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  1. Michael Llewelyn Davies (16 juin 1900 - 19 mai 1921) est, avec ses quatre frères, l'inspiration pour les personnages de J. M. Barrie Peter Pan, les frères Darling et les Lost Boys. Tard dans la vie, son seul frère survivant Nicholas le décrit comme "le plus intelligent d'entre nous, le plus original, le génie potentiel" [ 1 ] .

  2. Peter Llewelyn Davies. Peter Llewelyn Davies (25 de febrero de 1897 – 5 de abril de 1960) fue un militar británico, amigo e inspirador del escritor J.M. Barrie, para su personaje de Peter Pan. Barrie nombró al personaje en base al nombre de pila de Peter, quien a causa de que su vida fue plagada por la asociación al personaje, se suicidó ...

  3. Michael Llewelyn Davies was the forth of the five sons of Arthur and Sylvia Llewelyn Davies. He is widely reported to be the individual who most influenced J. M. Barrie in the creation of Peter Pan. He drowned in suspicious circumstances with a close friend just short of his 21st birthday.

  4. The mysterious death of Michael Llewelyn Davies. It could almost be said that Michael too was the boy who never grew up. Until 1970 in the UK the age of majority was twenty one. MIchael died when he was twenty. At Oxford University he had become friendly with another young man called Rupert Buxton. On 19th May, 1921, the two young men went ...

  5. Michael was the fourth of five sons of Arthur and Sylvia Llewelyn Davies. He was born three years after Barrie became friends with his older brothers and mother in 1897. He and his eldest brother George were the boys closest to Barrie, and he is widely reported as the individual who most influenced the portrayal of Peter Pan in the 1911 novel based on the play.

  6. Michael Llewelyn Davies. (1900-1921), Fourth son of Sylvia and Arthur Llewelyn Davies. Sitter in 15 portraits. Like. List Thumbnail.

  7. 1 de ene. de 2001 · Peter Llewelyn Davies destroyed nearly all of Barrie's vast correspondence with Michael in the melancholic period before he killed himself by diving under a Tube train at Sloane Square station. ( 'They were too much,' was his only comment on the letters between Barrie and [his brother] Michael.)' (CAPTIVATED: J.M. Barrie, the du Mauriers and the Dark Side of Neverland, by Piers Dudgeon)