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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Life  





2 Work  



2.1  Books  





2.2  Screenplays and film adaptations  





2.3  Short stories (selection)  







3 References  





4 External links  














Dixie Willson






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Dixie Willson (1930)

Dixie Lucile Reiniger Willson (30 July 1890 - 6 February 1974) was an American screenwriter, as well as an author of children's books, novels, and short stories.

Life

[edit]

Willson was born in Estherville, Iowa to John David Willson, a lawyer, and Rosalie Willson née Reiniger, a primary school teacher and piano tutor.[1] In 1894 her parents moved to Mason City where her two brothers were born, John Cedric Willson and Robert Meredith Willson, who later came to prominence as the composer of the Broadway hit musical The Music Man.

Work

[edit]

Willson produced numerous children's books, as well as many short stories and poems. Her best-known children's book is titled Honey Bear and contains illustrations of Maginel Wright Barney, sister of Frank Lloyd Wright. The story, told in verse, is about a baby being taken from his bassinet and into the forest by a bear. Tom Wolfe cites the book as the one which first made him wish to be a writer.[2]

InWhere the World Folds Up at Night, Willson chronicled the daily operations of the Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus, with which she performed for a brief time. Several other circus-themed books, including Little Texas and Mystery in Spangles, owe much to her close friend Bird Millman, a high-wire artist to whom she dedicated Honey Bear.

Books

[edit]

Screenplays and film adaptations

[edit]

Short stories (selection)

[edit]
  • Imogene Novré. All-Story Weekly, 16. March 1918
  • Girl in the Dust. The Delineator, December 1921
  • Man in You. McClure’s, January 1923
  • Dust in the Doorvmy. McClure’s, February 1923
  • For Graham Brady. The Delineator, March 1923
  • Lodging-House. The Delineator, November 1923
  • Once in Alabama. The Delineator, May 1924
  • Kings and Things. Ladies Home Journal, June 1924
  • Cross-Eyed Captain. Ladies Home Journal, November 1925
  • Moon-Rose. The Delineator, December 1925
  • Here Y’are Brother. Good Housekeeping, December 1925
  • God Gave Me Twenty Cents. Cosmopolitan, July 1926
  • Sunrise. The American Magazine, August 1926
  • Quality. The Delineator, September 1926
  • Help Yourself to Hay. Cosmopolitan, May 1927
  • Meet the Duchess. Liberty, 4. August 1928
  • From Here to Heaven. The Delineator, November 1928
  • Two I Love. The American Magazine, November 1928
  • Tell Me a Story About a Bear!. The Delineator, August 1929
  • Stray Dog Who Wouldn’t Be Lost. The Delineator, October 1929
  • Mr. Money. The American Magazine, September 1929
  • Two Little Girls. The Delineator, September 1929
  • Blue Whiskers. The American Magazine, November 1929
  • Who Kissed Me?. Cosmopolitan, November 1929
  • Jolly Good Boots. The Delineator, December 1929
  • Miss Coney Island. The Delineator, February 1930
  • Knock on Wood. The Delineator, March 1930
  • Elephant I Know. The Delineator, June 1930
  • Dream Machine. The Delineator, September 1930
  • Charity Begins at Home. Cosmopolitan, March 1932
  • Tricks in Trades. McCall’s, October 1932
  • Bunny Buttons. The Delineator, September 1932
  • Ghost of Halfpenny Lane. The Delineator, November 1932
  • Monkey Manners. The Delineator, May 1933
  • Three Tradesmen Call on a King. The Delineator, December 1933

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Bill Oates, Meredith Willson - America's Music Man, Bloomington, IN: AuthorHouse, . 2005, p. 5.
  • ^ Michael Gorman, Our Own Selves: More Meditations for Librarians, Chicago: American Library Association, 2005, p. 18.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Dixie_Willson&oldid=1204314527"

    Categories: 
    1890 births
    1974 deaths
    American children's writers
    People from Estherville, Iowa
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    20th-century American screenwriters
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    This page was last edited on 6 February 2024, at 22:08 (UTC).

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