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Susannah Clapp

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Susannah Clapp (born 1949) is a British writer, who has been the theatre critic of The Observer since 1997 and is a contributor to the BBC Radio 3 Nightwaves programme.[1]

Clapp read English at the University of Bristol, where one of her teachers was Christopher Ricks.[citation needed]

An editor and reader at the publisher Jonathan Cape early in her career, Clapp was a founder of the London Review of Books, where she was assistant editor.[2] She is the author of books about Bruce Chatwin and Angela Carter, and is the literary executor of the estates of both authors.[3]

She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature in 2013.[4]

In December 2013, after 14 years' involvement, Clapp resigned from the judging panel of the Evening Standard Theatre Awards following her objection to changes in the voting method.[5] Allegedly, vote rigging occurred caused by the use of a secret ballot, rather than the judges making their case to each other as had been the previous practice.[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Bloomsbury author page
  2. ^ Hyphen Press website – notes about the LRB
  3. ^ Clapp's page on RCW agency website
  4. ^ "Clapp, Susannah". Royal Society of Literature. 2023-09-01. Retrieved 2025-07-07.
  5. ^ Susannah Clapp "Why I resigned as an Evening Standard theatre awards judge", theguardian.com, 17 December 2013
  6. ^ Nicola Merrifield "Critics quit Evening Standard Awards panel amid vote-rigging claims", The Stage, 16 December 2013