Photo de l'auteur

Daphne Fielding (1904–1997)

Auteur de The Duchess of Jermyn Street

11 oeuvres 199 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: As Marchioness of Bath, with her first husband. Uncredited photo from ThePeerage.com

Œuvres de Daphne Fielding

The Duchess of Jermyn Street (1905) — Auteur — 75 exemplaires
The Stronghold: Four Seasons in the White Mountains of Crete (1953) — Photographe — 24 exemplaires
Before the sunset fades (1951) 14 exemplaires
Mercury Presides (1954) 9 exemplaires
The Nearest Way Home (1970) 7 exemplaires
The Adonis Garden (1961) 4 exemplaires
Cheddar Caves 2 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Autres noms
Vivian, Daphne Winifred Louise (birth name)
Thynne, Daphne
Marchioness of Bath
Date de naissance
1904-06-11
Date de décès
1997-12-05
Sexe
female
Nationalité
UK
Lieux de résidence
Longleat, Horningsham, Wiltshire, UK
Études
Queen's College, London
Malvern Girls' College
Professions
novelist
autobiographer
biographer
aristocrat
journalist
Relations
Fielding, Xan (2nd spouse)
Waugh, Evelyn (friend)
Leigh Fermor, Patrick (friend)
Somerset, Anne (granddaughter)
Thynn, Alexander (son)
Thynne, Christopher (son)
Courte biographie
Daphne Fielding, née Vivian, was the daughter of George, 4th Lord Vivian, and his wife, Barbara. She went to school at Queen's College, London, and Malvern St. James, and became acquainted with the Oxford set that included Evelyn Waugh, Harold Acton, and Brian Howard. With them, she became one of the "Bright Young Things" of post-World War I London society. In 1926, she married Henry Frederick Thynne, Viscount Weymouth, later 6th Marquess of Bath, against the wishes of both families, and had five children. The couple took over management of Longleat, the historic family estate. To supplement her income, Daphne wrote articles for newspapers and magazines. She researched and wrote the first guidebook to Longleat with a family history dating back to the 16th century, and Before the Sunset Fades (1953), about life above and below stairs at the estate. In 1953, after a divorce from her first husband, she married Xan (Alexander) Fielding, a war hero and travel writer 14 years her junior. They lived in Cornwall, Morocco, Portugal and France. She wrote an autobiography Mercury Presides (1954) and its sequel, The Nearest Way Home (1970). She also produced a novel, The Adonis Garden (1961). The Duchess of Jermyn Street (1964), a biography of Rosa Lewis of the Cavendish Hotel, was adapted into a popular television series. She also wrote a joint life of Lady Cunard and her daughter Nancy called Emerald and Nancy (1968), The Rainbow Picnic (1974) about Iris Tree, and The Face on the Sphinx (1978) about Gladys, Duchess of Marlborough. In the late 1970s, after splitting from Fielding, she moved to Arizona to live with old Oxford friend, Ben Kittridge. After his death, she returned to England and lived at the Old Laundry in Badminton.

Membres

Critiques

Emerald was an original and popular. Her daughter Nancy was also an original and popular but damaged and an angry woman. So many familiar names ran through their lives.
 
Signalé
Karen74Leigh | 1 autre critique | Apr 7, 2021 |
If you like the books that (older) Masterpiece Theater series are based on.... this one is for you. It was turned into the PBS Series the Duchess of Duke Street. This book really showed the real life of the main character that the series was based on.
 
Signalé
yukon92 | 1 autre critique | Dec 26, 2015 |
If you watched the BBC drama, The Duchess of Duke Street, you might want to read this biography of the woman who inspired it. She was a tough cookie, determined from a young age to make her way in the world through her cookery, who ended up running a hotel for the veddy, veddy upper classes. I'm not sure if she was a snob, or if that's Daphne Fielding, but there's no question that names were dropping all over the Cavendish Hotel.
 
Signalé
lilithcat | 1 autre critique | Sep 27, 2012 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
11
Membres
199
Popularité
#110,457
Évaluation
½ 3.6
Critiques
5
ISBN
8

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