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===Relationships===
===Relationships===
Barker has been openly gay<ref>http://books.google.com/books?id=yGIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA60&dq=clive+barker+homosexual&hl=es&sa=X&ei=OCGTT5qwMaqw2wWV-q2CBQ&ved=0CFcQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=clive%20barker%20gay&f=false</ref> since the early 1990s. Clive Barker's relationship with David Armstrong ended in 2009.
Barker has been openly gay<ref>http://books.google.com/books?id=yGIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA60&dq=clive+barker+homosexual&hl=es&sa=X&ei=OCGTT5qwMaqw2wWV-q2CBQ&ved=0CFcQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=clive%20barker%20gay&f=false</ref> since the early 1990s. Clive Barker separated from partner David Armstrong in 2009 after a fourteen year relationship.


==Writing career==
==Writing career==

Revision as of 22:27, 21 November 2012

Clive Barker
Clive Barker in 2007 at the EMP/Science Fiction Museum in Seattle.
Clive Barker in 2007 at the EMP/Science Fiction Museum in Seattle.
Born (1952-10-05) 5 October 1952 (age 71)
Liverpool, England, UK
OccupationAuthor, film director, screenwriter, producer, actor, playwright, painter, illustrator & visual artist
NationalityBritish
GenreHorror, Fantasy
Website
http://www.clivebarker.info/

Clive Barker (born 5 October 1952) is an English author, film director and visual artist best known for his work in both fantasy and horror fiction. Barker came to prominence in the mid-1980s with a series of short stories which established him as a leading young horror writer. He has since written many novels and other works, and his fiction has been adapted into motion pictures, notably the Hellraiser and Candyman series.

Early life

Clive Barker was born in Liverpool, England, the son of Joan Ruby (née Revill), a painter and school welfare officer, and Leonard Barker, a personnel director for an industrial relations firm.[1][2] Educated at Dovedale Primary School and the former Quarry Bank High School now Calderstones Quarry Bank High School, he studied English and Philosophy at Liverpool University.

As a four-year-old child, Barker witnessed the death of Léo Valentin, a French skydiver who plummeted to his death during a performance at an air show in Liverpool. Barker would later allude to Valentin in many of his stories.[3]

Personal life

In 2003, Barker received The Davidson/Valentini Award at the 15th GLAAD Media Awards, presented "to an openly lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender individual who has made a significant difference in promoting equal rights for any of those communities".[4] While Barker is critical of organized religion, he has identified himself as a Christian[5] and has stated that the Bible influences his work.[6]

Barker said in a December 2008 online interview (published March 2009) that he had polyps in his throat which were so severe that a doctor told him he was taking in ten percent of the air he was supposed to have been getting. He has had two surgeries to remove them and believes his resultant voice is an improvement over how it was prior to the surgeries. He said he did not have cancer and has given up cigars.[7] On 27 August 2010, Barker underwent surgery yet again to remove new polyp growths from his throat.

In early February 2012 Barker fell into a coma after a dentist visit led to blood poisoning. Barker remained in a coma for eleven days but eventually came out of it. Fans were notified on his Twitter page about some of the experience and that Barker was recovering after the ordeal, but left with many strange visions.

Relationships

Barker has been openly gay[8] since the early 1990s. Clive Barker separated from partner David Armstrong in 2009 after a fourteen year relationship.

Writing career

Barker is an author of contemporary horror/fantasy, writing in the horror genre early in his career, mostly in the form of short stories (collected in Books of Blood 1 – 6), and the Faustian novel The Damnation Game (1985). Later he moved towards modern-day fantasy and urban fantasy with horror elements in Weaveworld (1987), The Great and Secret Show (1989), the world-spanning Imajica (1991) and Sacrament (1996), bringing in the deeper, richer concepts of reality, the nature of the mind and dreams, and the power of words and memories.

Barker's distinctive style is characterized by the notion of hidden fantastical worlds coexisting with our own, the role of sexuality in the supernatural and the construction of coherent, complex and detailed universes. Barker has referred to this style as "dark fantasy" or the "fantastique". His stories are notable for a deliberate blurring of the distinction between binary opposites such as hell and heaven, or pleasure and pain (the latter particularly so in The Hellbound Heart).

When the Books of Blood were first published in the United States in paperback, Stephen King was quoted on the book covers: "I have seen the future of horror, his name is Clive Barker."[9] Critical studies of Barker's work include Clive Barker's Short Stories (1994) by Gary Hoppenstand[10] and an essay in S. T. Joshi's The Modern Weird Tale (2001). As influences on his writing, Barker lists Herman Melville, Edgar Allan Poe, Ray Bradbury, William S. Burroughs, William Blake, and Jean Cocteau, among others.[11]

He is also the writer of the best-selling Abarat series, and plans on producing two more novels in the series.

Barker's basic philosophy and approach are revealed in his foreword to H.R. Giger's illustrated work, "Necronomicon."

Film work

Barker has a keen interest in movie production, although his films have received mixed receptions. He wrote the screenplays for Underworld (aka Transmutations – 1985) and Rawhead Rex (1986), both directed by George Pavlou.[12] Displeased by how his material was handled, he moved to directing with Hellraiser (1987), based on his novella The Hellbound Heart. His early movies, the shorts The Forbidden and Salome, are experimental art movies with surrealist elements, which have been re-released together to moderate critical acclaim. After his film Nightbreed (Cabal), which was widely considered to be a flop, Barker returned to write and direct Lord of Illusions. Barker was an executive producer of the film Gods and Monsters, which received major critical acclaim. He had been working on a series of movie adaptations of his The Abarat Quintet books under Disney's management, but has admitted that because of creative differences, this project will not go ahead. He is developing a film based on his Tortured Souls line of toys from McFarlane Toys.

In October 2006, Barker announced through his official website that he will be writing the script to a forthcoming remake of the original Hellraiser movie.[13][14]

A short story titled "The Forbidden", from Barker's Books of Blood, provided the basis for the film Candyman and its two sequels.

Japanese director Ryuhei Kitamura directed the 2008 film Midnight Meat Train from Jeff Buhler's screenplay based on Barker's short story of the same name for Lakeshore Entertainment and Lionsgate.

In 2008, a movie was made from one of his "Book of Blood" short stories.[15] Clive Barker's Book of Blood was moderately well received, but was not very profitable.

In 2009 Barker's short story Dread (also from the Books of Blood) was made into a film and received good reviews. Dread (2009) on IMDb

Visual art and plays

Barker is a prolific visual artist working in a variety of media, often illustrating his own books. His paintings have been seen first on the covers of his official fan club magazine, Dread, published by Fantaco in the early '90s; on the covers of the collections of his plays, Incarnations (1995) and Forms of Heaven (1996); and on the second printing of the original UK publications of his Books of Blood series. Barker also provided the artwork for his young adult novel The Thief of Always and for the Abarat series. His artwork has been exhibited at Bert Green Fine Art in Los Angeles and Chicago, at the Bess Cutler Gallery in New York and La Luz De Jesus in Los Angeles. Many of his sketches and paintings can be found in the collection Clive Barker, Illustrator, published in 1990 by Arcane/Eclipse Books, and in Visions of Heaven and Hell, published in 2005 by Rizzoli Books. The most complete selection of Clive Barker's paintings and drawings are available to view in a gallery setting on the website.

He worked on the creative side of a horror video game, Clive Barker's Undying, providing the voice for the character Ambrose. Undying was developed by DreamWorks Interactive and released in 2001. He also worked on Clive Barker's Jericho for Codemasters, which was released in late 2007.

Barker created Halloween costume designs for Disguise Costumes[16][17]

Comic books

A longtime comics fan, Barker achieved his dream of publishing his own superhero books when Marvel Comics launched the Razorline imprint in 1993. Based on detailed premises, titles and lead characters he created specifically for this, the four interrelated titles — set outside the Marvel universe — were Ectokid (written first by James Robinson, then by future Matrix co-creator Lana Wachowski, with art by Steve Skroce), Hokum & Hex (written by Frank Lovece, art by Anthony Williams), Hyperkind (written by Fred Burke, art by Paris Cullins and Bob Petrecca) and Saint Sinner (written by Elaine Lee, art by Max Douglas). A 2002 Barker telefilm titled Saint Sinner bore no relation to the comic.

Barker horror adaptations and spinoffs in comics include the Marvel/Epic Comics series Hellraiser, Nightbreed, Pinhead, The Harrowers, Book of the Damned, and Jihad; Eclipse Books' series and graphic novels Tapping The Vein, Dread, Son of Celluloid, Revelations The Life of Death, Rawhead Rex and The Yattering and Jack, and Dark Horse Comics' Primal, among others. Barker served as a consultant and wrote issues of the Hellraiser anthology comic book.

In 2005, IDW published a three-issue adaptation of Barker's children's fantasy novel The Thief of Always, written and painted by Kris Oprisko and Gabriel Hernandez. IDW is publishing a 12 issue adaptation of Barker's novel The Great and Secret Show.

In December 2007, Chris Ryall and Clive Barker announced an upcoming collaboration of an original comic book series, Torakator, to be published by IDW.[18]

In October 2009, IDW published Seduth (Written by Clive Barker and Chris Monfette; art by Gabriel Rodriguez; colors by Jay Fotos; letters by Neil Uyetake; edits by Chris Ryall; and 3-D conversion by Ray Zone), the first time Barker has created a world specifically for the comic book medium in two decades. The work was released with three variant covers; cover a featuring art by Gabriel Rodriguez and cover b with art by Clive Barker and the third is a "retailer incentive signed edition cover" with art by Clive Barker.[19]

Bibliography

Novels

Collections

  • (1984–1985) Books of Blood (vols. 1 through 6 were released between 1984 and 1985. vols. 4 through 6 were published in the U.S. as The Inhuman Condition (volume 4), In the Flesh (volume 5), and Cabal (volume 6, though the title novella is original to this edition and replaces one of the volume's stories).)
  • (1985) Cabal (titular novella was also published as a Nightbreed mass market paperback)
  • (1987) The Inhuman Condition
  • (1987) In the Flesh
  • (1990) Clive Barker, Illustrator
  • (1992) Illustrator II: The Art of Clive Barker
  • (1995) Incarnations: Three Plays
  • (1996) Forms of Heaven: Three Plays
  • (2000) The Essential Clive Barker: Selected Fiction
  • (2005) Visions of Heaven and Hell
  • (?) Black is the Devil's Rainbow

Biographies

  • (1991) Clive Barker's Shadows in Eden A collection of essays written by multiple authors and friends of Barker's discussing production on his movies and interspersed with early sketches and drawings, along with snippets from various interviews. Edited by Stephen Jones.
  • (2002) Clive Barker: The Dark Fantastic by Douglas E. Winter
  • (2009) Memory, Prophecy and Fantasy: The World and Works of Clive Barker – Volume 1. A retrospective look at the background to Barker's published work from his earliest creative years. It includes many otherwise unpublished texts, artwork and photographic pieces alongside a detailed study of his fringe theatre work, written by Phil and Sarah Stokes who run his official website, Revelations.
  • (2010) Memory, Prophecy and Fantasy: The World and Works of Clive Barker – Volume 2. A second volume of the retrospective study of Barker's work again includes many otherwise unpublished texts and artwork from direct access to Barker's archives, written by Phil and Sarah Stokes.[20]

Nonfiction

  • (2011) The Painter, The Creature and The Father of Lies: Essays by Clive Barker Collection of Barker's essays and non-fiction writing. According to the Revelations website, the collection includes "introductions to both his own work and the works of others, newspaper and magazine articles, tributes and appreciations and other contributions to books". Published through Earthling Publications in October 2011.[21]
  • (2011) Beneath The Surface of Clive Barker's Abarat Companion volume to Barker's Abarat series. Published in 2011, the volume illustrates Barker's working methods, preliminary sketches, artwork and drafts and includes an extended interview with Barker by Abarat readers in an Alaskan school.[22]

Filmography

Year Title Director Producer Writer
1973 Salome
☒N
1978 The Forbidden
☒N
1985 Transmutations
☒N
1986 Rawhead Rex
☒N
☒N
1987 Hellraiser
☒N
☒N
1988 Hellbound: Hellraiser II
☒N
1990 Nightbreed
☒N
☒N
1992 Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth
☒N
Candyman
☒N
1995 Lord of Illusions
☒N
☒N
☒N
1996 Hellraiser: Bloodline
☒N
1998 Gods and Monsters
☒N
2006 The Plague
☒N
2008 Book of Blood
☒N
The Midnight Meat Train
☒N
2009 Dread
☒N
2013 Hellraiser
☒N
TBA Tortured Souls: Animae Damnatae
☒N
☒N
TBA Born
☒N

Video games

See also

References

  1. ^ Clive Barker Biography
  2. ^ Clive Barker Biography – Yahoo! Movies
  3. ^ Abrams, Michael (2006). Birdmen, Batmen, and Skyflyers: Wingsuits and the Pioneers Who Flew in Them, Fell in Them, and Perfected Them. New York: Harmony Books. pp. 131–132. ISBN 978-1-4000-5491-6.
  4. ^ The Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) Web Site
  5. ^ Presenter: Bill Maher (Friday 25 April 2003). "Season 1, Episode 10". Real Time with Bill Maher. 60 minutes minutes in. HBO. CBS Television City. {{cite episode}}: Check date values in: |airdate= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameters: |transcripturl= and |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |city= ignored (|location= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ The Official Clive Barker Resource-Revelations-Barker on Spirituality
  7. ^ Art and the Artist: An Interview with Clive Barker Strange Horizons interview
  8. ^ http://books.google.com/books?id=yGIEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA60&dq=clive+barker+homosexual&hl=es&sa=X&ei=OCGTT5qwMaqw2wWV-q2CBQ&ved=0CFcQ6AEwBQ#v=onepage&q=clive%20barker%20gay&f=false
  9. ^ http://www.clivebarker.info/newsstephenking.html
  10. ^ Clive Barker's Short Stories: Imagination as Metaphor in the Books of Blood and other works by Gary Hoppenstand. McFarland, 1994.
  11. ^ "Influences". Clive Barker Revelations. Retrieved 27 November 2011.
  12. ^ Underworld at IMDb
  13. ^ The Official Clive Barker Resource – Revelations – Exclusive Interviews 15
  14. ^ Clive Barker remaking HellraiserFangoria news, 20 October 2006
  15. ^ Revelations – official site interview 7 September 2007
  16. ^ "Dress Up Like Clive Barker's Nightmares".
  17. ^ "Clive Barkers Enters the 'Dark Bazaar' with JAKKS Pacific".
  18. ^ The Official Clive Barker Resource – Revelations – Uncompleted Other Projects – B
  19. ^ IDW Publishing
  20. ^ Official site, Clive Barker. "Revelations". Memory, Prophecy Fantasy. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
  21. ^ Publications, Earthling. "The Painter". The Painter, The Creature and The Father of Lies. Retrieved 26 April 2011.
  22. ^ Official site, Clive Barker. "Revelations". Beneath the Surface of Abarat. Retrieved 20 September 2011.

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