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Helen Jerome (1) (1883–1966)

Forfatter af Pride And Prejudice (A Sentimental Comedy In Three Acts)

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Værker af Helen Jerome

Associated Works

Conquest [1937 film] (1944) — Original play — 6 eksemplarer

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Kanonisk navn
Jerome, Helen
Andre navne
Bruton, Helene Ursula (birth)
Bruton, Nellie (pen name)
Fødselsdato
1883-05-10
Dødsdag
1966-02-10
Køn
female
Nationalitet
Australia
Fødested
London, England, UK
Dødssted
Berkshire, England, UK
Bopæl
Sydney, Australia
Erhverv
playwright
journalist
author
Kort biografi
Helen Jerome, née Helene Ursula Bruton, was born in London, England to Irish parents who then emigrated to Australia.
As a teenager in the late 1890s, she became a regular contributor of poems and articles to the Sydney Catholic newspaper, Freeman’s Journal. In 1900, she married Armand Jerome, a publisher, and went with him to Paris on honeymoon. Helen submitted travel stories to Australian newspapers while she was traveling overseas. On returning to Australia, the couple had a child, and Helen wrote more travel pieces, poems and other news items for periodicals such as The Worker, The Age and others. In the following decades, she traveled extensively in Russia, the far East, the USA, and Europe.

By 1923, Helen Jerome had settled permanently in the USA and became a naturalized citizen in 1940. She started adapting novels for the stage in the 1930s, and became best known for her stage versions of Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice (1932) and Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre (1936). Both were successfully produced and staged in London and the USA. The former became the basis for a hit 1940 Hollywood film starring Greer Garson and Laurence Olivier. Helen's adaptation of Pride and Prejudice gave greater substance to the character of Mr. Darcy, helping to make him into a well-known heartthrob. She re-married to George D. Ali, an oil company executive, and thereafter split her time between the USA and the UK.

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Elizabeth Bennet is the perfect Austen heroine: intelligent, generous, sensible, incapable of jealousy or any other major sin. That makes her sound like an insufferable goody-goody, but the truth is she's a completely hip character, who if provoked is not above skewering her antagonist with a piece of her exceptionally sharp -- but always polite -- 18th century wit. The point is, you spend the whole book absolutely fixated on the critical question: will Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy hook up?

Do you think Darcy and Elizabeth would have said "hook up?"
… (mere)
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Markeret
janelittlefield | Feb 10, 2007 |

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Statistikker

Værker
2
Also by
1
Medlemmer
54
Popularitet
#299,230
Vurdering
½ 4.6
Anmeldelser
1
ISBN
5

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