Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Agnes Ruby Boulton (September 19, 1893 – November 25, 1968) was a British-born American pulp magazine writer in the 1910s, later the wife of Eugene O'Neill . Life and career. Boulton was born in 1893 in London, England, the daughter of Cecil Maud (Williams) and Edward William Boulton, an artist.

  2. Nov 25, 2016 · Agnes Boulton, the daughter of the artist, Edward W. Boulton, was born on the 19th August 1892. The family moved to Philadelphia and later settled in Point Pleasant, New Jersey. After finishing her education she wrote for magazines such as Breezy Stories, Snappy Stories and Young's Magazine.

  3. English-born writer, second wife of Eugene O'Neill, and mother of Oona O'Neill Chaplin. Name variations: Agnes Boulton O'Neill. Born in London, England, on September 19, 1893; died in Point Pleasant, New Jersey, on November 25, 1968; daughter of Edward W. Boulton (a painter); sister of Margery Boulton; married a man named Burton; married Eugene ...

  4. People also ask

  5. The collection includes correspondence, writings of Agnes Boulton and of Eugene O'Neill, diaries of Agnes Boulton and of Eugene O'Neill, financial and legal documents, and photographs. The papers span the years 1910 to 1959, but the bulk of the material is from 1920 to 1927.

  6. The collection includes correspondence, writings of Agnes Boulton and of Eugene O'Neill, diaries of Agnes Boulton and of Eugene O'Neill, financial and legal documents, and photographs. The papers span the years 1910 to 1959, but the bulk of the material is from 1920 to 1927.

  7. Scope and Contents. The collection consists of writings, correspondence, and other papers broadly relating to Agnes Boulton. Writings include a typescript for Agnes Boulton's memoir about her marriage to Eugene O'Neill, Part of a Long Story (1958), and a partial typescript of Trouble in the Flesh (1959) by Max Wylie, as well as handwritten and ...

  8. Boulton’s part did not fit so well into the myth that history was making of his life because that part could not be his alone in the aloneness of the ro-mantic artist. Agnes Boulton figured large in this story of marriage, even though Eugene O’Neill had sought to keep her absent for the latter part of his life,

  1. People also search for