Author Douglas Adams dies

Author Douglas Adams, who
wrote The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, has died suddenly aged 49.
Mr Adams died on Friday morning
in Santa Barbara, California, following a heart attack, said his spokeswoman
Sophie Astin.
The author became a household
name when the cult science fiction novel was turned into a BBC TV series.
Prominent figures at the
BBC, who worked with Adams on many projects, have spoken of their shock
and sorrow at his death.
Alan Yentob, the BBC director
of drama and entertainment, said: "Douglas was a big character who will
be hugely missed by a host of friends and millions of fans around the world.
"He was a gifted writer;
a one-off talent who managed to combine fantasy and humanity in books which
enthralled generations of readers. We'll miss him enormously."
The BBC's head of comedy,
Geoffrey Perkins, who produced the original Hitchhiker's radio series,
said: "I'm absolutely devastated. I've known Douglas for 25 years. He was
absolutely one of the most creative geniuses to ever work in radio comedy.
"He probably wrote one of
the greatest radio comedy series ever; certainly the most imaginative.
Film
"For somebody who was so
involved in breakthroughs in new developments in technology, it's a tragedy
that he's died before most of the things he's talked about have come about."
Ashley Highfield, the BBC
director of new media, who worked wth Adams on his website, said: "I've
been a huge fan of Douglas and working with him on the h2g2 website was
the culmination of childhood dreams.
"He was pretty unique in
being innovative in media after media - from radio to the web. He was still
coming up with more new ideas than almost anyone I've met.
"His brainchild - the h2g2
website - which the BBC has taken forward, is groundbreaking in enabling
an online encyclopaedia to be created by the people for the people."
Adams was born in Cambridge
in 1952 and educated in Essex before returning to Cambridge to study at
St John's College.
His career included work
as a radio and television writer and producer before his life was changed
by the publication of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy in 1979.
The satirical tale chronicled
the journey of alien Ford Prefect and his human companion Arthur Dent throughout
the universe after the destruction of Earth.
It centred around the search
for an answer to life, the universe, and everything - which turned out
to be 42.
The novel went on to sell
more than 14 million copies worldwide and was followed by the sequels The
Restaurant at the End of the Universe, Life, the Universe and Everything
and So Long and Thanks For All the Fish.
In recent years the author
had been working on a Hitchhiker's Guide movie.
There was much speculation
about who would play Arthur Dent, with Hugh Laurie, Rowan Atkinson, Jim
Carrey, Ben Affleck and even Bruce Willis said to be in the running.
Adams married Jane Belson
in 1991 and had a daughter, Polly, in 1994. http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/uk/newsid_1326000/1326657.stm |