Sidney McCall
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Sidney McCall | |
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Born | Mary McNeill March 8, 1865 Wilcox County, Alabama, C.S. |
Died | January 11, 1954 Montrose, Alabama, U.S. | (aged 88)
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | American |
Sidney McCall (March 8, 1865 – January 11, 1954), born Mary McNeill, later Mary McNeil Fenollosa, was an American novelist and poet. Several of her novels were adapted into films.
Biography
[edit]McCall was born Mary McNeill (later dropping one of the l's) in Wilcox County, Alabama, to William Stoddard McNeill, a Confederate Army lieutenant from Mobile, Alabama, and Laura Sibley. McCall was the oldest of five children.[citation needed]
At the age of 18 she married Ludolph Chester who died two years later, leaving her with an infant child. She received a proposal of marriage of marriage from W. Ledyard Scott, a former suitor then serving as a professor of English and Latin at Zoshikwan College in Kagoshima, Japan. After sailing to Tokyo, she married Scott in 1890. However, the marriage was not a happy one and in 1892, she divorced Scott and returned to the United States, now with two children.[citation needed]
In 1895 while working at the Asian art division of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, she became an assistant to Ernest Fenollosa, a renowned American expert on Japanese art and culture. The two became romantically involved, and Fenollosa divorced his first wife, causing a social scandal in Boston. Forced to leave his post at the museum, Fenollosa moved with Mary to New York, but the couple returned to Japan in 1897 following a long honeymoon cruise.[1]
Selected works
[edit]- Out of the Nest: A Flight of Verses (1899) poetry, under her own name
- Truth Dexter (1901) novel, as Sidney McCall
- Hiroshige, the Artist of Mist, Snow and Rain (1901) essay, under her own name
- The Breath of the Gods : A Japanese Romance of To-day (1905), as Sidney McCall
- The Dragon Painter (1906) under her own name
- Red Horse Hill (1909) novel, as Sidney McCall
- Foreword to Epochs of Chinese and Japanese Art: An Outline History of East Asiatic Design (1912) by Ernest Fenollosa*
- Blossoms from a Japanese Garden: A Book of Child-Verses (1913) poetry, under her own name
- The Strange Woman (1914) novel, as Sidney McCall
- Ariadne of Allan Water (1914) novel, as Sidney McCall
- The Stirrup Latch (1915) novel, as Sidney McCall
- Sunshine Beggars (1918) novel, as Sidney McCall
- Christopher Laird (1919) novel, as Sidney McCall
Mary Fenollosa was also responsible for the posthumous completion, checking and publication of her late husband's work Epochs of Chinese and Japanese Art.[2]
Films
[edit]The Breath of the Gods is based on her novel of the same name. The Eternal Mother, a lost 1917 silent film, is based on her Red Horse Hill. The Dragon Painter (1919) is based on her novel The Dragon Painter.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ Murakata, Akiko, ed. (November 1994). "Mary Fenellosa's "Honeymoon" Journals to Japan: (2) French and Italian Interludes" (PDF). core.ac.uk / 39264081. Retrieved 15 July 2023.
- ^ FENOLLOSA, MARY McNEIL, 1865-1954, lib.ua.edu. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
- ^ Ikenberg, Tamara (14 February 2013). "Southern Literary Trail celebrates Mobile writer Mary McNeil Fenollosa and her Japanese influences". The Birmingham News. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
Further reading
[edit]- Mary McNeil Fenollosa, Encyclopaedia of Alabama
- Delaney, Caldwell. "Mary McNeil Fenollosa, An Alabama Woman of Letters." Alabama Review 16.3 (1965): 163–173.
- All Poetry: Poems by Mary McNeil Fenollosa