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Liane de Pougy (1869–1950)

Autor(a) de My Blue Notebooks

6+ Works 182 Membros 0 Críticas

About the Author

Inclui os nomes: Liane de Pougy, Liane de Pougy

Disambiguation Notice:

(eng) Pen name of Anne-Marie Chassaigne

Image credit: Liane de Pougy by Felix Nadar (1820-1921) From: http://commons.wikimedia.org

Obras por Liane de Pougy

My Blue Notebooks (1977) 165 exemplares
Idilio sáfico (1901) 9 exemplares
A Woman's Affair (2021) 4 exemplares
Det oåtkomliga (2022) 2 exemplares

Associated Works

The Assassin's Cloak: An Anthology of the World's Greatest Diarists (2000) — Contribuidor, algumas edições551 exemplares
The Virago Book of Wanderlust and Dreams (1998) — Contribuidor — 36 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome canónico
Pougy, Liane de
Nome legal
Chassaigne, Anne-Marie
Data de nascimento
1869-07-02
Data de falecimento
1950-12-26
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
France
Local de nascimento
La Flèche, Sarthe, France
Local de falecimento
Lausanne, Switzerland
Locais de residência
La Flèche, Sarthe, France
Paris, France
Lausanne, Switzerland
Ocupações
sex worker
novelist
dancer
actor
Relações
Barney, Natalie Clifford (lover)
Ghika, Georges (husband)
Organizações
Order of Saint Dominic

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Liane de Pougy was born Anne-Marie Chassaigne in a middle-class French family, and received a convent education. At age 16, she married a naval officer and had a child, but her husband was abusive, and she left him after two years. She moved to Paris, changed her name, danced in the chorus of the Folies Bergère cabaret, and established herself as a much sought-after courtesan. In 1899, she met the first great love of her life, Natalie Clifford Barney, a wealthy American expatriate and writer. The two women caused a scandal with their open affair, at the end of which Liane published a tell-all novel, Idylle Saphique (1901); it was a bestseller. Liane then met her second great love, Georges Ghika, a prince from a old noble Romanian family; he was several years her junior. In 1910, the couple married, and Liane changed her name again to Anne-Marie Ghika and was known as Princess Ghika. The marriage lasted about 16 years. In 1945, Liane joined a Dominican Order of nuns in Lausanne, Switzerland as a lay sister, and worked at the Asylum of Saint Agnes, a home for physically and mentally disabled abandoned children. She published a couple of light tales called L'Insaisissable and La Mauvaise part-Myrrhille. After her death, her diaries were published in English as My Blue Notebooks.
Nota de desambiguação
Pen name of Anne-Marie Chassaigne

Membros

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Estatísticas

Obras
6
Also by
2
Membros
182
Popularidade
#118,785
Avaliação
4.0
ISBN
17
Línguas
3

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