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    • Australian novelist, poet, journalist, and actress

      • Mary Elizabeth Kathleen Dulcie Deamer (13 December 1890 – 16 August 1972) was a New Zealand-born Australian novelist, poet, journalist, and actress. She was a founder and committee member of the Fellowship of Australian Writers.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dulcie_Deamer
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  2. Mary Elizabeth Kathleen Dulcie Deamer (13 December 1890 – 16 August 1972) was a New Zealand-born Australian novelist, poet, journalist, and actress. She was a founder and committee member of the Fellowship of Australian Writers.

  3. Mary Elizabeth Kathleen Dulcie Deamer (1890-1972), writer and Bohemian, was born on 13 December 1890 at Christchurch, New Zealand, daughter of George Edwin Deamer, a physician from Lincolnshire, and his New Zealand-born wife Mable, née Reader.

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  4. Mary Elizabeth Kathleen Dulcie Deamer (13 December 1890 – 16 August 1972) was a New Zealand-born Australian novelist, poet, journalist, and actress. She was a founder and committee member of the Fellowship of Australian Writers.

  5. A well-known figure in Kings Cross, she was crowned 'Queen of Bohemia' in 1925. In the 1930s, as a columnist in the Australian Woman's Mirror writing wittily about male/female relationships, she also wrote several well-reviewed plays.

  6. Deamer, Dulcie (18901972) Australian actress, novelist, playwright and journalist. Name variations: Mary Elizabeth Kathleen Dulcie Deamer. Born 1890 in Christchurch, New Zealand; died 1972; m. a business manager and divorced; children: 6.

  7. Mary Elizabeth Kathleen Dulcie Deamer. born Christchurch, New Zealand: 13 December 1890. died Randwick, New South Wales: 16 August 1972. works. In the Beginning: Six Studies of the Stone Age and Other Stories, including "A daughter of the Incas", a short novel of the conquest of Peru (Melbourne, Victoria: Gordon and Gotch, 1909) [coll: hb/]

  8. Jan 17, 2024 · Mary Elizabeth Kathleen Dulcie Deamer was born on 13 December 1890 at Christchurch, New Zealand. She was an actor, playwright, writer, poet, novelist, and journalist; while residing in Kings Cross, Sydney in 1925 she was crowned 'Queen of the Bohemia'; in 1929 she was founder and committee-member of the Fellowship of Australian Writers.