Age, Biography and Wiki
Andrea Levy is an English novelist and playwright. She was born in London, England, to Jamaican parents. She attended the University of Kent, where she studied English and Drama. She has written several novels, including Small Island, which won the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2004, and The Long Song, which won the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction in 2011. She has also written plays for the Royal Court Theatre and the National Theatre.
Levy is 63 years old and has an estimated net worth of $2 million. She has earned her wealth through her successful writing career. She has written several novels, plays, and short stories, and has won numerous awards for her work. She has also been a judge for the Man Booker Prize and the Orange Prize for Fiction.
Popular As |
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Occupation |
Author |
Age |
63 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Pisces |
Born |
7 March 1956 |
Birthday |
7 March |
Birthplace |
London, England |
Date of death |
February 14, 2019, |
Died Place |
London, United Kingdom |
Nationality |
United Kingdom |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 7 March.
She is a member of famous Author with the age 63 years old group.
Andrea Levy Height, Weight & Measurements
At 63 years old, Andrea Levy height not available right now. We will update Andrea Levy's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Who Is Andrea Levy's Husband?
Her husband is Bill Mayblin
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Not Available |
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Bill Mayblin |
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Andrea Levy Net Worth
Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Andrea Levy worth at the age of 63 years old? Andrea Levy’s income source is mostly from being a successful Author. She is from United Kingdom. We have estimated
Andrea Levy's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Under Review |
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Under Review |
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Author |
Andrea Levy Social Network
Timeline
The BBC Radio 4 programme "Andrea Levy: In her own words" was broadcast on 8 February 2020 in the Archive on 4 series, drawing on an in-depth interview in 2014 with oral historian Sarah O’Reilly for the British Library's Authors' Lives project, in which Levy spoke on condition that the recording would only be released after her death.
It was announced in February 2020 that Levy's literary archive had been acquired by the British Library, including notebooks, research material, correspondence, emails and audio recordings.
An Islington Heritage Plaque was unveiled in Levy's honour on her childhood home at Twyford House, Elwood Street, in Highbury in March 2020, at a ceremony attended by her husband Bill Mayblin and family members, Islington Councillors, Baroness Lola Young, and other friends.
Levy was married to Bill Mayblin. She died on 14 February 2019, aged 62, after living with metastatic breast cancer for 15 years.
Levy was the subject of a profile in Alan Yentob's BBC One television series Imagine entitled "Andrea Levy: Her Island Story", first shown in December 2018.
Her short book Six Stories and an Essay was published in 2014. It begins with an autobiographical essay and includes stories that are drawn from various life experiences.
Levy's fifth and final novel, The Long Song, won the 2011 Walter Scott Prize and was shortlisted for the 2010 Man Booker Prize. The Daily Telegraph called it a "sensational novel". Kate Kellaway in The Observer commented: "The Long Song reads with the sort of ebullient effortlessness that can only be won by hard work". The novel was adapted as a three-part BBC One television series that was broadcast in December 2018.
Levy was of primarily Afro-Jamaican descent. She had a Jewish paternal grandfather and a Scots maternal great-grandfather. She said in a 2004 article: "Jews went to Jamaica in the 1600s. My paternal grandfather was born Orthodox Jewish, from a very strict family, but after fighting in the First World War he became a Christian and came back and married my grandmother. His family disowned him, so I don’t know much about them." Her father came to Britain on the HMT Empire Windrush in 1948, with her mother following later that year on a banana boat.
Levy's fourth novel, Small Island (2004), which looks at the immediate outcomes of World War II and migration on what became known as the Windrush generation, was a critical success. The Guardian' s Mike Phillips praised the writing and the subject matter, calling it Levy's "big book". Levy herself said in 2004: "When I started Small Island I didn’t intend to write about the war. I wanted to start in 1948 with two women, one white, one black, in a house in Earls Court, but when I asked myself, 'Who are these people and how did they get here?' I realised that 1948 was so very close to the war that nothing made sense without it. If every writer in Britain were to write about the war years there would still be stories to be told, and none of us would have come close to what really happened. It was such an amazing schism in the middle of a century. And Caribbean people got left out of the telling of that story, so I am attempting to put them back into it. But I am not telling it from only a Jamaican point of view. I want to tell stories from the black and white experience. It is a shared history." Small Island won three awards, namely the Whitbread Book of the Year, the Orange Prize and the Commonwealth Writers' Prize. The novel was subsequently made into a two-part television drama of the same title that was broadcast by the BBC in December 2009. A stage adaptation by Helen Edmundson has been scheduled for performance at the National Theatre from April 2019.
After Never Far from Nowhere, Levy visited Jamaica for the first time and what she learned of her family's past provided material for her next book, Fruit of the Lemon (1999). The novel is set in England and Jamaica during the Thatcher era, highlighting the differences between Jamaican natives and their British descendants. The New York Times noted the novel "illuminates the general situation facing all children of postcolonial immigrants".
In 1994 Levy's first novel, the semi-autobiographical Every Light in the House Burnin', was published and attracted favourable reviews. The Independent on Sunday stated: "This story of a young girl in the 60s in north London, child of Jamaican migrants, stands comparison with some of the best stories about growing up poor – humorous and moving, unflinching and without sentiment". Her second novel, Never Far from Nowhere (1996), is a coming-of-age story about two sisters of Jamaican parentage, Vivian and Olive, growing up in Finsbury Park, London in the 1970s. It was long-listed for the Orange Prize.
Levy began writing in her mid-30s after her father died. It was not a therapeutic attempt to deal with her loss, but rather a need to understand where she came from. She then enrolled in Alison Fell's Creative Writing class at the City Lit in 1989, continuing with the course for seven years. She struggled initially to get her work published, her first novel being rejected by several companies that were unsure of how to market her writing. Levy spoke in a 1999 interview of the "herd mentality" of publishers worried about the possibly limited market appeal of her work: "the main problem was that they perceived it as being just about race, and thought it would only appeal to black readers." However, as Margaret Busby noted, Levy "proved that to write about... migration from the specific yet complex perspective of being a black English female is not a limitation to finding a wide and appreciative readership, but in fact the exact opposite."
Andrea Levy FRSL (7 March 1956 – 14 February 2019) was an English author best known for the novels Small Island (2004) and The Long Song (2010). She was born in London to Jamaican parents, and her work explores topics related to British Jamaicans and how they negotiate racial, cultural and national identities.