Hutchinson, G. Evelyn. A Preliminary List of the Writings of Rebecca West, 1912-1951. Yale University Library.
6, 98
Connections | Author name Sort ascending | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Reception | Ethel Wilson | Lilly's Story was translated into German and published in Switzerland in 1952, entitled simply Lilly. This was also the title for the Danish edition which appeared in 1954. Both stories were published in an... |
Reception | Rebecca West | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
released a movie version of War Nurse in the same year. Hutchinson, G. Evelyn. A Preliminary List of the Writings of Rebecca West, 1912-1951. Yale University Library. 6, 98 |
Publishing | Jan Struther | |
Performance of text | Jan Struther | |
Wealth and Poverty | Jan Struther | At the time of her recovery she and Dolf were broke, or as she termed it one jump ahead of the sheriff. Maxtone Graham, Ysenda. The Real Mrs Miniver. John Murray. 282 |
Health | Jan Struther | This was ironic: she had recently been in litigation with the film studio MGM
for making an unauthorised film sequel to her famous Mrs. Miniver, in which they made the heroine die of cancer. |
Textual Production | Jan Struther | Louis B. Mayer
invited JS
to write the script for a Mrs Miniver sequel, but by then she felt too distant from her character to produce it. He then invited her to Hollywood, hoping that... |
Textual Features | Jan Struther | In MGM
's sequel Mrs Miniver (again played by Greer Garson
but filmed this time in Britain) fought a long and losing battle with cancer. They made this movie before JS
was herself diagnosed with cancer. |
Reception | Jan Struther | This film flopped almost as dramatically as its predecessor had succeeded; MGM
lost $2,311,000. Ysenda Maxtone Graham
writes, It is a dreadful film. Maxtone Graham, Ysenda. The Real Mrs Miniver. John Murray. 284 |
Employer | Christina Stead | After her arrival in New York Stead spent several months reading unsolicited manuscripts without payment for New Masses (a Marxist publication edited by her friend Michael Gold
) because she wanted to see behind the... |
Textual Production | Christina Stead | After arriving in Hollywood in fall 1942, CS
became a screenwriter: I was a $175-a-week woman, and I counted for nothing. She worked in teams at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
, on Madame Curie, 1943, and They... |
Reception | E. Arnot Robertson | |
Other Life Event | E. Arnot Robertson | |
Textual Production | E. Arnot Robertson | |
Publishing | Henry Handel Richardson | At one time HHR
planned to convert her three-novel series into a set of four, to follow the fortunes of Richard Mahony's son Cuffy (a character who, despite his sex, has much of his author... |
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