 2020)[1] was a British TV documentary producer and author. He is best known for his exposés on organized crime and on Freemasonry.

Early life

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Short was born in Wookey, Somerset but later his family moved to London, where he attended St Dunstan's College. His father, George Short, was an aircraft engineer, and his mother, Hazel, was a nurse. In 1962, he went to Cambridge University to study history and was also a member of the Footlights Dramatic Club.[1]

Career

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After graduating from university, Short travelled in the Middle East and did freelance work for the BBC, before working, from 1969 to 1984, on major current affairs programmes for the ITV companies Thames Television, Granada and London Weekend Television (on the Lebanon) and for Channel 4's Dispatches series (on the international arms trade). In 1988 he presented Charlie Richardson and the British Mafia for Longshot Productions and Channel 4. Short has also completed a television series based on his 1989 book Inside the Brotherhood (Further Secrets of the Freemasons), for the ITV network with Twenty Twenty Television and Granada.[2]

As a result of his work on Freemasonry, Short made an extended appearance on Channel 4's After Dark television discussion series, and on 6 April 1989 was praised by Labour MP Max Madden in the UK House of Commons by way of two Early day motions asking the House to take action on information that Short had brought forward, and to congratulate Short on his work.[3]

Short wrote, produced and narrated the prize winning[2] ITV documentary series on the Mafia in America, Crime Incorporated. To accompany the series he also wrote Crime Inc.: A History of Organized Crime in America. In addition to feature articles for The Times, The Spectator, New Statesman, Punch and Time Out, he co-authored (in 1977) The Fall of Scotland Yard about police corruption in London.[2]

Short appeared in two episodes of the BBC documentary series Bent Coppers: Crossing the Line of Duty,[4] and provided the closing words at the end of the final episode: "Corruption doesn't go away. It's always there. You cannot get rid of it. All you can hope to do is to contain it, bottle it up, expose the worst examples of it, send the worst offenders to prison. Just as the price of liberty is eternal vigilance, the price of a clean police force is to never give up on the fight against corruption".

Personal life and death

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Grave of Martin Short in Highgate Cemetery

Short married Sana Saidi in 1974; when doing research in Lebanon in the early 1970s, a family he met asked him to take a letter back to their daughter (Sana), who was studying at university in London.[1] Together, the couple had three children, Ramsay, Alexander and Jumaan.[1]

Short died in 2020, from cancer, and was buried on the eastern side of Highgate Cemetery.[1]

Books

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  • The Fall of Scotland Yard, with Barry Cox et John Shirley, Penguin Books (1977) ISBN 978-0140523188
  • Crime Inc., Thames Methuen Publishing (1984), ISBN 978-0423010404
  • Inside the Brotherhood, Grafton (1989) ISBN 978-0246130204
  • Lundy: The Destruction of Scotland Yard’s Finest Detective, Grafton (1992), ISBN 978-0586209646
  • Informer, with Ron Farebrother, Smith Gryphon (1997), ISBN 978-1856851145
  • Survivor : Story of Jimmy Evans, with Jimmy Evans, Mainstream Publishing (2001) ISBN 978-1840184884
  • The Enforcer: Secrets of My Life with the Krays, with Albert Donoghue, John Blake Publishing (2002), ISBN 978-1857825251
  • Blake's Classic True Crime Compendium, with Drew MacKenzie, John Lightfoot, Tim Brown, Paul Cheston, Ron Farebrother, John Blake Publishing (2003), ISBN 978-1857825619
  • Blake's Classic True Crime Compendium 2, with Tim Brown, Paul Cheston, Ron Farebrother, John Blake Publishing (2004), ISBN 978-1857825275

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Boardman, David (20 September 2020). "Martin Short Obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 10 May 2021.
  2. ^ a b c Page three of Inside the Brotherhood (Further Secrets of the Freemasons), Grafton Books, 1989
  3. ^ Madden, Max (MP) (6 April 1989). "House of Commons Hansard Debates for 6 Apr 1989". Hansard. Retrieved 2 March 2022. That this House congratulates Martin Short on the publication of his book, Inside the Brotherhood; notes that the honourable Members for Ilford South, Croydon South, Chichester, Erewash, Banbury and Belfast North told Mr. Short they were Masons; further notes that Mr. Short believes that the honourable Members for Bury South, Reading East and Keighley are Masons; and finally notes Mr. Short reveals the Masonic Lodge to which Right honourable and honourable Members, Parliamentary Officers and staff belong is called the New Welcome Lodge (5139), which was consecrated in 1929 and meets five times a year at Freemason's Hall in London, and that Parliamentary Journalists who are Mason's belong to the Gallery Lodge (1928)
  4. ^ "Bent Coppers: Crossing the Line of Duty (2021)". IMDb. IMDb.com, Inc. Retrieved 9 May 2021.
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