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Lucie Delarue Mardrus

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Name
  
Lucie Delarue-Mardrus

Role
  
Journalist

Movies
  
Sowing the Wind


Lucie Delarue-Mardrus Paris Was A Woman Lucie DelarueMardrus born in Honfleur

Died
  
April 26, 1945, Chateau-Gontier, France

Spouse
  
J. C. Mardrus (m. 1900–1915)

Books
  
The Angel and the Perverts

People also search for
  
J. C. Mardrus, Maurice Keroul, Jacques Mills, Maurice Gleize, Steve Passeur

2010 10 19 kymael vid o po sie de lucie delarue mardrus avi


Lucie Delarue-Mardrus (3 November 1874 in Honfleur – 26 April 1945 ) was a French journalist, poet, novelist, sculptor, historian and designer. She was a prolific writer who produced more than 70 books.

Contents

Lucie Delarue-Mardrus DelarueMardrusjpg

In France, she is best known for her poem beginning with the line "L'odeur de mon pays était dans une pomme" ("In an apple I held the smell of my native land.") Her writings express her love of travel and her love for her native Normandy. L'Ex-voto (1932), for example, describes the life and milieu of the fishermen of Honfleur at the opening of the twentieth century.

Lucie Delarue-Mardrus arlindocorreiacomdelarueluciejpg

She was married to the translator J. C. Mardrus from 1900 to 1915, but her primary sexual orientation was toward women. She was involved in affairs with several women throughout her lifetime, and she wrote extensively of lesbian love.

Lucie Delarue-Mardrus Literary Encyclopedia Lucie DelarueMardrus Sophia Deboick

In 1902-03 she wrote a series of love poems to the American writer and salon hostess Natalie Clifford Barney, published posthumously in 1957 as Nos secrètes amours (Our Secret Loves). She also depicted Barney in her 1930 novel, L'Ange et les Pervers (The Angel and the Perverts), in which she said she "analyzed and described Natalie at length as well as the life into which she initiated me".

Lucie Delarue-Mardrus Catalogue bibliographique

The protagonist of the novel is a hermaphrodite named Marion who lives a double life, frequenting literary salons in female dress, then changing from skirt to trousers to attend gay soirées. Barney appears as "Laurette Wells", a salon hostess who spends much of the novel trying to win back an ex-lover, loosely based on Barney's real-life attempts at regaining her relationship with her former lover, Renée Vivien.

She was awarded the first recipient of the Renée Vivien prize for women poets in 1936.

One admirer wrote to describe Lucie Delarue-Mardrus, stating in part;

"She is adorable. She sculpts, mounts to horse, loves a woman, then another, and yet another. She was able to free herself from her husband and has never embarked on a second marriage or the conquest of another man."

Lucie delarue mardrus joie du printemps


References

Lucie Delarue-Mardrus Wikipedia