
Daphne du Maurier and Rebecca - #TheWomanAlchemist Monthly Feature
Laura MarianiShare
The PeopleAlchemist Edit: #theWomanAlchemist #Feature #womanofthemonth - Daphne du Maurier
Hello and welcome to another #TheWomanAlchemist monthly feature. My tribute to women writers and their contributions continues with Daphne du Maurier. Daphne du Maurier was born (13 May 1907) into a creative and successful family and had a privileged upbringing in Hampstead ( London). Her grandfather was George du Maurier (artist and writer). Her parents, Gerald du Maurier and Muriel Beaumont were both famous actors. Then, in the 1920s, the family bought a holiday home in Cornwall - Ferryside at Bodinnick - which became a place where she could dedicate herself seriously at the beginning of her writing career.DU MAURIER LIFE
The Loving Spirit was her first novel published in 1931. Her success grew from there. She married Frederick Browning, a military man, and they had three children the year after. She continued to write as Daphne du Maurier (1932–1946), but otherwise, her title was Daphne du Maurier, Lady Browning (posh, I know). In 1969 she was elevated to the Dame Commander of the British Empire (Dame Daphne du Maurier, Lady Browning, DBE), although she never actually used the title. The legend goes that she told no one about the honour. Even her children learned of it only from the newspapers, which says a lot about her personality and qualities, especially in this day and age. Daphne du Maurier was misleadingly described as a romantic novelist for a long time. Instead, she wrote dark, often gothic and edgy novels and short stories with unexpected twists or suspenseful endings.IN THE MOVIES
For this reason, her bestselling works were not taken seriously by critics to start with. However, they have since earned her an enduring reputation for the narrative craft. Additionally, many of her works have been successfully adapted into films. There were:- Rebecca (which was adapted into both a movie by Hitchcock and a play),
- Frenchman's Creek,
- My Cousin Rachel
- Jamaica Inn (turned into another Hitchcock movie) and
- The Birds -short stories which inspired yet again a very famous Hitchcock movie
- Don't Look Now turned into a film by Nicolas Roeg.