Marjorie Shiona WallaceCBE, FRCPsych is a British writer, broadcaster, investigative journalist, and chief executive of SANE, a mental health charity that she founded in the UK in 1986.
Early life and career
Wallace was born in Nairobi, Kenya, where her father was a civil engineer surveying for the railway. Her mother was a trained classical pianist, but was unable to pursue her interest professionally. After gaining a degree in Psychology and Philosophy from University College, London, Wallace worked as a trainee producer for ITV's The Frost Programme with David Frost. She went on to become a religious programmes producer and a current affairs reporter for London Weekend Television. While an investigative journalist and social services correspondent for The Sunday Times, she wrote a series of articles in 1972 highlighting the financial and emotional plight of the Thalidomide children who had been born in the 1950s and 1960s with physical disabilities. As a result of this campaign, she met Terry Wiles, about whom she co-authored a biography, On Giant's Shoulders. This was made into a 1979 BBCPlay of the Week in which Wallace was portrayed by Annabel Leventon. Her other investigations as a Sunday Times journalist ranged from the failure of concrete systems building and the 'hot-housing' of genius children to the Dioxin disaster in Northern Italy, about which she co-wrote the book The Superpoison.
SANE
Wallace founded the mental health charity SANE after writing a series of articles in The Times entitled "The Forgotten Illness" that highlighted the paucity of services and treatments for people suffering from schizophrenia. Initially focusing on schizophrenia, SANE is now concerned with all mental illnesses. SANE raises money for people with mental health problems. It established The Prince of Wales International Centre for SANE Research in Oxford and pioneered the UK's first national out-of-hours mental health helpline, offering practical information and emotional support 365 days a year. Wallace is the author of the 1986 book The Silent Twins, about June and Jennifer Gibbons, and she wrote the screenplay for the film of the same name. She also wrote and presented the television documentariesWhose Mind is it Anyway? and Circles of Madness, and has lectured on the subject of mental illness.
Honours and awards
While a journalist for The Times, Wallace was awarded Campaigning Journalist of the Year for 1988. She has also been awarded Medical Journalist of the Year and received a British Neuroscience Association award in 2002. As a result of her "The Forgotten Illness" articles and her subsequent work in the mental illness field, she was elected an honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists in 2001. Wallace was appointed Member of the Order of the British Empire in 1994, and an honorary Doctorate of Science by City University, London in 2001. Since 2004, she has been a Fellow of University College, London. In 2006, she was selected as one of the 16 key achievers who had made a difference to the health of the nation for an exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery and, two years later, was chosen as one of the 60 most influential people in shaping the history of the National Health Service. She was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in the 2008 New Year Honours. Wallace was named as Outstanding Campaigner at the 2016 Women of the Year Awards, reflecting her campaigning on behalf of mentally ill people and their families in the UK over the past 30 years.
Personal life
Wallace married the psychoanalyst Count Andrzej Skarbek, with whom she had three children: Sacha, Stefan and Justin. The couple later separated, although they did not divorce. Subsequently, she lived with the science writer and broadcaster Tom Margerison and their daughter, Sophia, in Highgate, North London. Margerison died in February 2014. In November 2015 Wallace was the guest for BBC Radio 4's Desert Island Discs. Her favourite piece, chosen in dedication to her mother, was Chopin's Ballade No. 4 in F minor, Op. 52. Her other choices included "Ah! Dite alla giovine" from La traviata by Giuseppe Verdi, "Sunrise in Your Eyes" by Sacha Skarbek and "Repentir" by Charles-François Gounod.