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Mary Manning (writer)

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Full Name
  
Mary Manning

Other names
  
Mary Howe, Mary Adams

Other name
  
Mary Howe, Mary Adams

Nationality
  
Irish

Occupation
  
writer

Mary Manning (writer) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb0

Born
  
30 June 1905
Dublin, Ireland

Died
  
27 June 1999, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

People also search for
  
Margaret McKenzie, Michael Horne

Books
  
Nobody Will Believe Y, English Skills Builder 1, Just (Stay) Married, New Ways Into Poetry: Themes a, I Wish I Was Little

Mary Manning Howe Adams (30 June 1905 – 27 June 1999) was an Irish novelist, playwright and film critic.

Contents

Biography

Born and raised in Dublin, Mary Manning got her theatre training in Sara Allgood's teaching class in the Abbey Theatre. She had gone to school in Morehampton House and Alexandra College, Dublin. She also worked as a writer for the Gate Theatre. She adapted the novel, Guests of the Nation, for a film directed by Denis Johnston. Manning also helped found the Dublin Film Society in 1930. She worked as a film critic and co-founded the Gate Theatre arts magazine, Motley in 1932.

In 1935 Manning moved to Boston where she married Harvard Law School professor Mark DeWolf Howe. They had three daughters Fanny, Susan and Helen. When her husband died Manning returned to Dublin in 1967 and lived in Monkstown, County Dublin for another ten years. During this time Manning wrote for various publications such as the Hibernia, The Irish Times. She later returned to live in Cambridge.

Manning was a founder of the Poets' Theatre in Cambridge, Massachusetts and worked as drama director at Radcliffe College during World War II.

After Manning returned to the US she married Faneuil Adams, of Boston, Massachusetts in 1980

Plays

  • Go, Lovely Rose
  • Youth's The Season
  • Storm over Wicklow
  • Happy Family
  • The Voices of Shem
  • Books

  • Mount Venus
  • Lovely People
  • The Last Chronicles of Ballyfungus
  • References

    Mary Manning (writer) Wikipedia