Picture of author.

Clemence Dane (1888–1965)

Author of Regiment of Women

55+ Works 331 Members 5 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: George Grantham Bain Collection, Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Reproduction Number: LC-DIG-ggbain-35540

Series

Works by Clemence Dane

Regiment of Women (1917) 57 copies
Broome Stages (1931) 39 copies
The Flower Girls (1900) 28 copies
Enter Sir John (1928) 20 copies
Legend (1919) 12 copies
The Moon is Feminine (1938) 12 copies
London Has a Garden (1964) 12 copies
Printer's Devil (1930) 9 copies
Re-Enter Sir John (1932) — Author — 8 copies
Wild Decembers (1932) 6 copies
He Brings Great News (1944) 5 copies
Granite (1926) 5 copies
The Nelson Touch (1942) 3 copies
Trafalgar day, 1940 (1941) 3 copies
Fate Cries Out (1935) 2 copies
The King waits. A tale (1929) 2 copies
Herod and Mariamne, (1938) 2 copies
The godson, a fantasy (1964) 2 copies
Mariners. A play (1927) 2 copies
Légende (1920) 1 copy
Die Broomes. 1 copy
Adam's Opera (1928) 1 copy
Call home the Heart (1947) 1 copy
Babyons Lady Babyon (1928) 1 copy
La vague qui passe (1940) 1 copy

Associated Works

The Floating Admiral (1931) — Contributor — 803 copies
The Scoop & Behind the Screen (1930) — Contributor — 210 copies
More Stories to Remember, Volume II (1958) — Contributor — 94 copies
Modern English Short Stories: Second Series (1911) — Contributor — 62 copies
The Fairies Return; or, New Tales for Old (1934) — Contributor — 50 copies
The Oxford Book of Historical Stories (1994) — Contributor — 40 copies
The Ghost Book: Sixteen Stories of the Uncanny (1926) — Contributor — 35 copies
A Bill of Divorcement [1932 film] (1932) — Original play — 10 copies
Bachelor's Quarters: Stories from Two Worlds (1944) — Contributor — 7 copies
Five Modern Plays (1950) — Author — 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Ashton, Winifred
Birthdate
1888-02-21
Date of death
1965-03-28
Gender
female
Nationality
England
UK
Birthplace
Blackheath, London, UK
Place of death
London, England, UK
Places of residence
London, England, UK
Switzerland
Germany
Education
private schools
Occupations
playwright
novelist
mystery writer
Relationships
Simpson, Helen (collaborator)
Organizations
Detection Club
Awards and honors
Academy Award (Best Story, 1946 ∙ Vacation from Marriage)
Short biography
Clemence Dane was the pen name of Winifred Ashton, born in Kent, England. After completing her education at age 16, she was hired to work as a French tutor in Switzerland. A year later she left, and studied art in England and Germany. Although she showed promise as a painter, she gave up her career as an artist to become an actress and then a teacher. She began writing while recuperating from the stresses of war work in World War I and took the pseudonym "Clemence Dane" from the famous 17th century church of St. Clement Danes in London. Her first published novel, the semi-autobiographical Regiment of Women (1917), was a big success. In 1919, she wrote another successful novel, Legend, which she turned into a play called A Bill of Divorcement. The play was a smash hit in London and on Broadway in New York, and was adapted into a film starring Katharine Hepburn and John Barrymore in 1932. Dane began writing screenplays as well as novels. She co-wrote the screenplay for Anna Karenina starring Greta Garbo. In 1946, she won an Academy Award with Anthony Pelissier for their screenplay for the film Vacation from Marriage, released in the UK as Perfect Strangers. With Helen de Guerry Simpson, she wrote three detective novels, the first of which, Enter Sir John (1928), was filmed as Murder! by Alfred Hitchcock. She also wrote a nonfiction book on the history of Covent Garden, the district in which she lived for a number of years, London Has a Garden (1964). In the course of her career, Clemence Dane wrote more than 30 plays and 16 novels.

Members

Reviews

I liked it very much—I'm always a sucker for a Great Detective like Sir John Samaurez, a popular West End actor-manager (meaning he produced his own plays as well as some touring companies'). I'm starting to conclude that in the 1920s the conventions of the Golden Age were a bit more fluid in that publishers did not enforce a particular rhythm. Here the trial is in the first third, the true murderer is identified at about 75%, and the novelistic plot is still spinning itself out up to the end. That's not what I expected!… (more)
 
Flagged
NinieB | Dec 5, 2019 |
Peter Varley, a young American actor, has a part in Sir John Saumarez's latest London production. Sir John likes Peter enough that he has put him up for membership at his club. When Peter is accused of cheating at cards, Sir John suspects that something is not right. The second of the two Golden Age detective stories starring Sir John Saumarez, the chief pleasure in this story is Sir John and the other characters.
 
Flagged
NinieB | Nov 10, 2019 |
Horatia "Horrie" Pedler is the owner of the successful publisher, Pedlar's Pack (yes, the two names are spelled differently). Marmion Poole is one of the authors who made her a success, but when he returns from years of living abroad and wants her to publish his tell-all memoirs, Horrie is in a predicament. This "elegant thriller" (Times Literary Supplement) is basically a light novel with some mystery trimmings. I enjoyed it, but it's not (unfortunately) a detective novel.

Character Sir John Samaurez, the amateur detective in two other books by Dane and Simpson, makes a couple of appearances, but I wouldn't call this one part of his series.… (more)
½
 
Flagged
NinieB | Nov 8, 2019 |
Great for a medieval studies nut.
 
Flagged
Colona | Apr 1, 2014 |

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Statistics

Works
55
Also by
15
Members
331
Popularity
#71,753
Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
5
ISBNs
42
Languages
1
Favorited
1

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