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Margaret Truman

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Occupation
  
Writerhistorian

Children
  
Clifton Truman Daniel

Spouse
  
Clifton Daniel (m. 1956)

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Margaret Truman


Margaret Truman dgrassetscomauthors1226623201p51559jpg

Born
  
Mary Margaret TrumanFebruary 17, 1924Independence, Missouri (
1924-02-17
)

Genre
  
Mystery fictionbiographyAutobiography

Died
  
January 29, 2008, Chicago, Illinois, United States

Parents
  
Harry S. Truman, Bess Truman

Books
  
Capital Crimes, Murder in the White House, Murder on Capitol Hill, Margaret Truman's Experime, Monument to Murder: A Capital

Similar People
  
Harry S Truman, Bess Truman, Clifton Daniel, Donald Bain, Martha Ellen Young Tr

What s my line george burns gracie allen margaret truman panel jun 6 1954


Mary Margaret Truman Daniel (February 17, 1924 –January 29, 2008), also known as Margaret Truman or Margaret Daniel, was an American singer who later became the successful author of a series of murder mysteries and a number of works on U.S. First Ladies and First Families, including a biography of her father, President Harry S. Truman. The only child of Harry Truman and First Lady Bess Truman, she was "a witty, hard-working Midwestern girl with singing talent who was neither particularly pretty nor terribly plain."

Contents

Aulicexclusiva wins mystery soprano is margaret truman c 1950


Early life

Margaret Truman Margaret Truman Historic Missourians The State

Mary Margaret was born in Independence, Missouri on February 17, 1924 and was christened Mary Margaret Truman (for her aunt Mary Jane Truman and maternal grandmother Margaret Gates Wallace) but was called Margaret from early childhood. She attended school in Independence until her father's 1934 election to the United States Senate, after which her education was split between schools in Washington, D.C. and Independence.

In 1942, she matriculated at George Washington University, where she was a member of Pi Beta Phi and earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in History in 1946. In June 1944, she christened the battleship USS Missouri at Brooklyn Navy Yard, and spoke again in 1986 at the ship's recommissioning.

Opera

After operatic vocal training, Truman's singing career began with a debut radio recital in March 1947. Reviewers were not always kind, but her father was fiercely protective: when in 1950 Washington Post music critic Paul Hume wrote that Truman was "extremely attractive on the stage... [but] cannot sing very well. She is flat a good deal of the time. And still cannot sing with anything approaching professional finish," President Truman wrote to Hume, "Some day I hope to meet you. When that happens you'll need a new nose, a lot of beefsteak for black eyes, and perhaps a supporter below!" A 1951 Time Magazine cover featured Truman with a single musical note floating by her head. She performed on stage, radio, and television until the mid-1950s.

Acting

Truman's professional acting debut occurred April 26, 1951. She co-starred with James Stewart in the "Jackpot" episode of Screen Directors Playhouse on NBC radio. On March 17, 1952, Truman was guest soloist on The Railroad Hour in a presentation of Sari.

Truman also performed on the NBC Radio program The Big Show. There she met writer Goodman Ace, who gave her advice and pointers; Ace became a lifelong friend, advising Truman even after The Big Show. She became part of the team of NBC Radio's Weekday show that premiered in 1955, shortly after its Monitor program made its debut. Paired with Mike Wallace, she presented news and interviews aimed at a female listening audience.

She appeared several times as a panelist (and once as a mystery guest) on the game show What's My Line? and guest-starred more than once on NBC's The Martha Raye Show.

In 1957, she sang and played piano on The Gisele MacKenzie Show

Writing

Truman's full-length biography of her father, published shortly before his death, was critically acclaimed. She also wrote a personal biography of her mother and histories of the White House and its inhabitants (including first ladies and pets). A series of murder mysteries, the Capital Crimes series, set in and around Washington, D.C., were published under her name; they were ghostwritten, first by William Harrington (according to Harrington)

After Harrington's apparent suicide, a self-written obituary was found in which he referred to Margaret Truman and others as his "clients". Harrington's literary agent (who was also Truman's agent) denied any collaboration with Truman, while somewhat obliquely acknowledging Harrington had "worked on" books credited to another author. Harrington has been "squarely" credited by at least one verifiable source with ghostwriting all the books published by the child of another United States president, Elliott Roosevelt.</ref> and then, allegedly, by Donald Bain.

Truman published regularly into her eighties. She served on the board of directors for the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum and the Board of Governors of the Roosevelt Institute.

Personal life

On April 21, 1956, Truman married Clifton Daniel, a reporter for The New York Times and later editor, at Trinity Episcopal Church in Independence; he died in 2000. They had four sons:

  • Clifton Truman Daniel (born 1957), Director of Public Relations for Harry S Truman College.
  • William Wallace Daniel (May 19, 1959 – September 4, 2000), a psychiatric social worker and researcher at Columbia University.
  • Harrison Gates Daniel (born 1963)
  • Thomas Washington Daniel (born 1966)
  • Later years and death

    In later life, Truman lived in her Park Avenue home. She died on January 29, 2008, in Chicago (to which she was relocating to be nearer her son Clifton). She was said to have been suffering from "a simple infection" and had been breathing with the assistance of a respirator. Her ashes, and those of her husband, were interred in Independence, in her parents' burial plot on the grounds of the Truman Library.

    References

    Margaret Truman Wikipedia