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Kitty Marion: Actor and Activist (1st)

Atkinson, Diane(Edited by)Gardner, Viv(Edited by)Gale, Maggie B.(Series edited by)
Part of the Women, Theatre and Performance series
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With the outbreak of World War I, German-born Kitty Marion, suspected of being a German spy and placed under surveillance, sailed from Liverpool for New York.

She left a dramatic and colourful life behind: a hectic and fascinating 20-year career as a performer crisscrossing Britain first as a singer, dancer and actress on the musical comedy and pantomime stage, and then in music hall as a 'refined comedienne'.

She campaigned against the sexual abuses rife in the theatre of the day which led her eventually into the suffragette movement where she became a 'notorious' militant, responsible for numerous acts of arson.

She was imprisoned, went on hunger-strike, and was force-fed more than 300-times.

In America, she became a celebrated 'foot-soldier' in Margaret Sanger's birth control movement.

Her autobiography, written in the 1930s is published here for the first time.

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Product Details
Manchester University Press
1526138069 / 9781526138064
eBook (EPUB)
01/03/2019
England
English
360 pages
Copy: 100%; print: 100%
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