Anthony Watson-Gandy
Anthony Blethyn Watson-Gandy (29 June 1919 – 27 June 1952) was a British scholar, translator and socialite, renowned as the last lover of Denham Fouts, bon vivant and companion to a veritable who's who of pre-1950 homosexuals (such as Viscount Tredegar and Crown Prince Paul of Greece). Watson-Gandy lived with Fouts in Rome until his untimely death from a drug overdose in 1948.[1]
Biography
Scion of a gentry family,[2] he was born in 1919, the youngest son of Major William Watson-Gandy MC (1872–1947) and Annis Vere née Gandy (1884–1960), of aristocratic descent;[2] they divorced in 1932.
After Westminster School, London from 1933,[3] he then went up to King's College, Cambridge,[4] before pursuing further studies at the Sorbonne in Paris.[2][1] Appointed Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur, he was also a Chevalier du Tastevin.
Commissioned in the Royal Air Force, Watson-Gandy served as a Flying Officer during World War II.[2]
After WWII he settled in Rome where he joined the circle of the infamous American socialite, Denny Fouts. Fouts enjoyed a privileged and prosperous upbringing but spent much of his later life dissolute, lying "in bed like a corpse, sheet to his chin, a cigarette between his lips turning to ash. His lover, Anthony Watson-Gandy, a writer and translator, would remove the cigarette just before it burned his lips."[5][6]
After the death of Fouts in 1948, Watson-Gandy travelled to Asia, settling at Macao where he lived with a Chinese boyfriend, smoking opium and studying Mandarin.[7]
Watson-Gandy translated from French The Rise and Splendour of the Chinese Empire (1952) by René Grousset,[1] being elected a Fellow of the Institute of Linguists. Shortly after returning to London, he died on 27 June 1952.[2][3]
References
- Isherwood, Christopher (2013). Lost Years. Random House. p. 360. ISBN 9781448162505. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
- Mosley, Charles, editor. Burke's Peerage, Baronetage & Knightage, 107th edition, 3 volumes. Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.A.: Burke's Peerage (Genealogical Books) Ltd, 2003
- "7 - Westminster School". westminster. Retrieved 31 December 2017.
- www.cambridge.org
- Leddick, David. Intimate Companions: A Triography of George Platt Lynes, Paul Cadmus, Lincoln Kirstein, and Their Circle. Pages 206–207. St. Martin's Press, 2000.
- Companion's name given on the American Foreign Service form "Report of the Death of an American Citizen," accessed on ancestry.com on 13 September 2011.
- Wollheim, Richard. "Jesus Christie". London Review of Books. Retrieved 31 December 2017.