Anne Rice life and biography

Anne Rice picture, image, poster

Anne Rice biography

Date of birth : 1941-10-04
Date of death : -
Birthplace : New Orleans, Loisiana, United States
Nationality : American
Category : Famous Figures
Last modified : 2010-10-05
Credited as : Writer and author, best-seller "The Vampire Chronicles", Lestat stories

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Anne Rice (born Howard Allen O'Brien on October 4, 1941) is a best-selling American author of gothic, erotic, and religious-themed books from New Orleans, Louisiana. She was married to poet and painter Stan Rice for 41 years until his death from cancer in 2002. Her books have sold nearly 100 million copies, making her one of the most widely read authors in modern history.

Among the people who have contributed to the significant increase of interest in the vampire in the last decades, few rank with writer Anne Rice. Her major vampire character, Lestat de Lioncourt, who was introduced in her 1976 book, Interview with the Vampire, has taken his place beside Bram Stoker's Dracula and Dark Shadows' Barnabas Collins as one of the three major literary figures molding the image of the contemporary vampire.

Rice was born Howard Allen Frances O'Brien in the Irish community in New Orleans, Louisiana, and changed her name to Anne shortly after starting school. During her late teens she grew increasingly skeptical of the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church in which she had been raised. She not only rejected the unique place of the Roman Church among other religious bodies, but also pronounced her disbelief in its major affirmations of the divine work of Jesus Christ and the existence of God. She replaced her childhood religious teachings with a rational ethical system, an integral element in her reworking of the vampire tradition.

Both Rice and her poet husband Stan Rice began writing professionally during the early 1960s, but he was the first to receive recognition. In 1970 he won the Joseph Henry Jackson Award for poetry . Rice sold her first story, "October 4, 1948," in 1965, but it was not until 1973 that she felt ready to quit her job in order to write full time.

The Vampire Chronicles:
As early as 1969 Rice had written a short story that she called "Interview with the Vampire." In 1973 she turned it into a novel and attempted to sell it. Following several rejections, Alfred A. Knopf bought it, and it was published in 1976. The book became an unexpected success and has remained in print both in hardback and paperback. Her second novel, The Feast of All Saints, was published by Simon & Schuster three years later, and a third, Cry to Heaven, appeared in 1982. Meanwhile another side of Rice emerged in a series of novels published under a pseudonym, A. N. Roquelaure. The Claiming of Sleeping Beauty (1983), Beauty's Punishment (1984), and Beauty's Release: The Continued Erotic Adventures of Sleeping Beauty (1985) were adult erotic fantasy novels. The sado-masochistic theme in the Roquelaure novels carried over into the more conventional novels published under a second pseudonym, Anne Rambling. In the midst of the release of these novels, her important vampire short story appeared in Redbook in 1984, "The Master of Rambling Gate."

Rice returned to the vampire theme in 1985 with The Vampire Lestat, the most heralded of what was to become the Vampire Chronicles series. This volume further developed the character of Lestat introduced in her earlier work. He emerged as a strong secular individualist who took to the vampire's life quite naturally. Born into the lesser aristocracy, he defied the vampire establishment in Paris and decided to make his own way in the world. A man of action who rarely rested in indecision, he was also deeply affected by poetry and music and freely showed his emotions. Rice described him as both an androgynous ideal and an expression of the man she would be if she were male. Like Rice, Lestat rejected his Catholic past and had no aversion to the religious weapons traditionally used against his kind. Seeking moral justification for his need to feed on fresh blood, he began to develop a vampire ethic, selecting those who had done some great wrong as his victims.

The success of The Vampire Lestat led to demands for more, and Rice responded with The Queen of the Damned (1988). Like the previous volumes, it became a bestseller and soon found its way into a paperback edition. Previously, Interview with the Vampire had also appeared in an audio cassette version (1986), and the publishers moved quickly to license audio versions of The Queen of the Damned (1988) and The Vampire Lestat (1989).

Rice was now a recognized author and her writing was regularly the subject of serious literary critics. She continued to produce at a steady rate and successively completed The Mummy (1989), The Witching Hour (1990), and Lasher (1993). In the meantime, further adventures of Lestat appeared in the fourth volume of the Vampire Chronicles, The Tale of the Body Thief (1992), released on audio cassette simultaneously with its hardback edition. In 1991 Katherine Ramsland finished her biography of Rice, entitled Prism of the Night, and moved on to compile a comprehensive reference volume, The Vampire Companion: The Official Guide to Anne Rice's Vampire Chronicles (1993).

No sooner did Ramland's volume appear that a fifth volume of the "Vampire Chronicles," Memnoch the Devil took Lestat into the supernatural realms of heaven and hell (after which Ramsland issued a revised edition). Memnoch was not as well received as the previous volumes, as it story tended to subordinate plot to philosophical musings on theological issues. After the publication of Memnoch, Rice announced that Lestat had left her and, to the disappointment of his fans, that there would be no more Lestat novels. However, she soon returned to the vampire theme with Pandora (immediately available on cassette and CD), the first of a projected series of books following the other characters in the "Vampire Chronicles."

Lestat's Vampire Culture:
Rice's novels have permeated the culture like no other recent vampire writings. Lestat was honored by a gothic rock band that took his name as their own and the androgynous ideal has been adopted by the gothic subculture. In 1988 a group of women in New Orleans founded an Anne Rice Fan Club. Rice approved the effort but suggested that a reference to Lestat be added to the club's name. It emerged as the Anne Rice's Vampire Lestat Fan Club. Two years later, Innovation Corporation picked up the comic book rights to The Vampire Lestat, which it issued as a 12-part series. A similar release of Interview with the Vampire and The Queen of the Damned followed in 1991 (though Innovation unfortunately folded before the final issue of Queen of the Damned could be released). Her short story The Master of Rambling Gate was also issued in 1991. Innovation brought together one of the finest teams in comic book art to produce the three. Innovation also released three issues of The Vampire Companion, a fanzine in comic book format that included stories about Rice's vampire books, Innovation's artists, and the process of producing the comic adaptations.

In 1976 Paramount bought the rights to Interview with the Vampire. The rights had a 10-year option, which expired in 1986. The rights reverted to Rice, and she, in turn, sold them to Lorimar along with the rights to The Vampire Lestat and The Queen of the Damned. Lorimar sold its rights to Interview with the Vampire to Warner Bros. who then passed them on to Geffen Pictures. In 1993 Geffen announced that it would begin the filming under Neil Jordan's direction. The studio signed Tom Cruise to play Lestat and Brad Pitt to play Louis, the vampire who is interviewed in the story. Rice, who had earlier envisioned Rutger Hauer as the perfect Lestat, reacted emotionally to the choice of Cruise, whom she saw as devoid of the androgyy so definitive of her favorite vampire character. However, when she finally previewed the film in 1994, she retracted all she had said and praised Cruise for his success in bring Lestat to the screen. Interview went one to be one of the largest-grossing films of the decade.

There is every reason to believe that, in spite of Rice's ending the Lestat stories, that he and his fellow vampires will remain a popular reference point for the vampire community for many years to come. Interview with a Vampire has now become the second best-selling vampire book of all time and has been translated into a number of foreign languages. An eighth Rice vampire volume, The Vampire Armand, has been announced for release in 1998.

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