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Louise Bryant (December 5, 1885 – January 6, 1936) was an American feminist, political activist, and journalist best known for her sympathetic coverage of Russia and the Bolsheviks during the Russian Revolution of November 1917. Born Anna Louise Mohan, she began as a young girl to use the last name of her stepfather, Sheridan Bryant, in ...
Dec 27, 1995 · Bryant died on Jan. 6, 1936, penniless, living alone in a $2-a-night hotel room. Most obituaries were kind, focusing on her writing accomplishments. But Somerset Maugham, who had followed her ...
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The Bohemian, the Bolsheviks, and the Old Blues. Louise Bryant’s long-lost papers shed light on a remarkable twentieth-century life. September/October 2005. by Mary V. Dearborn. Mary V. Dearborn, author of Queen of Bohemia: The Life of Louise Bryant, has written biographies of Henry Miller and Norman Mailer.
Jun 30, 2021 · In Provincetown, Louise Bryant with Eugene O’Neill and Eugene O’Neill with John Reed On their return to New York, O’Neill was heartbroken when Jack and Louise headed upstate and married on November 9, 1916.
Sep 22, 2016 · This novel tells two stories, one based on solid historical research and one based on pure speculation. The title's “true legendary love triangle” is of course the O'Neill–Louise Bryant liaison of 1916–1918, carried on while Bryant was the lover and later the wife of John Reed. The book's conjectural “secret never before revealed” is divulged in the prologue. Around the time O ...
When Bryant returned in early 1918 to Greenwich Village, sans Reed, from her journalism stint in Russia, O'Neill had just escaped New York with his new love, Agnes Boulton, to live and write in John Francis's flat in. Provincetown, MA. 6. O'Neill writes in pencil on 8.5" x 11" paper in minuscule script. He fits, for.
The Provincetown Players performed The Game, a play written by Bryant. While Reed was in New York attending to a serious health condition, she had an affair with Eugene O’Neill. In the autumn of 1916 Louise and John purchased a weekend retreat called Innisfree, located at 106 Mt Airy Road in the northern Westchester village of Croton-on-Hudson.