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Mary Tourtel (1874–1948)

Autor(a) de Rupert and Edward at the Circus

93 Works 192 Membros 0 Críticas

About the Author

Séries

Obras por Mary Tourtel

Rupert and Edward at the Circus (1960) 8 exemplares
Rupert goes Hiking (1935) 7 exemplares
The Monster Rupert (1948) 7 exemplares
Rupert and the Magic Whistle (1975) 6 exemplares
Rupert and the Magic Toy Man (1900) 5 exemplares
A Horse Book (2008) 5 exemplares
Rupert and Bill and the Pirates (1975) 5 exemplares
Rupert at the Seaside 5 exemplares
Rupert Treasury (1984) 4 exemplares
Rupert and the Wonderful Boots (1946) 4 exemplares
Rupert Annual 1936 (1985) 3 exemplares
Rupert and Dapple (1975) 3 exemplares
Rupert and Prince Humpty Dumpty (2001) 3 exemplares
Rupert in the Wood of Mystery (1968) 3 exemplares
Rupert Tourtel Facsimile (2001) 2 exemplares
Dl. 11 1 exemplar
The Rupert Story Book. (1938) 1 exemplar
Rupert and the Three Robbers (1929) 1 exemplar
Rupert & the Iron Spade (1974) 1 exemplar
Rupert Stories 1 exemplar

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Nome canónico
Tourtel, Mary
Data de nascimento
1874-01-12
Data de falecimento
1948-03-15
Localização do túmulo
St. Martin Churchyard, Canterbury, Kent, England, UK
Sexo
female
Nacionalidade
UK
Local de nascimento
Canterbury, Kent, England, UK
Local de falecimento
Canterbury, Kent, England, UK
Locais de residência
Canterbury, Kent, England, UK
Educação
University for the Creative Arts, Canterbury
Ocupações
Writer

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Mary Tourtel, née Caldwell, was born in Canterbury, England, a daughter of Samuel Caldwell, a stained-glass artist and stonemason on Canterbury Cathedral, and his wife Sarah. She was brought up in their artistic household. She studied art at the Sidney Cooper School of Art in Canterbury (now the University for the Creative Arts), and became an artist and children's book illustrator. She published her first book, A Horse Book and Three Little Foxes in 1897 at age 23. In 1900, she married Herbert Bird Tourtel, an assistant editor of The Daily Express.
The Express was in hot competition with The Daily Mail and The Daily Mirror, which then had popular illustrated characters called Teddy Tail and Pip, Squeak and Wilfred. The owner of the Express, Lord Beaverbrook, challenged Herbert Tourtel to come up with a character that would surpass its rivals, and he thought of his wife Mary. She created and illustrated Rupert Bear, who first appeared in a story called The Adventures of a Little Lost Bear in 1920. After 15 years of drawing Rupert Bear, she retired and Rupert Bear was continued by Alfred Bestall. Many books reprinting her stories were published in the 1920s and 1930s.

Membros

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Estatísticas

Obras
93
Membros
192
Popularidade
#113,797
Avaliação
3.0
ISBN
31
Línguas
1

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