Difference between revisions of "Madeleine Masson"

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MASSON, Madeleine [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madeleine_Masson] (1912-2007) (South African-born playwright, journalist). She also wrote biographies, short stories, radio plays.
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[[Madeleine Masson]] [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Madeleine_Masson] (1912-2007). South African-born playwright, journalist. She also wrote biographies, short stories, radio plays, some as "Starr", "Marion Holmes" or "M. Rayner".
  
 
== Biography ==
 
== Biography ==
She was born in Johannesburg in 1912. She lived abroad since her first marriage.
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She was born Madeleine Levy in Johannesburg in 1912. She lived abroad since her first marriage.  
 
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Madeleine took her surname "Masson" from one of her first husband's subsidiary titles.
 
 
=== Youth ===
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
=== Training ===
 
 
 
  
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She studied at the Sorbonne in Paris, where she obtained a PhD in Philosophy. After living in South Africa for a number of years until 1952, she married Captain John Rayner and had a son. Widowed, she moved to Bosham, West Sussex in the 1990s. As novelist wrote many works on the Old Cape.
  
 
=== Career ===
 
=== Career ===
She was a columnist for the ''Cape Times'' until 1951.
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She was a columnist for the ''[[Cape Times]]'' until 1951.
  
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
 
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance==
She wrote the plays ''[[Bitter Aloes]]'', ''[[Miranda]]'', ''[[Fantasia in Three]]'', ''[[The Heir]]'', ''[[Home is the Hero]]'', ''[[Passport to Limbo]]'', ''[[Puppet's Party]]'', ''[[Servant of God]]'', ''[[Tropicana]]'', ''[[Fossil's Secret]]'', ''[[In Our Veins]]'' (under the nom de plume 'Starr'), ''[[People of Quality]]'' (under the nom de plume 'Marion Holmes'), ''[[Hearts and Flowers]]'' (with [[Ralph Roney]]), ''[[Mask of Youth]]'', ''[[Seed for Freedom]]'', ''[[No Room for Martyrs]]'', ''[[The Flowering Wilderness]]'', ''[[The Twain]]'', ''[[Audrey]]'', ''[[The Black Swan]]'', ''[[Cry Haro]]'', ''[[Villa Poetica]]'', ''[[The Bronte Enigma]]'', ''[[Chekmate]]'', ''[[Gilded Lilies]]'', ''[[Incident at Aasvoel's Kop]]'',  
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She wrote the plays ''[[Bitter Aloes]]'' (1945), ''[[Miranda]]'' (1945), ''[[Fantasia in Three]]'' (1944), ''[[The Heir]]'' (1945), ''[[Home is the Hero]]'' (1944), ''[[Passport to Limbo]]'' (1942), ''[[Puppet's Party]]'' (1941), ''[[Servant of God]]'' (1943), ''[[Tropicana]]'' (1939, a play in French), ''[[Fossil's Secret]]'', ''[[In Our Veins]]'' (under the nom de plume 'Starr'), ''[[People of Quality]]'' (under the nom de plume 'Marion Holmes'), ''[[Hearts and Flowers]]'' (with [[Ralph Roney]]), ''[[Mask of Youth]]'', ''[[Seed for Freedom]]'', ''[[No Room for Martyrs]]'', ''[[The Flowering Wilderness]]'', ''[[The Twain]]'', ''[[Audrey]]'', ''[[The Black Swan]]'', ''[[Cry Haro]]'', ''[[Villa Poetica]]'', ''[[The Bronte Enigma]]'', ''[[Chekmate]]'', ''[[Gilded Lilies]]'', ''[[Incident at Aasvoel's Kop]]'', ''[[The Enigma of George Sands]]''.
  
''[[Bitter Aloes]]'' and ''[[Miranda]]'', two one-act plays performed in the [[Carlton Hotel Ballroom]]  by the [[Johannesburg Repertory Society]] on 26 August 1945.
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Wrote one film ''[[Servant of God]]'' (retitled ''[[Maddalena]]''). Golden Laurel Award as best film at Edinburgh Festival, 19**.
  
 
== Awards, etc ==
 
== Awards, etc ==
  
 
== Sources ==
 
== Sources ==
''The Star'', 28 December 2004.
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''[[The Star]]'', 28 December 2004.
 
 
[[ESAT Bibliography Tra-Tz|Tucker]], 1997.
 
  
 
[[NELM]] [Collection: MASSON, Madeleine]: 1998. 75. 286.
 
[[NELM]] [Collection: MASSON, Madeleine]: 1998. 75. 286.

Revision as of 16:51, 28 June 2018

Madeleine Masson [1] (1912-2007). South African-born playwright, journalist. She also wrote biographies, short stories, radio plays, some as "Starr", "Marion Holmes" or "M. Rayner".

Biography

She was born Madeleine Levy in Johannesburg in 1912. She lived abroad since her first marriage. Madeleine took her surname "Masson" from one of her first husband's subsidiary titles.

She studied at the Sorbonne in Paris, where she obtained a PhD in Philosophy. After living in South Africa for a number of years until 1952, she married Captain John Rayner and had a son. Widowed, she moved to Bosham, West Sussex in the 1990s. As novelist wrote many works on the Old Cape.

Career

She was a columnist for the Cape Times until 1951.

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

She wrote the plays Bitter Aloes (1945), Miranda (1945), Fantasia in Three (1944), The Heir (1945), Home is the Hero (1944), Passport to Limbo (1942), Puppet's Party (1941), Servant of God (1943), Tropicana (1939, a play in French), Fossil's Secret, In Our Veins (under the nom de plume 'Starr'), People of Quality (under the nom de plume 'Marion Holmes'), Hearts and Flowers (with Ralph Roney), Mask of Youth, Seed for Freedom, No Room for Martyrs, The Flowering Wilderness, The Twain, Audrey, The Black Swan, Cry Haro, Villa Poetica, The Bronte Enigma, Chekmate, Gilded Lilies, Incident at Aasvoel's Kop, The Enigma of George Sands.

Wrote one film Servant of God (retitled Maddalena). Golden Laurel Award as best film at Edinburgh Festival, 19**.

Awards, etc

Sources

The Star, 28 December 2004.

NELM [Collection: MASSON, Madeleine]: 1998. 75. 286.

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