Evadne Price Fletcher Attiwill | |
---|---|
Born | Evadne Price 1896 or 1901 At Sea |
Died | April 17, 1985 Sydney, Australia |
Pen name | Evadne Price, Helen Zenna Smith |
Occupation | writer |
Language | English |
Nationality | British |
Spouse(s) | 1: C. A. Fletcher 2: Kenneth Attiwill (1929-1985)[1] |
Evadne Price (b. 1896/1901 - d. 17 April 1985 in Sydney, Australia), who wrote mostly under the pseudonym Helen Zenna Smith, was an English writer, actress, astrologer and media personality.
She became famous for her many romance novels, most of which were serialised in the national newspapers, as well as her children's books starring the popular character Jane Turpin. She also published an occasional astrology column for SHE magazine, and is now best remembered for her semi-biographical World War I novel Not So Quiet: Stepdaughters of War, a feminist reprise to All Quiet on the Western Front. In Germany she'd been compared to Adrienne Thomas, whose book, Katrin becomes a soldier was published in 1930.
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Evadne Price was born at sea off the coast of New South Wales, Australia to English parents. The National Union Catalogue lists her birthdate as 1896, but Kenneth Andrew Attiwill (her second husband of 54 years) claims she was born in 1901. She was educated in New South Wales and England. She first worked as an actress in London, and then turned to journalism. She wrote a column for the Sunday Chronicle and other newspapers. She married C. A. Fletcher, who died, later she married the also writer Kenneth Andrew Attiwill in 1929.
Many of Price's stories are set in a backdrop of the World Wars. Price's semi-biographical sketch of a group of ambulance drivers in World War I - Not So Quiet: Stepdaughters of War (1930), received critical acclaim, and was published under her pseudonym. A British publisher initially approached Price to write a spoof on Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front. Price managed to persuade him to publish an account of a woman's experience of the war instead. She contacted Winnifred Young, a British ambulance driver who had kept war diaries to provide her with a basis for her story. It was translated into French as "Pas Si Calme" by Gallimard, Paris in 1931. Also translated into Dutch; a trilogy "Gij vrouwen ....!", "Vrouwen in nood" and "Vrouwenroeping".
During World War II, Price was the war correspondent for The People from 1943, covering the Allied invasion and all of the major war stories through the Nuremberg Trials. Her husband was a POW in Japan, and was presumed dead for two years.
Evadne Price was a very successful romance novelist and wrote romance novels under the pseudonym Helen Zenna Smith. Some of her books were serialized in the weekly British weekly The People. Several hundred of her novels were serialized in the Novel magazine. Among her more popular books were Society Girl, Glamour Girl, Escape to Marriage, and Air Hostess in Love. She was a former vice-president of the Romantic Novelists' Association.[2]
Price's career as a romance novelist took her into playwriting, radio scriptwriting and screenwriting. Her play Big Ben, written for the Malvern Festival in 1939, was a successful one (The Times called it "a large, comfortable play with a soul to call its own"). The Phantom Light (1937) was a stage version of her novel, The Haunted Light. The play was also made into a film starring Gordon Harker. Once a Crook (1939) - a play which was co-written by Price and her husband Kenneth Attiwill, was also both a play and a film. She also acted in the movie Trouble with Junia (1967) in the minor part of Miss Hallyday beside her husband Ken Attiwill.
Evadne Price is also remembered for her children's stories, which she often published in magazines. Her most well known creation in this field was Jane Turpin, often referred to as the "Female William" and serialized in the Novel magazine from 1928. Price, however, did not take kindly to Jane stories being referred to as a copy of the William series. She went on record saying she "had never heard of William", even though William stories were regularly advertised on Jane book dust jackets. The famous illustrator Thomas Henry Fisher, who illustrated both Jane and William books, even signed the illustrations for the Jane books as "Marriott" so as to distinguish the two series.
Evadne Price had a parallel career as a broadcaster during the early years of British television. Her afternoon horoscope show called “Fun with the Stars” led to a long-running evening program. Price was dubbed the “new astrologer extraordinaire” for twenty-five years for the SHE magazine and published a successful collection of these columns as SHE Stargazes. When she and her husband retired to Australia in 1976, Evadne Price wrote the monthly horoscope column for Australian Vogue. She also appeared weekly on the ITV Central evening news magazine show with a 5 minute astrological reading and she would always close with the catchphrase "think lucky and you'll be lucky".
Evadne Price died on 17 April 1985 in Sydney, Australia. Evadne Price has an unfinished autobiography which was to have been named Mother Painted Nude.
As Helen Zenna Smith:
As Evadne Price: (including all Jane books)
NB: All "Jane" books were published by Robert Hale, London unless otherwise mentioned