David Frith
{{Short description|Cricket writer and historian}}
{{for|the Tranmere Rovers footballer|David Frith (footballer)}}
{{EngvarB|date=August 2014}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2014}}
{{BLP sources|date=February 2010}}
David Edward John Frith (born 16 March 1937) is an English cricket writer and historian. Cricinfo describes him as "an author, historian, and founding editor of Wisden Cricket Monthly".{{Cite web|url=http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/story/author.html?author=288|title=David Frith | Cricket Author |website=Cricinfo.com|access-date=5 September 2024}}
Life and career
David Frith was born in Gloucester Terrace in London, not far from Lord's,{{cite web |title=Ashes 2019 Interview - Cricket historian and writer David Frith with Jim Maxwell |url=https://www.abc.net.au/radio/grandstand/ashes-2019-interview---cricket-historian-and-writer-david-frith/11425892 |website=ABC Radio |access-date=17 December 2019}} on 16 March 1937.
The family resided in Rayners Lane, Harrow, whilst he attended Roxbourne School. In 1949, he emigrated with his family to Australia, arriving in Sydney aboard the RMS Orion on 25 February 1949.David Frith, Caught England, bowled Australia. A cricket slave's complex story, p. 66, Eva Press, 1997
After leaving Canterbury Boys' High School on 15 February 1954 he started his first job as a copy-boy for The Daily Mirror but left after two months to join the Commonwealth Bank where he was posted to the Cronulla branch. He played his early cricket for the famous St George club and then Paddington before returning to England in 1964.
=Return to Sydney=
After the death of his mother in May 1971, family commitments led Frith to move back to Sydney. Here he sought, to no avail, a full-time cricket related post but, thanks to a recommendation by Jack Fingleton, he did secure some work with the Australian News and Information Bureau. The return to Australia would prove to be short-lived and he moved back to the United Kingdom departing aboard the TSS Fairstar on 19 March 1972.David Frith, Caught England, bowled Australia. A cricket slave's complex story, p. 183, Eva Press, 1997
=Magazine editing=
Commencing with the November 1972 issue, he succeeded Tony Pawson as deputy editor of The Cricketer before becoming editor from the March 1973 issue. He founded Wisden Cricket Monthly and edited it from June 1979 to February 1996. In 1988 Frith won the Sports Council's British Sports Journalism award as Magazine Sports Writer of the Year.
Specialising in Ashes Test match history, Frith has written dozens of books on both cricket in modern times and cricket of the past. His major works include My Dear Victorious Stod (a biography of A. E. Stoddart), a lavishly illustrated history of England versus Australia, Silence of the Heart (on cricket's suicides, an expansion of his earlier book By His Own Hand), The Fast Men, The Slow Men (about fast bowlers and spinners respectively), Pageant of Cricket (the only cricket book to have as many as 2000 pictures), Caught England, Bowled Australia (autobiography), The Trailblazers (the first English tour of Australia, in 1861–62), The Archie Jackson Story (biography) and Bodyline Autopsy. The catalogue of his vast collection ran to 1100 pages. He has also been involved in producing cricket videos, which have been extremely successful.
Frith famously commented that India should withdraw from the World Cup if they did not improve.{{citation needed|date=September 2024}} When they won it in 1983 he was pleased to (literally) eat his words, with the help of some red wine, claiming that he had helped spur India to victory.{{Cite web|date=2008-06-25|title=Wisden ex-editor says why he ate his words after '83 win|url=https://www.dnaindia.com/sports/report-wisden-ex-editor-says-why-he-ate-his-words-after-83-win-1173389|access-date=2021-09-22|website=DNA India|language=en}}{{Cite web|title=When an editor ate his words|url=https://www.espncricinfo.com/story/samir-chopra-when-an-editor-ate-his-words-703921|access-date=2021-09-22|website=ESPNcricinfo|language=en}}
In association with the National Film and Television Archive, he presented an annual archive cricket film evening at the National Film Theatre in London for 30 years.{{cite web |last1=Parkinson |first1=Justin |title=Close of play for cricket's film show |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-24692240 |website=BBC News |access-date=30 September 2023 |date=8 December 2013}}
In 2003 Frith became the first author to win the Cricket Society's Book of the Year award three times, and was also a finalist in the William Hill Sports Book awards for his Bodyline Autopsy. The book also won Wisden's book of the year and, in January 2010, it won Cricketweb's award for "book of the decade".[http://www.cricketweb.net/cricketbooks/6110.php Cricket Web's Book of The Decade] review of Bodyline Autopsy In his assessment, Martin Chandler wrote:
"Autopsy" is a magnificent book possessing a vibrancy and objectivity that when I first read it I found quite remarkable. It is, without question, the CW "Book of the Decade" and were there any prospect of my being around to collect I would certainly place a large wager on whoever is writing this feature in 90 years time confirming it as CW "Book of the Century".
His co-written history of the Australian Cricket Board won the Australian Cricket Society book award in 2007, and in 2011 Frith was given the Cricket Society's Ian Jackson Award for Distinguished Services to Cricket.
He has been honorary vice-president of the Cricket Memorabilia Society since its foundation in 1987.
In 2013 he was awarded honorary life membership of the Association of Cricket Statisticians and Historians, and wrote a further book, Guildford's Cricket Story, which revealed his adopted home town's unique claims to being the 'cradle of cricket'.
Books by Frith
- {{cite book | year= 1969| title= Runs in the Family (by John Edrich; as told to David Frith)|location=London|publisher= Stanley Paul| isbn=0090978404}}
- {{cite book | year= 1970| title= 'My Dear Victorious Stod': a biography of A. E. Stoddart (Limited ed. of 400 numbered and signed copies)|location=New Malden|publisher=The Author | isbn=0950183709}}
- {{cite book | year= 1974 | title=The Archie Jackson Story: a biography (Limited ed. of 1000 numbered and signed copies)| location = Ashurst| publisher= The Cricketer| isbn=0902211021 }}
- {{cite book | year= 1975| title= The Fast Men: a 200-year cavalcade of speed bowlers|location = Wokingham| publisher= Van Nostrand Reinhold | isbn=0442301502 }}
- {{cite book | year= 1976| title= Cricket Gallery: fifty profiles of famous players from 'The Cricketer' (Edited by David Frith)| location = Guildford |publisher=Lutterworth Press | isbn=071887000X }}
- {{cite book | year= 1976| title= Great Moments in Cricket (As Andrew Thomas, editor with Norman Harris)|location=London|publisher=Queen Anne Press | isbn=0362002711}}
- {{cite book | year= 1977| title= England versus Australia: a pictorial history of the test matches since 1877| location=Guildford |publisher=Lutterworth Press | isbn=0718870123 }}
- {{cite book | year= 1977 | title=The Ashes '77 (with Greg Chappell)|location=London |publisher= Angus & Robertson| isbn= 0207957924}}
- {{cite book | year= 1978| title= The Golden Age of Cricket, 1890–1914| location= Guildford | publisher= Lutterworth Press | isbn= 0718870220}}
- {{cite book | year= 1979 | title=The Illustrated History of Test Cricket (Edited by Martin Tyler and David Frith)|location=London|publisher=Marshall Cavendish | isbn=0856857068}}
- {{cite book | year= 1979 | title=The Ashes '79 |location=London|publisher=Angus & Robertson | isbn=0207142645}}
- {{cite book|year=1980|title=Thommo (Jeff Thomson, the world's fastest bowler, tells his own story to David Frith)|location=London|publisher=Angus & Robertson|isbn=0207140340}}
- {{cite book | year= 1982 | title= Rothmans Presents 100 Years England v Australia: the complete history of the Ashes (with Doug Ibbotson and Ralph Dellor)|location=Aylesbury|publisher=Rothmans Publications | isbn=0907574033}}
- {{cite book | year= 1984| title= The Slow Men| location= London | publisher= Allen & Unwin | isbn= 0047960698}}
- {{cite book | year= 1985| title=Cricket's Golden Summer : paintings in a garden (by Gerry Wright ; with a commentary by David Frith)|location=London|publisher= Pavilion| isbn=090751667X}}
- {{cite book | year= 1986| title=England v Australia Test match Records 1877–1985 (Edited by David Frith) |location=London|publisher= Willow| isbn=0002181983}}
- {{cite book | year= 1987| title= Pageant of Cricket|location=London|publisher=Macmillan | isbn=0333451775}}
- {{cite book | year=1988 | title= Guildford jubilee 1938–1988: fifty years of county cricket|location=Guildford|publisher=Guildford C.C. }}
- {{cite book | year= 1991| title= By His Own Hand: A Study of Cricket's Suicides|location=London|publisher= Stanley Paul| isbn=0091746876}}
- {{cite book | year=1994 | title= Stoddy's mission: the First Great Test Series 1894–1895 |location=Harpenden|publisher=Queen Anne Press | isbn=1852915617}}
- {{cite book | year= 1997| title= Test match Year 1996–97 (Edited by David Frith)|location=London|publisher=Penguin Books| isbn=0140264493}}
- {{cite book | year=1997 | title=Caught England, Bowled Australia: a cricket slave's complex story |location=London|publisher=Eva Press | isbn=0953121100}}
- {{cite book | year=1999 | title=The Trailblazers: The First English Cricket Tour of Australia: 1861–62 |location=Childrey|publisher= Boundary Books| isbn=0952207095}}
- {{cite book | year=2001 | title= Silence of the Heart: cricket suicides |others= foreword by Mike Brearley |location=Edinburgh|publisher= Mainstream| isbn=184018406X}}
- 2011: Random House, {{ISBN|1780573936}}
- {{cite book | year= 2002| title= Bodyline Autopsy: The Full Story of the Most Sensational Test Cricket Series – England v Australia 1932– 3| location= London | publisher= Aurum Press | isbn= 1854108964}}
- {{cite book|year=2003|title=The Ross Gregory Story|location=Melbourne|publisher=Lothian Books|isbn=0734405987}}
- {{cite book | year= 2005| title= Battle for The Ashes|location=London|publisher=Ebury Press | isbn=0091910846}}
- {{cite book | year= 2007| title= The Battle Renewed: The Ashes Regained 2006–2007|location=Sydney|publisher=Australian Broadcasting Corporation | isbn=978-0733320828}}
- {{cite book | year= 2007| title= Inside Story: Unlocking Australian Cricket's Archives (with Gideon Haigh)|location=Sydney|publisher=News Custom Publishing | isbn=978-1921116001}}
- {{cite book | year=2009 | title= The David Frith Archive: A Detailed Catalogue of the Cricket Library and Memorabilia Collection of David Frith (Limited ed. of 75 copies)|location=Childrey|publisher= Boundary Books}}
- {{cite book | year=2010 | title= Frith on Cricket|location=Ilkley|publisher=Great Northern Books | isbn=978-1905080724}}
- {{cite book | year=2012 | title= Cricket's Collectors (Limited ed. of 150 copies)|location=Godalming|publisher=Cricket Memorabilia Society }}
- {{cite book | year=2013 | title=Guildford's Cricket Story: Celebrating 75 Years of the Woodbridge Road County Cricket Festival – and much besides |location=Guildford|publisher=Guildford C.C. }}
- {{cite book | year=2014| title= Frith's Encounters|location=Hove|publisher=Von Krumm Publishing | isbn=978-0956732125}}
- {{cite book |year=2015 |title='Stoddy': England's Finest Sportsman |location=Hove |publisher=Von Krumm Publishing |isbn=978-0-9567321-3-2}}
- {{cite book |ref=none |title=Archie Jackson : cricket's tragic genius |location=Melbourne |publisher=Slattery Media Group |date=2020 }}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Frith, David}}
Category:British male journalists
Category:Writers from the City of Westminster
Category:People educated at Canterbury Boys' High School