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  1. Winifred Ashton CBE, better known by the pseudonym Clemence Dane (21 February 1888 – 28 March 1965), was an English novelist and playwright. Life and career [ edit ] After completing her education, Dane went to Switzerland to work as a French tutor, but returned home after a year.

  2. Jan 9, 2017 · Clemence Dane is the ‘invisible womanof British 20th century culture: a prolific and popular writer and artist, described by her great friend Noel Coward as ‘a wonderful unique mixture of artist, writer, games mistress, poet and egomaniac.’

  3. Clemence Dane’ was the pseudonym of Winifred Ashton, an English playwright and novelist with a celebrity status in London when she joined Time and Tide’s pages in the early 1920s. Over the course of her career spanning nearly half a century she wrote over twenty plays, thirteen novels and a novella, numerous short stories, plus poetry ...

  4. Feb 2, 2018 · Clemence Dane won an Oscar as the scriptwriter for Vacation from Marriage in 1946. She was the first British woman screenwriter to have ever achieved that award. In 1953, she was awarded the CBE. In private life, she was unmarried but kept an open house for friends and was noted for her generous, outgoing character.

  5. Clemence Dane (name for the London church, St Clement Danes) was the pseudonym of Winifred Ashton, an English novelist and playwright (1888-1965). Between World Wars I and II, she was arguably Britain’s most successful all-round writer, with a unique place in literary, stage and cinematic history.

  6. May 31, 2024 · Clemence Dane. (1888—1965) Quick Reference. (1888–1965), playwright and novelist, whose first play, A Bill of Divorcement (1921), had a success never quite matched by her later works. Her novels include Regiment of Women (1917) and Legend (1919). From: Dane, Clemence in The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature »

  7. Clemence Dane began writing after ill health cut short an acting career. Born Winifred Ashton, she took her pseudonym from the Church of St. Clement Danes in the Strand, in the area of London where she lived for most of her life.