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Society Women Who Have Won Success
In Art, Literature, and the Drama
The number of women who win
success in literature grows larger
almost every year. Catherine Duer
and her sister, now Mrs. Henry
Wise Miller, began as Mrs. Whitney
did, to write verse before they
turned their pens to fiction of a
kind that reveals chiefly the New
York they know best. They had
never thought of writing as a
profession when their first poems
were published, but success led
them on until they were well
established on the magazine lists.
Miss Duer is now a regular
contributor to all of the fiction
magazines.
Mrs. Wharton is, of course, the
best known of the women who have
made for themselves a better place
in literature than they occupied
by right in society. She was a
Miss Jones, of Philadelphia, and a
sister of Cadwalader Jones. Her
husband is a man of wealth.
Writing began in her case as a
result of an irresistible desire
to see what she could accomplish
with her pen. Her health was never
robust and much of her writing was
done to pass the time while she
was confined to her house. For
years she practiced in this way,
so that when her works came first
before the public she was already
a finished writer.
Mrs. Wharton's home, "The Mount,"
at Lenox, is another example of
her solicitude and care in the
details of life. This
comparatively small establishment
is wonderfully maintained.
Mrs. Clarence H. Mackay is another
woman of wealth who has found time
among the duties of a great
position in the world of wealth
and fashion to yield to the
inclination to write. She has
already published a play and
written a novel, and she delights
in gathering literary men about
her.
Absorption in other interests has
made it impossible for her to
write much of late, but she has
confided to her friends that she
is going to do something in the
line of authorship more important
than anything she has yet
attempted. Educational matters,
which have taken so much of her
time for the past two years, are
likely to figure in this new work.
Mrs. Mackay is just now especially
interested in trade schools as the
result of her studies in socialism
at Barnard College during two
terms. She attended lectures
regularly and no student was more
industrious or showed greater
interest in her work.A newcomer in
this field is Miss Frances Davidge,
who, although only out of her
teens, is the author of one of the
"best sellers" of the year. Her
first novel has been uncommonly
successful, although she had no
other preparation for her work
than the ordinary education of a
young woman of social position.
She is the daughter of William
Davidge, a merchant, and her
mother was a Miss Robinson, a
daughter of Beverley Robinson, of
Staten Island. She is one of a set
of young girls to which belonged
the former Miss Clare Bryce, who
was married the other day to J.
Sargeant Cram. Although Miss
Davidge is just arriving in the
literary field, her success has
been brilliant for a beginner.
Another newcomer among the poets
is Blanche Le Roy Shoemaker,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry F.
Shoemaker, of New York. She was
introduced to society only last
winter, but she has published a
book of verse good enough to find
many admirers outside the circle
of her own friends.
Mrs. Edwin Post, who was the
beautiful Emily Price, daughter of
the late Bruce Price, the
architect, is another recent
addition to the list of women
writers. She has so far confined
herself to fiction and always
signs "Emily Post."
The success of society women in
literature is by no means a new
thing. Ever since Mrs. Sidney
Harris, who was Miriam Coles,
wrote "Rutledge" and other novels,
thirty years ago, literature has
been a favorite occupation of
women in society, who have met
with varying degrees of success in
pursuit of its laurels.
Mrs. Van Rensselaer Cruger was one
of those who attained the most
widespread popularity. Mrs. Burton
Harrison, although a Southern
woman by birth, gained her
reputation as a writer after she
had won a place in New York
Society. From her earnings she
built a house.
Coming along in this same line is
Miss Doris Francklyn, who though
not yet introduced to society, has
written several plays that have
been acted by amateurs with
success. Her first p lay, acted at
the Carnegie Lyceum last year, was
a fairy story, and two little
farces b y her were given last
week. Miss Francklyn is considered
to have unusual dramatic talent,
and her plays, in view of the fact
that she is still in her teens,
are considered to possess
remarkable merit.
Other society women have tried
their hands at play writing, but
they had first won their laurels
as writers of fiction. Both Mrs.
Wharton and Mrs. Mackay have tried
the dramatic form.
Mrs. Francois Tonetti, formerly
Miss Mary Lawrence, daughter of a
wealthy New York family, as a girl
took a great interest in
sculpture. She possessed such
talent that she decided to make
sculpture her life work. In the
course of her professional career
she met Francois Tonetti, the
Italian sculptor, and they were
married. Painting has interested
several women so much that they
were able to make a profession of
it and find success in it. The
Emmets are probably the most
striking examples of success in
this art.
By birth they are connected with
many of the most fashionable
families and could have had any
social pleasures they desired.
They are cousins of the Astors,
and on account of their own
positions as well as their
cleverness, they could have gone
to any houses they cared to.
But their art interested them too
much to allow other diversions,
and they surrendered themselves to
it with very gratifying success.
Jane Emmet, who married Robert Von
Glahn, the painter, and Eleanor
Emmet have had great success with
their portraits, and a sister (Rosina
Emmet, now Mrs. Arthur Sherwood)
won fame as a painter nearly
twenty years ago.
Mrs. Albert Herter, who used to be
the beautiful Adele Maguiness, is
another portrait painter. Mrs.
Leslie Cotton, who was Miss Pansy
Benedict before her marriage, is a
welcome guest at the most
exclusive houses and few women are
more popular at Newport. Yet Mrs.
Cotton now supports herself and
her family by her portraits. The
possession of talent, a large
visiting list, and the ability to
make her sitters acquainted with
her society friends, the elements
that can make a portrait painter
very successful.
Music also has absorbed many New
York women who might otherwise
have devoted themselves wholly to
the pleasures of society. Mrs.
Grenville Snelling, who was born
Anthon, has been a serious student
of music for years merely from the
desire to cultivate a beautiful
voice to the fullest extent. She
has occasionally appeared with
success in public and contributed
to the delight of a wider circle
than that made by her friends by
her artistic use of a lovely lyric
soprano voice.
Miss Frances Ives has just
appeared in public for the first
time, and her success on this
occasion seems to show that she
may have chosen her career wisely.
She is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Bravion Ives. For five years her
interest in music led her to take
up the study seriously, and she
expects ultimately to enter on an
operatic career, although there is
only her ambition as the impulse
to such an undertaking.
Of all the other New York women
who have interested themselves in
music none has gone so far as Miss
Mary Callender. She has even begun
to teach and has so many pupils
that her time is taken up with
them to the exclusion of almost
every other occupation.
Mrs. E. Marey Raymond, daughter
of a physician famous a half
century ago, is one of New York's
wealthy women who have found great
pleasure in music. Her art is
creative and she has composed many
songs as well as a comic opera
that was produced years ago with
some success. Pel Plancon has sung
a number of Mrs. Raymond's songs
in concert.
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