Clare Hoskyns-Abrahall

Clare Hoskyns-Abrahall in 1950

Clare Hoskyns-Abrahall (1900-1990) was an English author who wrote as C.H. Abrahall, Clare H. Abrahall or occasionally as C.M. Drury. She wrote biographies and historical fiction for children and young adults, school stories, stage plays which she sometimes helped produce, and more. She is known for her book Prelude about the pianist Eileen Joyce which was turned into a film, Wherever She Goes.

Biography

Clare Constance Maria Drury was born on 31 January 1900[1] in London to Gertrude Elizabeth (née Holt) and Lieutenant-Colonel Richard Frederick Drury, a civil engineer who was in the RAF during World War One.[2] They were living in Wheathampstead by the time Clare (sometimes Clara) Drury was eleven[3] and this was still the family home in 1925.[4] She was educated at St Helen’s School, Abingdon and then at the Royal College of Music.[5] Towards the end of the First World War she served as a driver in the parachute section of the Women's Royal Air Force.[6] During World War Two she was a commandant in the British Red Cross.[6]

In 1925 she married Theo Chandos Hoskyns-Abrahall, who worked in the Colonial Service, mainly in Nigeria.[4][7] They divorced in 1944.[8] In 1950 T. C. Hoskyns-Abrahall was made a knight.[5] After his knighthood Clare Hoskyns-Abrahall was sometimes called Lady Clare Hoskyns-Abrahall, despite the divorce and the prevailing conventions. In 1953 newspapers reported her shouting repeatedly at a political meeting because she felt the speaker "was saying such horrible things about England".[9] She described her politics as "Conservative".[6] Clare Hoskyns-Abrahall survived her daughter Priscilla and son Follett and died in 1990.[10] Her other son Robin died in 1995.[10]

Writing and drama

Biographies of pianists

After meeting at a charity concert around 1945, Hoskyns-Abrahall persuaded the concert pianist Eileen Joyce to let her tell her story,[11] in which she incorporated imaginative sections about Joyce's early life. They became friends and in the 1950s Hoskyns-Abrahall accompanied Joyce on concert tours, overseas[6] and in the UK.[11] The biography, Prelude, was her most successful book. Originally aimed at children, it was also read by adults. Not only was it re-published several times in English, it was translated into other languages too, including German (Ein Mädchen macht Karriere) and Dutch.[11] After the film version, Wherever She Goes, stage and radio adaptations followed.

Books for children and young adults

Many of these have a historical theme, whether fact or fiction.

School stories

Plays

Hoskyns-Abrahall was a member of the Arts Theatre Club, and of the Hovenden Theatre Club, both in London. She was sometimes involved in production as well as writing.[6]

In the 1950s a newspaper reported on a forthcoming book by Hoskyns-Abrahall, Kate Fox and the Princesses, the story of the nanny to Princesses Olga, Elisabeth and Marina.[11] It is listed in a reference book[6] but not in authoritative library catalogues.

References

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