- Born
- Died
- Nickname
- Alfie
- Alfred Bester was born on December 18, 1913 in New York City, New York, USA. Alfred was a writer, known for The Stars My Destination, The Juliet and Fireside Theatre (1949). Alfred was married to Rolly Bester. Alfred died on September 30, 1987 in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, USA.
- SpouseRolly Bester(September 16, 1936 - January 12, 1984) (her death, 1 child)
- Stories of nostalgia
- Stories of time travel
- Stories of revenge
- His first novel, "The Demolished Man" (1953), received the first Hugo Award ever given for Best Novel. The joke among fans is that the book was so great that the World Science Fiction Society had to create an award just to acknowledge it and bestow on it an unforgettable place in science-fiction history.
- He was engaged to be Guest of Honor at the World Science Fiction Convention held in Brighton, England, 27 August-1 September, 1987; but he broke his hip shortly beforehand and could not attend (tragically, he died at the end of that September from complications). He did, however, live long enough to learn that he would be awarded the Science Fiction Writers of America's Grand Master Award for Lifetime Achievement.
- Jackie Gleason acquired film rights to his 1953 novel, "Who He?", a satire about the television industry, but although Gleason was interested in acting as the main character, he never followed it up.
- His short fiction sometimes features stories of nostalgia, and most of those are among his most highly-rated among fans and editors. He shares this theme of longing for the past with Ray Bradbury and Jack Finney. Bradbury and Finney had stories adapted for 'The Twilight Zone" (1959), as their stories were more easily adapted, whereas Bester did not, perhaps because he was prone to write stories that were more violent or that would have cost too much in the way of special effects.
- Adaptations of the novel "The Stars My Destination" have been frequently rumored. Charlie Jane Anders wrote in 2010, "According to Hughes' Greatest Sci-Fi Movies Never Made, Richard Gere owned the rights to this novel right after his success with Pretty Woman (1990), and wanted to star in it. Later, NeverEnding Story (The NeverEnding Story (1984)) producer Bernd Eichinger had the rights and hired Neal Adams to do concept art. Still later, Paul W.S. Anderson was set to direct it, but wound up doing Event Horizon (1997) instead. Since then, a number of scripts have been written, but the film's gotten no closer to happening.".
- I'm not much interested in extrapolating science and technology; I merely use extrapolation as a means of putting people into new quandaries which produce colorful pressures and conflicts.
- Most science-fiction quite frankly is silly nonsense.
- [1972, interview with Charles Platt in "New Worlds Quarterly"] I'm a great believer in people, and their untapped potential. It's obvious we can't all be a Gully Foyle, but most of us energize at such a low level, so far short of our real capabilities, we could all be more, do more. Today, in America, I think everyone needs a good kick in the ass, to get them doing things.
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