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  1. Winifred Ashton CBE, better known by the pseudonym Clemence Dane (21 February 1888 – 28 March 1965), was an English novelist and playwright.

  2. Jan 9, 2017 · Learn about the life and work of Clemence Dane, a prolific and popular writer and artist, who was the first British woman screenwriter to win an Oscar and the inspiration for Madame Arcati in Blithe Spirit. The V&A Archives hold a vast selection of material relating to her, including playscripts, poems, photographs and a bust of Ivor Novello.

  3. Clemence Dane was the pseudonym of Winifred Ashton, a prolific and influential writer who contributed to Time and Tide, a feminist magazine, in the 1920s. She wrote plays, novels, short stories, poetry, criticism, journalism and screenplays, and was a friend of Noël Coward and Virginia Woolf.

  4. English novelist and playwright. Name variations: also wrote under real name Winifred Ashton; acted under Diana Cortis. Born Winifred Ashton on February 21, 1888, in Greenwich, London; died on March 28, 1965, in London; daughter of Arthur Charles (a commission merchant) and Florence (Bentley) Ashton; educated in England, Germany, and ...

  5. Clemence Dane. (1888—1965) Quick Reference. (18881965), playwright and novelist, whose first play, A Bill of Divorcement (1921), had a success never quite matched by her later works. Her novels include Regiment of Women (1917) and Legend (1919). From: Dane, Clemence in The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature »

  6. Feb 2, 2018 · Clemence Dane won an Oscar as the scriptwriter for Vacation from Marriage in 1946. She was the first British woman screenwriter to have ever achieved that award. In 1953, she was awarded the CBE. In private life, she was unmarried but kept an open house for friends and was noted for her generous, outgoing character.

  7. Clemence Dane (1888–1965) National Portrait Gallery, London. Playwright, novelist, artist and actress, born in Greenwich, southeast London. She was educated in England, Germany and Switzerland and studied at the Slade School of Fine Art, 1905–7, under her real name, Winifred Ashton.

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