From _The New York Times_ online:


May 12, 2001

Douglas Adams, Author of "Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy," Dies at 49

By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Filed at 1:07 p.m. ET

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Douglas Adams, whose cult science fiction comedy "The 
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy" drew millions of fans and spawned a 
mini-industry, has died at age 49.

The British-born Adams died Friday of an apparent heart attack in Santa 
Barbara, Calif., a family friend, Elizabeth Gibson, said Saturday. She said 
Adams collapsed while working out at a gym.

"He was not ill," Gibson said. "This was completely unexpected."

The "Hitchhiker's Guide," which began as a British Broadcasting Corp. radio 
series in 1978, is a satirical adventure about a group of interplanetary 
travelers; it opens with the Earth being destroyed to make way for an 
intergalactic highway.

It was turned into a book, which sold 14 million copies around the world, 
and later into a television series.

The book was followed by several sequels, including "The Restaurant at the 
End of the Universe," "Life, the Universe an
Everything" and "So Long, and Thanks For All the Fish."

The books blended satire, memorably named characters such as Zaphod 
Beeblebrox and Marvin the Paranoid Android, and witty philosophy, at one 
point supplying the answer to "the ultimate question of life, the universe 
and everything." The answer was 42.

Adams later recalled how he first thought of the book during a teen-age 
trip around Europe.

"I was hitchhiking around Europe in 1971, when I was 18, with this copy of 
'A Hitchhiker's Guide to Europe,'" he said.

"At one point I found myself lying in the middle of a field, a little bit 
drunk, when it occurred to me that somebody should write a Hitchhiker's 
Guide to the Galaxy. It didn't occur to me that it might actually be me 
years later."

Geoffrey Perkins, the BBC's head of comedy, called Adams "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," he added.

Born in Cambridge, England, in 1952 and educated at Cambridge University, 
Adams began his career as a writer and script editor at the BBC.

He followed the "Hitchhiker's Guide" with several books about "holistic 
detective" Dirk Gently; "Last Chance to See," a book about endangered 
species; and, with John Lloyd, the hilarious alternative dictionary "The 
Meaning of Liff."

He also founded a multimedia company, Digital Village, which produced the 
"Starship Titanic" computer game and an online travel guide inspired by the 
"Hitchhiker's Guide."

A frequent radio broadcaster on science and technology, Adams had been 
working for several years on a screenplay for an oft-delayed "Hitchhiker's 
Guide" movie.

In August 1996, he told a technology conference in New Orleans that the 
main problem in adapting the series for film was not special effects.

"It's the nature of the story, which is picaresque, which translates to one 
damn thing after another, and another, and another.

"It's very hard to translate that to a 100-minute feature film," he said. 
"Every script has a beginning and a middle and an end."

Adams married Jane Belson, a lawyer, in 1991. The couple, who had lived in 
Santa Barbara since 1999, had a 6-year-old daughter, Polly. Adams is also 
survived by his mother, Jan Thrift of England.

------

Associated Press Writer Jill Lawless, in London, contributed to this report.

------

On the Net:

Douglas Adams site: http://www.douglasadams.com

Hitchhiker's Guide: http://www.h2g2.com


Copyright 2001 The Associated Press


Reply via email to