This month Fowey plays host to an arts and literary festival celebrating a world-renowned writer who became Cornwall’s most famous adopted daughter.
LET your imagination travel back in time to May 1937. Picture a young woman seated in a hut in the grounds of Menabilly manor house near Fowey and overlooking The Gribbin. She has just given birth to her second daughter, Flavia. As she sits deep in thought she is writing a book that will not only enhance her growing literary reputation but gain her a place among the exclusive band of British classical writers. The young woman is, of course, Daphne Du Maurier and the book is Rebecca.
This month, her 110th birthday will be celebrated at the famous Fowey Festival. The celebration is not just a commemoration of her birth in 1907 but a tribute to her incredible literary contribution, and Fowey’s continued contribution, to the arts.
Daphne Du Maurier was actually born in North London and her childhood saw her much-travelled including a spell at a finishing school near Paris. But there was no place like Cornwall where she had holidayed and when the family bought a holiday home – Ferryside in Fowey – she was thrilled.
Daphne loved everything about Cornwall – the sea, the beaches, the land, the people and the peace. Above all she felt an immediate connection with the atmosphere of Cornwall, something she reflects in her writing. She wanted to tell a story but she also wanted her readers to ‘feel’ what they were reading. Her aim was to create an atmosphere that magnetised her readers. And she succeeded.
It has been well-chronicled that Daphne was the middle of three daughters born to actor and theatre manager Gerald Du Maurier – himself the son of a writer and artist – and Muriel, a successful actress.
Esta historia es de la edición May 2017 de Cornwall Life.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor ? Conectar
Esta historia es de la edición May 2017 de Cornwall Life.
Comience su prueba gratuita de Magzter GOLD de 7 días para acceder a miles de historias premium seleccionadas y a más de 9,000 revistas y periódicos.
Ya eres suscriptor? Conectar
Gems Of The Sea
A Cornwall-based designer-maker is turning a by-product of marine litter into unique pieces of jewellery
In Search Of Autumn
Award-winning photographer David Chapman explores Fowey and its surrounding area
The secret GARDENER
It’s been 30 years since Sir Tim Smit discovered Cornwall’s Lost Gardens of Heligan. Su Carroll talks to him about his horticultural voyage of discovery
Look East
Look across the water at the South West’s latest resident: Sir Antony Gormley’s Look II
Eco by the sea
Beautiful buildings shouldn’t cost the earth, as stunning eco-home Waterhouse, created near Rock by ARCO2, readily illustrates
Flavours of LOCKDOWN
The spring lockdown created thousands of new entrepreneurs – and Cornwall’s food and drink industry has been boosted by hundreds of new products. Whet your appetite...
Go WILD in the water
With leisure centres closed, getting a swim means heading out to sea - but that’s not the only reason wild swimming is on the rise
Criminal Cornwall
St Michael’s Mount is the setting for a brutal death (or two) in the latest Cornish crime story by best-selling writer Nicola Upson
Autumn colour
Autumn is the perfect time to walk around Cornwall’s gardens and enjoy the gorgeous autumnal colour our mild weather has to offer. We pick nine wonderful places to visit
A Unique Spirit
A unique spirit Collecting rare and exclusive alcoholic drinks is a luxurious hobby that is only growing in popularity