“Contemporary Authors”. Gale Databases: Literature Resource Centre-LRC.
Flora Robson
Standard Name: Robson, Flora
Connections
Connections Sort descending | Author name | Excerpt |
---|---|---|
Friends, Associates | Muriel Box | |
Literary responses | Lesley Storm | The play received rave reviews in England. The reviewer for the Times wrote: The Dialogue is consistently neat and pointed, and tense situations open smoothly into situations yet more tense; the Evening News... |
Performance of text | Lesley Storm | |
Reception | Queen Elizabeth I | Rosemary Hill
has contrasted two of the many film Elizabeths as reflecting their times. In Fire Over England, 1937, Flora Robson
played a majestic and belligerent Elizabeth defeating the Armada; in Young Bess... |
Textual Production | Lesley Storm | LS
's next play, Great Day, which opened on Broadway at the Playhouse Theatre
on 14 March 1945, grew out of her journalism dealing with Eleanor Roosevelt
's war-time visit to England in October... |
Textual Production | Muriel Box | Her new name, Muriel Box (so far owed to deed-poll not to marriage), appeared both on the title-page and under a frontispiece cartoon portrait of them both in profile. The copyright was listed in the... |
Textual Production | Lesley Storm | LS
's best-known play, Black Chiffon, had its premiere in London at the Westminster Theatre
. It ran for over 400 performances. The celebrated Flora Robson
played the lead role. Morgan, Fidelis, editor. The Years Between: Plays by Women on the London Stage 1900-1950. Virago, 1994. 401 Ravenhall, Chris. “Lesley Storm’s <span data-tei-ns-tag="tei_title" data-tei-title-lvl=‘m’>Three Goose Quills and a Knife</span>: A Burns Play Rediscovered”. Studies in Scottish Literature, Vol. 32 , pp. 46-54. 46-7 |
Timeline
By 28 November 1934
The young Flora Robson
, in A Letter to a Young Actress, contributed as a preface to Ladies Only by Muriel
and Sydney Box
, provided a fascinating account of women's part in amateur...
Texts
Robson, Flora, Muriel Box, and Sydney Box. “A Letter to a Young Actress”. Ladies Only, George G. Harrap, 1934, pp. 7-10.