Jump to content

Sophie Dahl: Difference between revisions

From Niidae Wiki
imported>Citation bot
Altered title. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Abductive | Category:People educated at Bedales School | #UCB_Category 100/199
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 09:13, 17 May 2025

Template:Short description Template:Use British English Template:Use dmy dates

Template:Infobox writer

Sophie Dahl (born Sophie Holloway on 15 September 1977)<ref>Patricia Neal: An Unquiet Life, Stephen Michael Shearer, 2021</ref><ref>Hammer Complete: The Films, The Personnel, The Company, Howard Maxford, McFarland, Inc. Publishers, 2019, p. 403</ref><ref name=":0">Template:Cite web</ref> is an English author and former fashion model. Her first novel, The Man with the Dancing Eyes, was published in 2003 followed by Playing With the Grown-ups in 2007. In 2009, she wrote Miss Dahl's Voluptuous Delights, a cookery book which formed the basis for a six-part BBC Two series named The Delicious Miss Dahl. In 2011, she published her second cookery book From Season to Season. Her first children's book, Madame Badobedah, was released in 2019. She is the daughter of Tessa Dahl and Julian Holloway and the granddaughter of author Roald Dahl, actress Patricia Neal, and actor Stanley Holloway.

Early life and education

[edit]

Dahl was born in London in 1977 to the actor Julian Holloway and the writer Tessa Dahl, who were unmarried.<ref name="TelegraphGarnett">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=":0" /> Dahl's parents separated shortly after her birth.<ref name="Scott2019Times">Template:Cite news</ref> Through her mother, Dahl has three half-siblings.<ref name="TelegraphGarnett"/> As a child, Sophie frequently spent time at both her maternal and paternal grandparents' houses in Great Missenden, Buckinghamshire, and East Preston, West Sussex, respectively.<ref>"Visiting the Roald Dahl Museum" Template:Webarchive, Roald Dahl Museum.org, accessed 26 November 2013.</ref><ref>"Sophie Dahl, model and TV presenter" Template:Webarchive, The Scotsman (magazine), 20 March 2010, accessed 26 November 2013.</ref> Dahl has noted that her childhood was "an odd one, but with such magic".<ref name="GUARDIAN1" /> Dahl attended 10 schools and lived in 17 homes in various locations including London, New York, and India.<ref name="GUARDIAN1">"'I'm a bit of a dork" Template:Webarchive, The Guardian (online edition), 19 October 2007, accessed 26 November 2013</ref>

Writing career

[edit]

In 2003, Dahl published her first book, an illustrated novella and Times bestseller, The Man with the Dancing Eyes (Bloomsbury Publishing).<ref>"Soft-shoe shuffle" Template:Webarchive, Hadley Freeman The Guardian, 1 February 2003, accessed 23 November 2020.</ref> From 2005, she was a contributing editor and regular columnist at Men's Vogue, until its closure in 2008. Her next books were Playing with the Grown-Ups (2007)<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and two cook books, Miss Dahl's Voluptuous Delights (2009)<ref>"Sophie Dahl" Template:Webarchive, BBC, accessed 2 February 2019.</ref> and From Season To Season (2011).<ref>"From Season to Season: A Year in Recipes (Hardback)" Template:Webarchive, Waterstones, accessed 23 November 2020</ref> She was a contributor to an anthology, Truth or Dare, edited by Justine Picardie, which included works by Zoë Heller and William Fiennes.<ref>"Truth or Dare: The First Boy I Loved", pp. 105–117.</ref> She also provided introductions to the Puffin Classic new edition of The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett,<ref>"The Secret Garden" Template:Webarchive, Penguin Books, accessed 23 November 2020.</ref> and the Virago Press re-issue of Stella Gibbons' 1938 novel Nightingale Wood – both released in April 2009 – and Nancy Mitford's Don't Tell Alfred, reissued by Penguin in March 2010.<ref>"Don't Tell Alfred" Template:Webarchive, Penguin Books, accessed 23 November 2020.</ref>

In March and April 2010, a six-part cookery series, "The Delicious Miss Dahl", which Dahl wrote and presented, was broadcast on BBC 2. She wrote and presented a social history documentary about the Victorian cook Isabella Beeton, which was transmitted on BBC 2 on 29 September 2011.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Dahl was a contributing editor at British magazine Vogue for a decade, writing about subjects from cultural identity and the journey of refugees to Britain<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> to the Proustian response to scent, winning a Jasmine Award for her column.<ref>"Vogue Celebrated at Jasmine Awards" Template:Webarchive, Vogue magazine, 7 March 2013, accessed 26 November 2013.</ref> She is a contributing editor at Condé Nast Traveller, and has written essays for amongst others, The Guardian,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> the American edition of Vogue, The Observer<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> and The New York Times Magazine.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>

It was announced in the Bookseller in 2019 that Dahl had been signed to a four-book deal with Walker Books. The first of these, Madame Badobedah, a children's picture book illustrated by Lauren O'Hara, was published in October 2019 and received a number of nominations and awards including a nomination for a Kate Greenaway Medal. It received a Parents' Choice Gold Award, and was selected as a 2019 Best Children’s Book by both the Guardian and The Sunday Times.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>"Madame Badobedah" Template:Webarchive, Walker Books, accessed 12 May 2020.</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Dahl's second book with Walker, The Worst Sleepover in the World, illustrated by Luciano Lozano, was published in October 2021.<ref>"I'm pleased as punch...", @mssophiedahl, Instagram, 25 May 2021</ref>

Her seventh book, and third children's book, Madame Badobedah and The Old Bones, was published by Walker Books in October 2023.

In 2020, Dahl became a monthly columnist and contributing editor at House & Garden magazine.<ref>"Sophie Dahl" Template:Webarchive, House & Garden, accessed 10 February 2021.</ref>

Modelling career

[edit]

Dahl started modelling at the age of 18 after a chance meeting with Isabella Blow, who was then an editor at British Vogue.<ref>"Remembering Isabella Blow, the maverick stylist who changed British fashion, a decade on from her death Template:Webarchive", The Telegraph, accessed 7 May 2017.</ref> The following year she made her debut on the catwalk at Lainey Keogh's London fashion week show, modelling Autumn/Winter knitwear.<ref>"Lainey Keogh Template:Webarchive", Bloomsbuy Publishing, accessed 3 July 2019.</ref> She went on to appear in advertising campaigns for Versace, Alexander McQueen, Boucheron, Pringle, Godiva, Banana Republic, Gap and Boodles amongst others.<ref name="HERALD1">Template:Cite web</ref><ref>"Sophie Dahl Template:Webarchive", Models.com</ref> She appeared on the covers of both British and Italian Vogue,<ref>"Brit Girls on the Vogue Cover" Template:Webarchive, Vogue, accessed 23 March 2015.</ref><ref>"Vogue Italia April 2000: Sophie Dahl by Steven Meisel" Template:Webarchive, The Fashion Spot, accessed 25 January 2015.</ref> along with the covers of Elle,<ref>"Elle Magazine Canada (July 2004)" Template:Webarchive famousfix.com, accessed 23 November 2020</ref> Harpers Bazaar,<ref>"Harper's Bazaar Magazine - 2008 - Sophie Dahl" Template:Webarchive, magazinecanteen.com, accessed 15 October 2018</ref> Red,<ref>"Sophie Dahl Cover Interview" Template:Webarchive Red, 5 October 2010</ref> Numero, and Tatler.<ref>"Tatler Magazine - October 2000 - Sophie Dahl" Template:Webarchive, magazinecanteen.com, accessed 15 October 2018</ref>

During her career as a model, Dahl worked with photographers including Richard Avedon, Peter Lindbergh, Tim Walker,<ref>"Vogue Archive – Tim Walker" Template:Webarchive, Vogue, accessed 15 October 2018</ref> Steven Klein and Steven Meisel. In 2000, Dahl became the face of Yves Saint-Laurent's Opium. The ad campaign was art-directed by Tom Ford and shot by Steven Meisel.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Dahl's nude images in British advertisements caused a near-record number of complaints to the UK's Advertising Standards Authority.<ref>"Offensive Opium Posters to be Removed" Template:Webarchive, The Guardian, published 19 December 2000.</ref>

Personal life

[edit]

Dahl's paternal grandparents were the actor Stanley Holloway and his wife, Violet (Template:Nee Lane), a former chorus dancer.<ref name="H&R74-75">Holloway and Richards, pp. 74–75</ref> Dahl's paternal lineage has been associated with the stage since at least 1850; Charles Bernard (1830–1894), a great-uncle to Stanley Holloway, was a Shakespearean actor and theatre manager in London and the English provinces. Bernard's son, Oliver Percy Bernard (1881–1939), was an architect and scenic designer, responsible for the sets for Sir Thomas Beecham's Ring Cycle at Covent Garden.<ref>Holloway and Richards, p. 74</ref><ref>"He was the nice one: farewell to Oliver Bernard" Template:Webarchive, London Evening Standard, 4 June 2013</ref> Through Bernard, Dahl is related to his sons, the poet and translator Oliver Bernard, the photographer Bruce Bernard,<ref name="bruce">May, A. (2004) "Bernard, Bruce Bonus (1928–2000) Template:Webarchive", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, accessed 22 August 2007 Template:ODNBsub</ref> and the writer Jeffrey Bernard.<ref name="H&R74-75" /><ref name="bruce" /> Dahl's maternal grandparents were the author Roald Dahl and the American actress Patricia Neal.<ref>"Patricia Neal Obituary" Template:Webarchive, The Telegraph, 9 August 2010, accessed 26 November 2013.</ref>

On 9 January 2010, Dahl married the singer Jamie Cullum.<ref>"Sophie Dahl and Jamie Cullum's Secret Wedding" Template:Webarchive, The Independent, 11 January 2010, accessed 26 November 2013</ref> They had their first child, a daughter, in 2011.<ref>"Sophie Dahl Gives Birth to First Child" Template:Webarchive, The Telegraph, 6 March 2011, accessed 26 November 2013.</ref> The couple had a second daughter in 2013.<ref>"Sophie Dahl Welcomes Second Child" Template:Webarchive, Vogue UK, 7 March 2013, accessed 22 October 2018</ref> The family lives in Buckinghamshire.<ref>"Instagram snoop: Sophie Dahl" Template:Webarchive, House & Garden, accessed 4 June 2019.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Dahl is an ambassador for Place2Be, a charity which provides mental health support and advocacy in schools across the UK.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Bibliography

[edit]

References

[edit]

Template:Reflist

Sources

[edit]
[edit]

Template:Roald Dahl

Template:Authority control