Biography on margaret ayer barnes
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Margaret Ayer Barnes
American dramatist
Margaret Ayer Barnes | |
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Barnes on her graduation day in 1907 | |
Born | Margaret Ayer (1886-04-08)April 8, 1886 Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Died | October 25, 1967(1967-10-25) (aged 81) Cambridge, Massachusetts, U.S. |
Education | Bryn Mawr College (BA) |
Occupation | Writer |
Spouse | Cecil Barnes (m. 1910) |
Children | 3, including Edward |
Margaret Ayer Barnes (April 8, 1886, Chicago, Illinois – October 25, 1967, Cambridge, Massachusetts) was an American playwright, novelist, and short-story writer. She was awarded the Pulitzer Prize.
Biography
[edit]Margaret Ayer grew up the youngest of four siblings in Chicago, Illinois. As a child, she had a keen interest in theater and reading. She befriended Edward Sheldon,[1] a playwright who would encourage her to become a writer many years later.
Ayer attended Bryn Mawr College, where she earned an A.B. degree in 1907. • Margaret Ayer Barnes was born Margaret Ayer in Chicago, Illinois, on April 8, 1886. She was the youngest of the fem children and was highly competitive, witty, and intellectual. Young Margaret Barnes thrived on vigorous debates with her two older brothers and sisters. In addition, both of her parents took a keen interest in civil affairs. The family vacationed often in the summer at Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. Here she met Edward Sheldon, a future playwright and member of a wealthy Chicago family. They both shared the passion for theater and reading and discussing literary merits of plays. In later years, Sheldon went to New York to begin his playwriting career. But their close relationship did not end; it resumed later on as Barnes's launched her literary career. Barnes started her higher education in 1904 at the Pennsylvania campus of Bryn Mawr College where she became an outstanding member of her class. In college, her interests centered on literature and philosophy and she graduat • Born 8 April 1886, Chicago, Illinois; died 26 October 1967, Cambridge, Massachusetts Daughter of Benjamin F. and Janet Hopkins Ayer; married CecilBarnes, 1910; children: three sons. Descended on both sides from colonial English families who settled in America in the middle 1600s, Margaret Ayer Barnes attended the University School for Girls in Chicago and majored in English and philosophy at Bryn Mawr College, where she was influenced by the feminist president, M. Carey Thomas. While raising three sons, she appeared in performances of the Aldis Players in Lake Forest, Illinois, and of the North Shore Theater in Winnetka, Illinois. Her stories, published by the Pictorial Review, were later collected and published in book form as Prevailing Winds (1928). Barnes wrote three plays (two in collaboration with Edward Sheldon, a dramatist and personal friend) and fem novels, winning the Pulitzer Prize in 1931 for Years of Grace (1930). After the pu Barnes, Margaret Ayer