Alan Holmes Dent (7 January 1905 – 19 December 1978) was a Scottish journalist, editor and writer.
Early life
Alan Dent was born in Maybole, Ayrshire, Scotland, of English parents. He lost his mother when he was two years old. He was educated at Carrick Academy[1] and Glasgow University, where he began to study medicine at the age of 16, but later switched to French, English and Italian. He left the university without a degree in 1926 heading for London.[1][2]
Career
Dent approached the critic James Agate in the hope of becoming his secretary, and was appointed. He remained with Agate for 14 years. Later, in Agate's Ego volumes of diaries and letters, Dent was, according to John Gielgud, called "Jock".[3]
^John Gielgud's letter to Stark Young, 15 August [1953] in Richard Mangan (ed.), Gielgud's Letters, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2004 [Orion Books edn, 2010], p. 100.
^Brooke, Michael (2003–14). "Henry V (1944)". BFI screenonline. Retrieved 9 July 2014.
^Brooke, Michael (2003–14). "Hamlet (1948)". BFI screenonline. Retrieved 9 July 2015.
^Brooke, Michael (2003–14). "Richard III (1955)". BFI screenonline. Retrieved 9 July 2015.