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Daphne Du Maurier

Literature / Writers Datebook: May 13

 

Brief biography of Daphne Du Maurier, English novelist, short story writer and biographer, whose bestseller books are likewise blockbuster movies. She's famous of Rebecca, The Birds, Jamaica Inn, Frenchman's Creek, and My Cousin Rachel. 

 

 

 Daphne du Maurier was an English writer of romantic suspense novels, mostly set on the coast of Cornwall where she spent most of her life. She is best-known for her bestseller novels Rebecca, Jamaica Inn, Frenchman's Creek, and My Cousin Rachel, with all these novels becoming film blockbusters.

 

Du Maurier's Life in a Nutshell       

Daphne du Maurier was born in London on May 13, 1907. She came from an artistic family whose father was an actor-manager. Her grandfather was an artist and novelist.  She was married to Frederick Arthur Montague Browning, a lieutenant-general in the British Army.

In 1969, Du Maurier was made a Dame of the British Empire.  She died in Cornwall on April 19, 1989, at the age of 81.

 

Du Maurier's Bestseller Novels into Blockbuster Films

Her first novel, The Loving Spirit, was published when she was 24 years old. A string of other novels followed, some of them with historical settings.

Her most famous book is Rebecca, a gothic bestseller. The hero in the story is unable to forget his tragic first marriage while he tries to be happy with his second wife, Rebecca. It was made into a movie in 1940, starring Laurence Olivier and Joan Fontaine, and was voted the best picture of that year. It was directed by the famous Alfred Hitchcock, who also directed the 1963 film of du Maurier's frightening novel "The Birds" starring Tippi Hedren. It was Hedren's movie debut. 

Other bestsellers that were also made into motion pictures include Jamaica Inn, a tale of  smugglers, Frenchman's Creek, a pirate romance, and My Cousin Rachel, a sensational romance.

 

Other Writing Genres

Du Maurier also wrote biographies of members of her family and of Francis Bacon, an English statesman in the 1500s and 1600s. Her plays include September Tide. At age 70 she published her autobiography, Myself When Young.

 

Daphne Du Maurier Quote:

"We are all ghosts of yesterday, and the phantom of tomorrow awaits us alike in the sunshine or in shadow, dimly perceived at times, never entirely lost."

~ Growing Pains, Published in the USA as Myself When Young ~

 

Works by Daphne Du Maurier

The Loving Spirit, 1931

Jamaica Inn, 1936

Rebecca, 1938

Frenchman's Creek, 1941

Hungry Hills, 1943 

September Tide, 1948

My Cousin Rachel, 1951

Kiss Me Again, Stranger (including The Birds), 1952

The Scapegoat, 1957

Vanishing Cornwall, 1967

Myself When Young, 1977

 

Photo credit:

Daphne Du Maurier. NNDB / Public Domain

 

Resources:

Goring, Rosemary, Ed. Larousse Dictionary of Writers. New York: Larousse, 1994

Ousby, Ian.  The Cambridge Guide to Literature in English. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993.

Payne, Tom. The A-Z of Great Writers. London: Carlton, 1997

 

(c) May 2010. Tel. Inspired Pen Web. All rights reserved.  

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