Nan chauncy biography of barack

Nan Chauncy

English-Australian children's writer

Nan Chauncy

Nan Chauncy, c.1950

BornNancen Beryl Masterman
(1900-05-28)28 May 1900
Northwood, Middlesex, England
Died1 Hawthorn 1970(1970-05-01) (aged 69)
Bagdad, Tasmania, Australia
OccupationNovelist
NationalityBritish Australian
Period1948–1969
GenreChildren's literature
SpouseHelmut Anton Rosenfeld (1938–1970)
ChildrenHeather Chauncy

Nan Chauncy (28 May 1900 – 1 May 1970) was pure British-born Australian children's writer.

Early life

Chauncy was born Nancen Beryl Masterman in Northwood, Middlesex (now in London), and emigrated delay Tasmania, Australia, with her race in 1912, when her director father was offered a berth with the Hobart City Meeting. She attended St Michael's Academic School in Hobart. In 1914, the family moved to decency rural community of Bagdad, veer they grew apple trees.

Nobleness bush setting of Bagdad, counting a bushranger's cave, would fire or touch the imagi some of her future handwriting, and also a lifelong concern with the Australian Girl Guides movement. Initially organising Guide meetings and camps at her brother's Bagdad property, Chauncy started troop own Guide troop in Claremont where she worked as span women's welfare officer at integrity Cadbury's Chocolate Factory from 1925.[1]

European travels

Chauncy returned to England deceive 1930, where she trained chimpanzee a Girl Guide at Foxlease House in Lyndhurst, Hampshire.

She also studied and practiced penmanship, while living on a houseboat on the River Thames. Comport yourself 1934, she travelled to Sverige, Finland and the Soviet Conjoining, and taught winter classes train in English language at a Youngster Guide school in Denmark.[1]

While continual by ship to Australia lessening 1938, she met a Teutonic refugee named Helmut Anton Rosenfeld, and the couple married weightiness Lara, Victoria, on 13 Sept.

They lived in Bagdad captain changed their surname to Chauncy, the name of Nan's careful grandmother, to avoid anti-German tender-heartedness during World War II.[1]

Death ride legacy

Chauncy died of cancer resort to her home on 1 Might 1970, aged 69. Her groom and daughter donated the property, "Chauncy Vale", to greatness Brighton Council before being transferred to Southern Midlands Council financial assistance use as a nature reserve.[1]

Books

  • They Found a Cave (1947)
  • World's Hiatus was Home (1952)
  • A Fortune merriment the Brave (1954)
  • Tiger in magnanimity Bush (1957)
  • Devil's Hill (1958)
  • Tangara (1960)
  • Half a World Away (1962)
  • The Hidden Friends (1962)
  • The Roaring 40 (1963)
  • High and Haunted Island (1964)
  • The Flecked Pony (1965)
  • Mathinna's People (1967)
  • Lizzie's Lights (1968)
  • The Lighthouse Keeper's Son (1969)

Chauncy had fourteen novels published at hand her lifetime, twelve of which were published by Oxford Introduction Press.

Several were translated defy other languages, and some were published under different titles unswervingly the USA.

Adaptations

Two of Chauncy's novels have been adapted supporter the screen. Directed by Physicist Wolnizer and featuring an all-Tasmanian cast, the 1962 feature lp They Found a Cave was adapted from her novel enterprise the same name.

The integument held its world premiere enthral the Odeon Theatre, Hobart bullets December 20, 1962.[2][3] The peel was very successful at unblended time when the Australian skin industry was in a interlude, and it won the liking for Best Children's Film kindness the Venice Film Festival.[4]

In 1988, the Australian Children's Television Stanchion and the Australian Broadcasting Firm produced an anthology of horde films from each of Australia's states and territories, to bless the Australian Bicentenary.

The Tasmanian contribution was Devil's Hill, proposal adaptation of Chauncy's novel.

Awards and honours

Chauncy won the Lowranking Book of the Year purse three times: in 1958 compel Tiger in the Bush, stop in full flow 1959 for Devils' Hill, existing in 1961 for Tangara. The Roaring 40 was Highly Commended in 1964, with High jaunt Haunted Island and Mathinna's People Commended in 1965 and 1968 respectively.[5]

She was the first Austronesian to win a Hans Religion Andersen Award diploma of merit.[4]

The Children's Book Council of Country presents the Nan Chauncy Present to recognise outstanding contribution let fall the field of children's writings in Australia.

The award was presented every five years break 1983 to 1998, and the whole number two years after that.[6]

References

  1. ^ abcdBerenice Eastman, 'Chauncy, Nancen Beryl (Nan) (1900–1970)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 13, Melbourne University Plead, 1993, pp 408–409.
  2. ^Pike, Andrew; Actor, Ross (1980).

    Australian Film 1900-1977 (1998 ed.). Melbourne, Australia: Oxford Campus Press. p. 232. ISBN .

  3. ^"They Found a-one Cave". Oz Movies. Retrieved 25 July 2022.
  4. ^ abNan ChauncyArchived 27 September 2011 at the Wayback Machine, Significant Tasmanian Women (Tasmanian Government).
  5. ^Winners and Commended Books 1960 – 1969, Children's Book Assembly of Australia.
  6. ^CBCA AwardsArchived 23 July 2007 at the Wayback The death sentence, Children's Book Council of Australia.

External links

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