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  1. Stanley Tucci wearing his Daphne du Maurier t-shirt. Stanley Tucci wearing his Daphne du Maurier t-shirt. From time to time, on the Daphne du Maurier website news pages, we have mentioned the Women's Prize for Fiction and Girls on Top collaboration, which has produced a range of beautiful t-shirts with the names of some of our finest authors on ...

  2. www.dumaurier.org › aboutdaphnedumaurierAbout Daphne du Maurier

    Daphne du Maurier (13th May 1907 - 19th April 1989) was first and foremost a really excellent storyteller but she was also part of the remarkable du Maurier dynasty - a granddaughter, daughter, sister, military wife, mother and grandmother. Daphne is often thought of as reclusive; she was perhaps solitary, comfortable with her own company and ...

  3. www.dumaurier.org › mobile › menu_pageDaphne du Maurier

    Daphne was overwhelmed by the scale and grandeur of Milton, a house that dated back to 1590, and it left a lifelong impression on her. When Daphne imagined the scene of the Manderley Ball, it was Milton she was thinking of. Years later, she said that the sight of the rather intimidating housekeeper at Milton, all dressed in black, sewed the ...

  4. George du Maurier. Bibliographies of Daphne, Angela and George du Maurier.

  5. www.dumaurier.org › menu_pageDaphne du Maurier

    Daphne du Maurier was well-known and well-regarded for her macabre and paranormal contributions to literature, famous in particular for her novel Rebecca (1938). Du Maurier wrote off-kilter stories, bringing the strange to the fore, and The Birds is considered her masterpiece. In it, she causes the natural and the ordinary to become unnatural ...

  6. www.dumaurier.org › menu_pageDaphne du Maurier

    Daphne du Maurier read widely throughout her life, and it could be that these or other stories about automatons planted the seed in her mind that later became The Doll. But unfortunately, without any documentation about The Doll, other than the brief reference that she quotes from her diaries, we may never know.

  7. www.dumaurier.org › menu_pageDaphne du Maurier

    Daphne du Maurier's play September Tide was written after the war, and Gertrude performed in it in the role of Stella. The play premiered at Oxford in 1948 and then moved to the London stage at the Aldwych Theatre, where its run continued until 1949. Her time with the play lasted about ten months.

  8. www.dumaurier.org › menu_pageDaphne du Maurier

    It was published by Peter Davies Ltd, a London publishing house owned by Peter Davis, Daphne du Maurier's cousin, the son of her father's older sister Sylvia. Peter's younger brother Nico also worked at the publishing house. Sadly, the novel hardly made a dent in the world of fiction, and initially, it only sold about 350 copies.

  9. www.dumaurier.org › menu_pageDaphne du Maurier

    It is a mountain village high in the Troodos mountains on the island of Cyprus, which Daphne du Maurier visited before the war. It is where, also, she planned and wrote some of Rebecca. Daphne du Maurier. In 1936, a young Daphne du Maurier was in Alexandria, Egypt, as her husband, Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick “Boy” Browning and his ...

  10. www.dumaurier.org › menu_pageDaphne du Maurier

    The great love of Daphne du Maurier’s life was of course Menabilly, the Tudor mansion house in Cornwall that she rented from the Rashleigh family, and that was to be the setting for many of her most successful novels. Menabilly was Manderley in Rebecca; it featured in its own right in du Maurier’s historical novel of the English civil war ...

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