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  1. Christine Longford, Countess of Longford (née Trew; born 6 September 1900 in Somerset, died 14 May 1980, Dublin, Ireland) was a playwright. Following her parents' separation her mother took in lodgers while Christine attended Oxford Wells High School.

    • Plays, books on theatre
    • Mount Jerome Cemetery, Dublin
  2. Christine Longford (née Trew) was born in 1900 in Somerset and died 14 May 1980 in Dublin, Ireland. Following her parents' separation her mother took in lodgers while Christine attended Oxford Wells High School. She won a scholarship to study Classics at Somerville College, Oxford.

    • (109)
    • May 14, 1980
  3. 4 de nov. de 2020 · From 1941 to 1943, Christine Longford wrote and produced three plays. No longer a writer of social comedies, she instead dramatized stories of heroism and sacrifice in times of crisis. Lord Edward (1941), The United Brothers (1942) and Patrick Sarsfield (1943) were all performed during World War II.

    • Erin Grogan
    • 2021
  4. Pakenham, Christine Patti (‘Christine Longford’) (née Trew) (1900–80), countess of Longford, novelist, and playwright, was born 6 September 1900 at Cheddar, Somerset, England, only child of Richard Trew, a naval officer who drowned at sea during the first world war, and Amy Trew (d. 1944).

  5. Christine Longford, Countess of Longford (née Trew; born 6 September 1900 in Somerset, died 14 May 1980, Dublin, Ireland) was a playwright. Following her parents' separation her mother took in lodgers while Christine attended Oxford Wells High School. She won a scholarship to study Classics at Somerville College, Oxford.

  6. Christine Longford, Countess of Longford (née Trew; born in 1900 in Somerset, died 14 May 1980, Dublin, Ireland) was a playwright. She attended Oxford Wells High School and won a scholarship to study Classics at Somerville College, Oxford.

  7. Christine Longford’s satirical view of the English and Irish characters in Tankardstown reveal her – an English-born daughter of the Irish diaspora – to have been a very astute insider/outsider when it came to Irish society.