Helen Lawrenson
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Helen_Lawrenson an entity of type: Thing
Helen Lawrenson (Geburtsname: Helen Brown; * 1. Oktober 1907 in LaFargeville, New York, USA; † 5. April 1982 in New York City) war eine US-amerikanische Redakteurin und Schriftstellerin, die mit ihren unverblümten Beschreibungen der New Yorker Gesellschaft der 1930er Jahre Berühmtheit erlangte.
rdf:langString
Helen Lawrenson (born Helen Strough Brown, October 1, 1907 – April 5, 1982), was an American editor, writer and socialite who gained fame in the 1930s with her blunt descriptions of New York society. She made friends with great ease, many among the rich and famous, notably author Clare Boothe Luce and statesman Bernard Baruch. At the height of the Great Depression, in the 1930s, she was an editor of Vanity Fair. She later became notorious for an article called "Latins Are Lousy Lovers", published in Esquire in 1936. She supported herself by writing articles for the rest of her life.
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Helen Lawrenson
rdf:langString
Helen Lawrenson
rdf:langString
Helen Lawrenson
rdf:langString
Helen Lawrenson
rdf:langString
New York City, US
xsd:date
1982-05-05
rdf:langString
La Fargeville, New York, US
xsd:date
1907-10-01
xsd:integer
68318389
xsd:integer
1124648520
xsd:date
1907-10-01
rdf:langString
Helen Brown
xsd:integer
2
xsd:date
1982-05-05
rdf:langString
Writer, editor, socialite
rdf:langString
Helen Lawrenson (Geburtsname: Helen Brown; * 1. Oktober 1907 in LaFargeville, New York, USA; † 5. April 1982 in New York City) war eine US-amerikanische Redakteurin und Schriftstellerin, die mit ihren unverblümten Beschreibungen der New Yorker Gesellschaft der 1930er Jahre Berühmtheit erlangte.
rdf:langString
Helen Lawrenson (born Helen Strough Brown, October 1, 1907 – April 5, 1982), was an American editor, writer and socialite who gained fame in the 1930s with her blunt descriptions of New York society. She made friends with great ease, many among the rich and famous, notably author Clare Boothe Luce and statesman Bernard Baruch. At the height of the Great Depression, in the 1930s, she was an editor of Vanity Fair. She later became notorious for an article called "Latins Are Lousy Lovers", published in Esquire in 1936. She supported herself by writing articles for the rest of her life. Lawrenson's two autobiographies, Stranger at the Party and Whistling Girl, are full of anecdotes and strong opinions – especially about New York society, politics left and right, and dense with anecdotes and vehement statements not easily corroborated.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
11721
rdf:langString
Helen Brown