Roma GillOBE, M.A. Cantab., BLitt. Oxon. (29 September 1934 – 3 August 2001) was a British academic, writer and noted scholar on the works ofShakespeare andMarlowe. She edited more than 30 texts including three in the Oxford School Marlowe series and twenty-one in the Oxford School Shakespeare series, making these works more accessible to younger students. In addition, Gill was a prolific author of scholarly articles and reviews who during her prolific lecturing career inspired her many students with her passion for 16th-century literature. In her later life she developedmultiple sclerosis which caused her great pain and disabled her to the extent she couldn't move and had to dictate the notes for her books.[1]
Gill was born inKeighley inYorkshire where she attended Keighley Girls' Grammar School. She was coached by the teacher, poet and criticPhilip Hobsbaum for scholarships toNewnham College, Cambridge andSt Hilda's College, Oxford. Newnham considered that her examination answers were too similar to the views of the literary criticF. R. Leavis and did not offer her a place;[2] she was offered a scholarship by St Hilda's but opted instead to become one of 16 founding scholars reading English atNew Hall, Cambridge where during her first week she was profiled inVarsity,Cambridge University's mainstudent newspaper. At Cambridge she became keenly interested in the theatre, playingLady Macbeth inMacbeth for the University Actors Club. An enthusiastic horsewoman, Gill endured many falls leading to at least two incidences ofconcussion, which her friendPhilip Hobsbaum believed may have contributed to her later illness.[2]
On graduating fromCambridge Gill studied for the degree ofBLitt on the works ofPhilip Massinger underHelen Gardner atSt Hilda's College, Oxford (1957–59). Gill lectured atRipon College of Education andKesteven College of Education between 1959 and 1963. In 1960 atKesteven she began to fall over, in 1965 being diagnosed withmultiple sclerosis.[1] From 1963 she taught at theUniversity of Sheffield underWilliam Empson. Here she was the only female lecturer in the department before becoming Reader in English Literature in 1979.[3] Despite being in great pain and having limited mobility because of her illness, Gill travelled around the world, fromWoolagong in Australia toYaounde in Cameroon. Throughout this period Gill taught at summer schools atOxford andStratford-upon-Avon in addition to lecturing in New York, Berlin, New Orleans, Malta and Florida.[1]
Gill was known for her general editorship of the Oxford School Shakespeare series and for her editions of the works ofChristopher Marlowe. She was general editor of the Oxford University Press Works (1987–98), for which she edited the first volume on the poems and translations. She also published editions of Marlowe'sDoctor Faustus (1965) andEdward II (1967) in addition to a one-volume of Marlowe's complete plays (1971). She was a prominent member of The Marlowe Society of America, and since her death the Society has awarded the Roma Gill Prize every two years for the best new work in Marlowe studies.[3]
She retired from Sheffield in 1984 as her illness progressively worsened, and for a period she lived inOxford, but having limited mobility - by now she was on crutches and struggled with the uneven pavements - she eventually made her home inCambridge. By this time she only had the use of her left hand and was permanently in a wheelchair; she was thus forced to dictate notes to a voice-activated computer. She was appointedOBE in 1994 for services to literature,[4] receiving her award from Elizabeth II atBuckingham Palace in her electric wheelchair.[1]
Roma Gill died inCambridge in 2001 aged 66.[5]
Murray Edwards College, Cambridge, where Gill studied when it was New Hall, Cambridge, appoints a Roma Gill Fellow in English.