Margaret Mayo (playwright)
Margaret Mayo | |
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Born |
Brownsville, Illinois, United States | November 19, 1882
Died |
February 25, 1951 68) Ossining, New York, United States | (aged
Occupation | Playwright, Screenwriter, Actress |
Margaret Mayo, born Lillian Elizabeth Slatten[1] (November 19, 1882 in Brownsville, Illinois – February 25, 1951 in Ossining, New York), was an American actress, playwright and screenwriter. She is buried in St. Francis of Assisi Cemetery, Mount Kisco, New York.
Margaret Mayo was a stage actress from 1896 to 1903, when she retired from performing to devote herself to playwriting. Her earliest successes were adaptations of novels: The Marriage of William Ashe (1905) and The Jungle (1907). However, Mayo is best remembered as the author of more original plays such as Polly of the Circus (1907), Baby Mine (1910), Twin Beds (1914), and Seeing Things (1920), written with Aubrey Kennedy. She adapted several of her plays for the silent screen. Her play Polly of the Circus became the first film produced by the Goldwyn Company in 1917, of which she was a founding member along with her former husband Edgar Selwyn.[2] The play was again made into a film in 1932.
Margaret Mayo was instrumental in making housing arrangements for the Indian spiritual teacher Meher Baba at Harmon, near New York City, during his fist visit to America in 1931. She owned and provided the stone house retreat where he stayed on this first trip.[3]
References
- ↑ Alumni Directory and Ten-year Book (graduates and Non-graduates) 4, Stanford University, 1932, p. 495
- ↑ List of Goldwyn Company films at IMDB
- ↑ Lord Meher, by Bhau Kalchuri, Manifestation Inc., 1986. p. 1466
External links
- Works by Margaret Mayo at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about Margaret Mayo at Internet Archive
- Margaret Mayo at the Internet Movie Database
- Margaret Mayo at the Internet Broadway Database
- Margaret Mayo at the Women Film Pioneers Project
- Margaret Mayo papers, 1882-1970 (bulk 1901-1950), held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division, New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
- two photos of Margaret Mayo, ..photo #1, ...photo #2
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