Franny Moyle has a degree in English and History of Art from St John's College, Cambridge. She has played a key role in the BBC's arts programming, most recently as Commissioner of Arts and Culture across the BBC's four main channels. A year ago she left to pursue her own projects and is now a freelance executive producer, handling some of their major cultural series. She is a director of the Hackney Empire, near her home in East London, and is married with three children.
'A hectic tale, packed with sex and dark drama...not so much an extension but an explosion and an echo of today's celebrity culture' West End Extra, Gerald Isaaman 'Desperate Romantics is a gripping read and far more than a historical biography. It's like reading a modern-day soap opera. Franny Moyle writes as if she'd been transported from 1848 to the present day to report on their fascinating lives' Now, Clare Nasir 'Riveting ... Moyle captures vividly the texture and colour of this vital world' Independent on Sunday 'The jauntiness of her approach is a refreshing antidote to the incestuous, dreamlike claustrophobia of these interlocking lives. Her book is powerful, absorbing and, well, rather jolly' Sunday Times 'Read about the truth behind John and Effie Ruskin's unconsummated marriage ... and a host of other seemingly respectable 'Blue Plaque' names who lived their lives at a pace that would leave Damien Hirst and Jake and Dinos Chapman breathless' The Resident 'Moyle's book captures all the sex, madness and addiction, making modern-day sagas seem downright dull!' Glamour 'This has been well-covered before but she retells it with exceptional vigour and with fine detail culled from original sources' Daily Express The book is packed with colourful illustrations and drawings, while the words are pretty darned colourful too' Birmingham Post 'Moyle tells the story with great verve, and the forthcoming drama based on her book should be one to look out for' Choice 'Solidly researched book ... Desperate Romantics is a cleanly written and evocative work that concentrates not only on the PRB as a group, but as individual geniuses' Sunday Herald Magazine 'The book is highly readable and admirably free of bias and prurience' Independent 'Particularly impressive is the way Moyle returns to a key moment...at various points to consider it from different angles...it will remind you of how all those wild young men and marginal girls fitted together in a nexus of mutual need and exploitation...it's got television written all over it, and in a good way, too' Guardian 'Look out for the major TV series which coincides with this book about the bad boys of the Victorian art world' Unite Magazine 'This should be fascinating TV viewing ... a scandalous saga' Bookseller This makes for a thoroughly absorbing book, well illustrated with pictures...excellent material...if the BBC2 drama, which is scheduled to follow in the summer, is as well researched and presented as the book, it will be unmissable Morning Star It all bears retelling and Franny Moyle fleshes it out with some new material and shrewd surmises ... the book is well illustrated and researched, as well as crisply written Irish Times 'The age of the Romantics is alive and well in this fascinating book that accompanies the BBC series of the same name' Tatler For sheer, scabrous fun it is hard to imagine a better offering than Franny Moyle's Desperate Romantics ... an utterly gripping read Sunday Express 'Very well researched ... Moyle achieves an unusual level of empathy ... the story is certainly inflammatory' Time Out 'For sheer, scabrous fun it is hard to imagine a better offering than Franny Moyle's Desperate Romantics ... an utterly gripping read' International Express 'Vivacious book ... perfect material for a BBC2 drama tie-in this year ... all the elements for notoriety ...and entertainment!' Lancashire Evening Post Sir John Ure is absorbed by an account of the Pre-Raphaelites ... Franny Moyle [is] a scholarly and highly entertaining chronicler of their unruly exploits Sir John Ure, Country Life 'This should be fascinating TV viewing ... a scandalous saga' Bookseller 'Drama, romance and Victorian morality aplenty' Wharf, Giles Broadbent