Barrie, J. M.

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[[Image:J.m.barrie.200x284.jpeg|thumb|right|J.M. Barrie]]
 
Sir '''James Matthew Barrie''', 1st Baronet, [[Order of Merit|OM]] (9 May 1860 – 19 June 1937), more commonly known as '''J. M. Barrie''', was a [[Scotland|Scottish]] [[novel|novelist]] and [[playwright]].  He is best remembered for his play ''Peter Pan'', based on his unconvential relationship with the Llewylyn Davies boys who he became guardian of after the death of their parents. The tale of a "the boy who refused to grow up" is said to be autobiographical and reflects Barries' own troubled childhood. Regardless, the story has captivated millions whether in play or movie form and has provided a platform for the emergence of some of the greatest actors of the 20th century including:  [[Mary Martin]], [[Jean Arthur]], [[Margaret Lockwood]], [[Glynis Johns]], [[Mia Farrow]] and gymnast, [[Cathy Rigby]] as Peter Pan. The nefarious pirate Captain Hook has been played by [[Charles Laughton]], [[Boris Karloff]], [[Alistair Sim]], [[Cyril Ritchard]] and [[Dustin Hoffman]].
 
  
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[[Image:James Matthew Barrie00.jpg|300px|thumb|right|J.M. Barrie]]
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Sir '''James Matthew Barrie,''' 1st Baronet, [[Order of Merit|OM]] (May 9, 1860 – June 19, 1937), more commonly known as '''J. M. Barrie,''' was a [[Scotland|Scottish]] [[novel|novelist]] and [[playwright]]. He is best remembered for his play, ''Peter Pan,'' or ''The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up,'' about Peter, Wendy and the ''Lost Boys'' of ''Never Never Land.'' Barrie was a prolific writer in his lifetime, but only ''Peter Pan'' has become a timeless classic that continues to delight both children and adults with its theme of never leaving the innocent realm of childhood, where wondrous things exist beyond the day-to-day realities.
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Critics have speculated that ''Peter Pan'' was a reflection of Barrie's own desire to not want to "grow up," both literally and figuratively, after the traumatic death of his brother in a childhood accident. This confrontation with [[death]] and [[mortality]] at a very young age set his life on a course in search of an [[ideal]] world where growth and death had no negative impact. Another root of the story was Barrie's unconventional relationship with the Llewylyn Davies boys, whom he met in [[London]]'s Kensington Park and regaled with stories of [[pirate]]s and their misadventures. On the impossible dilemma of "not wanting to grow up" Barrie commented:
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<blockquote>To be completely human—with its full range of both practical and imaginative potentialities—and to grow up; these are in a sense contradictories. By growing up, by co-operating in social order… one has to curtail the imagination; by doing this one is obliged to give up so much that one becomes an unacceptably diminished person.</blockquote>
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{{toc}}
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The story in play or movie form has captivated millions and provided a platform for the emergence of some of the greatest actors of the twentieth century.
  
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
Born in [[Kirriemuir]], [[Angus]], the second youngest of ten children, Barrie was educated at [[Dumfries Academy]], and the [[University of Edinburgh]]. He became a [[journalist]] in [[Nottingham]], then [[London]], and turned to writing [[novel]]s and subsequently [[play]]s.
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Born in Kirriemuir, [[Scotland]], Barrie was educated at [[Dumfries Academy]], and the [[University of Edinburgh]]. He became a [[Journalism|journalist]] in [[Nottingham]], then [[London]], and turned to writing [[novel]]s and subsequently [[play]]s.
J.M. Barrie's family were Scottish weavers; he was the ninth child of ten. When he was six, his brother David, his mother's favourite, died in a skating accident on the eve of his 14th birthday. His mother never recovered from the loss {{Fact|date=March 2007}}
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He came from a family of humble Scottish weavers and was born the ninth of ten children. When he was six, his brother David, his mother's favorite, died in a skating accident on the eve of his 14th birthday. His mother never recovered from the loss and subsequently J.M. tried to fill the void in her life through a devoted, if not overly enmeshed, relationship with her.<ref>Anthony Lane, [http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2004/11/22/041122crat_atlarge Lost Boys.] Retrieved June 20, 2007.</ref>
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In 1897, he wrote a biography of his mother titled simply, ''Margaret Ogilvy.'' His close relationship with her is said to be the basis for more than one character in his writings, including "Wendy" in ''Peter Pan.''
  
Barrie was married to the actress [[Mary Ansell]] but it has been speculated that their marriage was platonic; it produced no children. The marriage ended in divorce which was highly stimagized in those times.  
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As a result of his childhood trauma, Barrie suffered from [[psychogenic dwarfism]]. As an adult he stood only four feet, teen inches tall. This growth disorder occurs between the ages of two and 15 and is brought on by extreme emotional deprivation or stress. The condition results in decreased growth [[hormone]] (GH) secretion, inappropriate height and weight, and immature [[skeleton|skeletal]] age.<ref> [http://www.chasingthefrog.com/reelfaces/findingneverland.php Questioning the Story.] ''Chasingthefrog.com''. Retrieved June 20, 2007.</ref>
  
Made a [[baronet]] in 1913, Barrie lies buried at Kirriemuir next to his parents and one sister and a brother.
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Barrie married actress [[Mary Ansell]] in July 1894. She had played opposite Irene Vanburgh in Barrie's second play, ''Walker, London.'' It has been speculated that their marriage was platonic because it produced no children.<ref>"James Matthew Barrie, Sir." Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. 17 Vols (Gale Research, 1998).</ref> He divorced Ansell in 1909. It was during the difficult time of his divorce that he met [[Sylvia Llewellyn Davies]] and her sons in [[Kensington Park]], London, and developed a close bond with them. Through his storytelling relationship with the boys in this family (fictionalized in the film, ''Finding Neverland'') the idea for the play featuring Peter Pan was born. Barrie, already an established writer, created his masterpiece from this character whose first appearance was in his novel, ''The Little White Bird.'' (1902)
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He was made a [[baronet]] in 1913, and granted the [[Order of Merit]] for his service during [[World War I]]. Barrie died in London, on July 19, 1937, and was buried at Kirriemuir, next to his parents and one sister and a brother.
  
 
==Literary career==
 
==Literary career==
[[Image:PeterPan Statue Londres.jpg|thumb|Peter Pan statue in Kensington Gardens, London]]
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[[Image:PeterPan Statue Londres.jpg|thumb|left|Peter Pan statue in Kensington Gardens, London]]
Barrie set his first novels in his birthplace of Kirriemuir, which he referred to as "Thrums." Barrie often wrote dialogue in [[Scots language|Scots]]. His Thrums novels were hugely successful: ''Auld Licht Idylls'' (1888), ''A Window in Thrums'' (1889), and ''The Little Minister'' (1891). His two "Tommy" novels, ''Sentimental Tommy'' (1896) and ''Tommy and Grizel'' (1902.  
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Barrie's early novels take place in the fictional town of "Thrums," based on his birthplace of Kirriemuir. Barrie often wrote dialogue in [[Scots language|Scots]] and his early works drew extensively on his Scottish upbringing. His Thrums novels were hugely successful: ''Auld Licht Idylls'' (1888), ''A Window in Thrums'' (1889), and ''The Little Minister'' (1891). His two "Tommy" novels, ''Sentimental Tommy'' (1896) and ''Tommy and Grizel'' (1902), added to his oeuvre during this era.  
  
Barrie also wrote a number of works for the [[theatre]], beginning with ''Ibsen's Ghost'' (1891), a [[parody]] of [[Henrik Ibsen]]'s drama ''[[Ghosts]]''
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After finding success with novels, Barrie then decided to challenge writing for the [[theater|theater]]. His first play, ''Richard Savage'' closed after one performance. Undeterred, Barrie rebounded with ''Ibsen's [[Ghost]]'' (1891), a [[parody]] of [[Henrik Ibsen]]'s drama, ''Ghosts.'' Ibsen's plays were known for having grim themes and Barrie mocked their pessimism with his lighthearted [[satire]].
  
Barrie also authored the flop, ''[[Jane Annie]]'' (1893), which he begged his friend [[Arthur Conan Doyle]] to revise and finish. Notable successes included ''[[Quality Street (play)|Quality Street]]'' (1901) and ''[[The Admirable Crichton]]'' (1902).  
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He turned his popular story, ''The Little Minister,'' into a play that premiered in [[New York City]] at Frohman's Empire Theater on September 27, 1897. The play, starring [[Maude Adams]], went on to give over three hundred performances, breaking all Broadway records for that time.<ref>Michelle Powell, [http://www.amrep.org/past/peter/peter1.html An Awfully Big Adventure.].''amrep.org''. Retrieved June 20, 2007.</ref>
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Other dramatic successes included ''The Admirable Crichton'' (1902) and ''What Every Woman Knows'' (1908), plays that criticized the rigid and antiquated class structure of [[Queen Victoria|Victorian]] [[England]].  
  
Barrie's most famous and enduring work, ''[[Peter Pan]]'', had its first stage performance on December 27 1904.  
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Barrie's most famous and enduring work, ''Peter Pan,'' was first staged in [[London]] on December 27, 1904. Two more classic fantasy plays that he produced were ''Dear Brutus,'' which has been compared to [[William Shakespeare|Shakespeare]]'s '' A Midsummer Night's Dream,'' about a group of people who enter a magic wood; and his final real stage success, ''Mary Rose'' (1920) about a ghost mother seeking her lost son on earth.
  
Later plays included ''What Every Woman Knows'' (1908).  His final play was ''The Boy David'' (1936), which dramatized the Biblical story of King [[Saul]] and the young [[David]]. Like the role of Peter Pan, that of David was played by a woman — [[Elisabeth Bergner]].
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His final play was ''The Boy David'' (1936), which dramatized the [[Bible|Biblical]] story of King [[Saul]] and the young [[David]]. Like the role of Peter Pan, that of David was played by a woman—[[Elisabeth Bergner]].
  
Barrie, along with a number of other playwrights, was involved in the 1909 and 1911 attempts to challenge the censorship of the theatre by the [[Lord Chamberlain]].
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==Peter Pan==
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The Llewelyn Davies family consisted of parents [[Arthur Llewelyn Davies|Arthur]] (1863–1907) and [[Sylvia Llewelyn Davies|Sylvia, née du Maurier]] (1866–1910) (daughter of [[George du Maurier]]), and their five sons [[George Llewelyn Davies|George]] (1893–1915), [[Jack Llewelyn Davies|John]] (1894-1959), [[Peter Llewelyn Davies|Peter]] (1897–1960), [[Michael Llewelyn Davies|Michael]] (1900–1921), and [[Nicholas Llewelyn Davies|Nicholas]] (1903–1980).
  
==Influences==
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Barrie became acquainted with the family around 1898, after meeting George and Jack with their nanny Mary Hodgson in [[London]]'s [[Kensington Gardens]]. Barrie, who lived nearby would often walk his St. Bernard dog in the park. He then met the boys' mother at a cocktail party and his continued involvement with the family, which has become legendary, provided inspiration for his play, ''Peter Pan.''
Barrie travelled in high literary circles, and had many famous friends. With [[Arthur Conan Doyle]] he wrote a failed musical. With [[Robert Louis Stevenson]] he conducted a long correspondence, but the two never met in person. [[George Bernard Shaw]] was for several years his neighbor, and once participated in a Western that Barrie scripted and filmed. [[Jerome K. Jerome]] introduced Barrie to his wife; [[H.G. Wells]] was a friend of many years. J.M. Barrie met [[Thomas Hardy]] through [[Hugh Clifford]] while he was staying in London. Conan Doyle, Jerome, Wells and other luminaries such as [[G. K. Chesterton]] and [[A.A. Milne]] also occasionally played [[cricket]] with a team founded by Barrie.
 
  
Barrie also befriended Antarctic explorer [[Robert Falcon Scott]] and was one of the seven recipients of letters that Scott wrote in the final hours of his life. <ref>Chaney, Lisa. ''Hide-and-Seek with Angels - A Life of J.M.Barrie'', London: Arrow Books, 2005</ref>  Another close friend of Barrie's, theater producer [[Charles Frohman]], died famously, declining a lifeboat seat when the ''[[RMS Lusitania]]'' was sunk by a German [[U-boat]] in the North Atlantic, reportedly paraphrasing Peter Pan's final line from the stage play, "To die will be an awfully big adventure."
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Eventually—in a story befitting one of Barrie's own—he became a surrogate father to the boys. When they were orphaned—both of their parents died at fairly young ages of natural causes—he became their guardian. Sylvia Llewelyn Davies' specified in her will that Barrie be trustee and guardian to the boys, along with her mother, her brother Guy Du-Maurier, and her husband's brother, [[Arthur Llewelyn Davies]].  
  
On several occasions he met and told stories to the little girl who would become [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth]] and her younger sister [[Princess Margaret]].
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''Peter Pan'' went on to become one of the most culturally iconic myth-figures of the twentieth Century. He represents the eternally young and along with his [[fairy]] friend, "Tinkerbell," he introduces the Darling siblings, Wendy and John, to a world in which adult rules are non-existent and children's imaginations are able to have free reign. Every good yarn must pit good against evil and ''Peter Pan'' is no exception. The infamous Captain Hook and his band of villainous pirates forces the children to leave "Never Never Land" and return to the their London home—and back to the stark reality of growing up.  
  
==Peter Pan==
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In 1911, Barrie published a narrative adaption of the play, called "Peter and Wendy." The novel's epilogue makes clear the ultimate destiny chosen by Wendy who as an adult meets Peter Pan again. A ''New York Times'' reviewer said that the book is full of "the kind of lovely things one dreams about," and an ''Anthenaeum'' critic contended that the book "will survive even the play."<ref>"James Matthew Barrie" ''Contemporary Authors Online'' (Gale Research, 2003).</ref>
The Llewelyn Davies family consisted of parents [[Arthur Llewelyn Davies|Arthur]] (1863–1907) and [[Sylvia Llewelyn Davies|Sylvia, née du Maurier]] (1866–1910) (daughter of [[George du Maurier]]), and their five sons [[George Llewelyn Davies|George]] (1893–1915), [[Jack Llewelyn Davies|John]] (1894-1959), [[Peter Llewelyn Davies|Peter]] (1897–1960), [[Michael Llewelyn Davies|Michael]] (1900–1921), and [[Nicholas Llewelyn Davies|Nicholas]] (1903–1980).
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==Friendships==
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Barrie was part of a literary circle that included many notable writers of the day including [[Robert Louis Stevenson]], [[George Bernard Shaw]] (who once participated in a [[Western]] that Barrie scripted and filmed), and [[Jerome K. Jerome]], who introduced Barrie to his wife. [[H.G. Wells]] was a friend and neighbor of many years. J.M. Barrie met [[Thomas Hardy]] while the Welsh author was visiting London—both writers shared a fascination with [[ghosts]] and spirits. Other literati of the time, such as [[Arthur Conan Doyle]], [[G. K. Chesterton]], and [[A.A. Milne]] occasionally played [[cricket]] on a team formed by Barrie.
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Barrie also befriended [[Antarctica|Antarctic]] explorer [[Robert Falcon Scott]] and was a recipient of one of the letters that Scott wrote in the final hours of his life.<ref>Lisa Chaney. ''Hide-and-Seek with Angels—A Life of J.M. Barrie.'' (London: Arrow Books, 2005).</ref> Another close friend of Barrie's was theater producer [[Charles Frohman]]. In 1915, Barrie asked him to come to London to help out a faltering production. Frohman ignored warnings and sailed on the ''[[Lusitania]].'' When the ship was [[torpedo]]ed on May 7, 1915, Frohman is said to have met his end, intoning the last line in Peter Pan: "Why fear death, it's the greatest adventure of all." For his epitaph Frohman asked that he be remembered as "The man who gave Peter Pan to the world and ''Chantecler'' (a play by [[France|French]] dramatist [[Edmund Rostand]]) to America."<ref> [http://www.answers.com/topic/charles-frohman?cat=entertainment Charles Frohman.].''Answers.com''. Retrieved June 19, 2007.</ref>
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==Criticism==
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In 1911, the book, ''Peter Pan and Wendy'' was hailed as Barrie's masterpiece. Soon after its publication, it was "recommended for the imaginative, the eternally youthful and the pure in heart," by one reviewer.<ref>Anita Silvey, ed., ''Children's Books and Their Creators.'' (New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1995).</ref>
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However, speculation about Barrie's sexuality caused later critics of the [[Victorian era]] to dismiss  ''Peter Pan'' as "one of the most fragmented and troubled works in the history of children's literature."
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One biographer has said of Barrie's works, "Barrie owed his popularity to a peculiar alloy of raw, unashamed sentimentality and haunting bitterness, which eventually allowed him to become the voice and imagination of a world which was slowly and inexorably losing faith in Victorian myths…"<ref>"James Matthew Barrie, (Sir)." ''St. James Guide to Fantasy Writers.'' (St. James Press, 1996. ISBN 1558622055 ).</ref>
  
Barrie became acquainted with the family in 1897 or 1898 after meeting George and Jack with their nurse (i.e [[nanny]]) Mary Hodgson in [[London]]'s [[Kensington Gardens]].  He lived nearby and often walked his dog Porthos in the park. He met Sylvia, the mother, througha chance encounter at a dinner party.  
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Barrie himself said of his children's writing, "Children have the strangest adventures without being troubled by them."
  
He became a surrogate father to the boys, and when they were orphaned, he became their guardian. Sylvia Llewelyn Davies' specified in her will that Barrie be trustee and guardian to the boys, alongside her mother, her brother Guy Du-Maurier and Arthur Llewelyn Davies' brother Compton.  Mary Hodgson, the boys' nurse  continued caring for the boys until they were all in school and Jack was married. (Chaney, p. 285)
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==Books and films==
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In August 2004, Great Britain's leading children's hospital, [[Great Ormond Street Hospital]] in [[London]], which holds the [[copyright]] to ''Peter Pan,'' conducted a world wide search for an author to write the official sequel. English children's author [[Geraldine McCaughrean]] was chosen and her book, titled ''Peter Pan in Scarlet,'' was published in 2006.  
  
statue of Peter Pan.?
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The 1978 [[BBC]]'s award-winning miniseries ''Lost Boys'' by Andrew Birkin, (also titled ''J.M. Barrie and the Lost Boys'') starring [[Ian Holm]] as Barrie and [[Ann Bell]] as Sylvia is considered factual. It addresses the issue of Barrie's affection for the Davies boys. The [[DVD]] is available in both the [[United Kingdom|UK]] and [[United States|U.S]].
Barrie is credited with popularizing the name "Wendy."
 
The first appearance of Pan came in ''The Little White Bird'' (1901).
 
In 1924 he specified that the [[copyright]] of the play should go to the nation's leading children's hospital, [[Great Ormond Street Hospital]] in [[London]].  The [[Peter Pan#Copyright status|current status of the copyright]] is complex.
 
  
==Criticism==
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A semi-fictional movie about his relationship with the family, ''Finding Neverland,'' was released in November 2004, starring [[Johnny Depp]] as Barrie and [[Kate Winslet]] as Sylvia Llewelyn Davies.
  
==Filmology==
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==Author's works (a partial list)==
The [[BBC]] made an award-winning miniseries by Andrew Birkin, {{imdb title|id=0077045|title=The Lost Boys}} (also titled ''J.M. Barrie and the Lost Boys''), in 1978, starring [[Ian Holm]] as Barrie and [[imdbname:0068029|Ann Bell]] as Sylvia.  It is considered factual, includes Arthur Llewelyn Davies ([[imdbname:0683116|Tim Piggot-Smith]]), and confronts the issue of Barrie's affection for the Davies boys. The [[DVD]] is available in both the UK and USA.
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'''Novels'''
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:(1902) ''The Little White Bird'' ISBN 0585015945
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:(1921) ''Peter and Wendy'' ISBN 0404087892
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:(1932) ''Farewell Miss Julie Logan: A Wintry Tale'' ISBN 1841950033
  
A semi-fictional movie about his relationship with the family, ''[[Finding Neverland]]'', was released in November 2004, starring [[Johnny Depp]] as Barrie and [[Kate Winslet]] as Sylvia Llewelyn Davies. It omits Arthur and Nico
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'''Plays'''
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:(1904) ''Peter Pan or The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up''
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:(1908) ''When Wendy Grew Up: An Afterthought'' ISBN 0887762077
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:(1917) ''Dear Brutus''
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:(1920) ''Mary Rose'' ISBN 0404087949
  
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'''Short Stories'''
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:(1891) "The Little Minister" ISBN 0404087841
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:(1893) "Two of Them"
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:(1893) "A Tillyloss Scandal" ISBN 0836931343
  
  
 
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{{succession box|title=[[Rector of the University of St Andrews]]|years=1919 - 1922|before=Field Marshall Sir [[Douglas Haig]]|after=[[Rudyard Kipling]]}}
 
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==Notes==
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<references/>
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
*Chaney, Lisa. ''Hide-and-Seek with Angels - A Life of J.M.Barrie'' (2005). London: Arrow Books ISBN 0312357796
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* Birkin, Andrew. 2003.''J. M. Barrie and The Lost Boys.'' Yale University Press. ISBN 0300098227
*Silvey, Anita, ed. ''Children's Books and Their Creators.'' (1995) Houghton Mifflin Co.: New York ISBN 978-0-927663-37-3
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*Chaney, Lisa. 2005. ''Hide-and-Seek with Angels: A Life of J.M.Barrie.'' London: Arrow Books. ISBN 0312357796
*"James Matthew Barrie, (Sir)." ''St. James Guide to Fantasy Writers.'' St. James Press 1996. Reproduced in ''Biography Resource Center.'' Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007.
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*"James Matthew Barrie" ''Contemporary Authors Online'' Gale Research 2003. Reproduced in ''Biography Resource Center.'' Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2003.
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*"James Matthew Barrie, (Sir)." ''St. James Guide to Fantasy Writers.'' St. James Press 1996. ISBN 1558622055.  Reproduced in ''Biography Resource Center.'' Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007.
 
*"James Matthew Barrie, Sir." ''Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. 17 Vols. Gale Research, 1998. Reproduced in ''Biography Resource Center.'' Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007.
 
*"James Matthew Barrie, Sir." ''Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. 17 Vols. Gale Research, 1998. Reproduced in ''Biography Resource Center.'' Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007.
*''The Story of J.M.B.'' by [[Sewell Stokes]], ''Theatre Arts'', Vol.XXV No.11, New York: Theatre Arts Inc, Nov 1941, pp 845-848.
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*Silvey, Anita, ed. 1995. ''Children's Books and Their Creators.'' New York: Houghton Mifflin Co. ISBN 9780927663373
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*Stokes, Sewell. "The Story of J.M.B." in ''Theatre Arts,'' Vol. XXV No. 11: 845-848.
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*White, Donna R. and C. Anita Tarr. 2006. ''J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan In and Out of Time: A Children's Classic at 100.'' Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0810854287
  
 
==External links==
 
==External links==
{{wikiquote}}
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All links retrieved March 11, 2018.
{{wikisource author}}
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* [http://www.gutenberg.org/browse/authors/b#a10 J. M. Barrie] ''Project Gutenberg''.  
*{{gutenberg author|id=J._M._Barrie|name=J. M. Barrie}}, Retrieved May 26, 2007.
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* [http://www.jmbarrie.co.uk "Barrie's official website"], ''J.M. Barrie.co.uk''.  
* [http://www.elook.org/literature/jmbarrie/ "Works by J. M. Barrie"], ''eLook.org'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.
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* [http://www.sirjmbarrie.com "French website"], ''sirjmbarrie.com''.
* [http://www.jmbarrie.co.uk "Barrie's official website"], ''J.M. Barrie.co.uk'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.  
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* [http://www.chasingthefrog.com/reelfaces/findingneverland.php ''Questioning the Story''] ''Chasingthefrog.com''.  
* [http://www.sirjmbarrie.com "French website"], ''sirjmbarrie.com'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.
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* Munoz, Karen. 2001. [http://serendip.brynmawr.edu/bb/neuro/neuro01/web3/Munoz.html I Won't Grow Up: The Causes of Psychogenic Dwarfism] ''serendip.brynmawr.edu.''  
* [http://www.fierychariot.co.uk "Info on ''It Might Have Been Raining''"], ''Fiery Chariot'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.
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* Lane, Anthony, [http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2004/11/22/041122crat_atlarge "Why J.M. Barrie Created Peter Pan"], ''The New Yorker'', 2004.
* [http://www.kirjasto.sci.fi/jmbarrie.htm "A biography"], ''Books and Writers'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.
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* Kellaway, Kate. 2006. [http://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews/childrenandteens/0,,1890018,00.html ''The Ascent of Pan''] ''books.guardian.co.uk''.  
* Cecil Adams, Chicago Reader, 2004:[http://www.straightdope.com/columns/041119.html "Was the author of ''Peter Pan'' a pedophile?"], ''The Straight Dope'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.
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*[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0057381/ "J.M. Barrie"], ''IMDb''.
* Anthony Lane, The New Yorker, 2004:[http://newyorker.com/critics/atlarge/?041122crat_atlarge "Why J.M. Barrie Created Peter Pan"], ''The New Yorker'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.
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* [http://www.siracd.com/life/life_Barrie.shtml "J. M. Barrie and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle"], ''The Chronicles of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.
 
* [http://www.gosh.org/about_us/peterpan/copyright.html "Further information about the Copyright for Peter Pan and Great Ormond Street Hospital"], ''Great Ormond Street Hospital Children's Charity'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.
 
*[http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0057381/ "J.M. Barrie"], ''IMDb'', Retrieved May 26, 2007.
 
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[[Category:History and biography]]
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[[Category:Biography]]
 
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Latest revision as of 08:18, 13 March 2024

J.M. Barrie

Sir James Matthew Barrie, 1st Baronet, OM (May 9, 1860 – June 19, 1937), more commonly known as J. M. Barrie, was a Scottish novelist and playwright. He is best remembered for his play, Peter Pan, or The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up, about Peter, Wendy and the Lost Boys of Never Never Land. Barrie was a prolific writer in his lifetime, but only Peter Pan has become a timeless classic that continues to delight both children and adults with its theme of never leaving the innocent realm of childhood, where wondrous things exist beyond the day-to-day realities.

Critics have speculated that Peter Pan was a reflection of Barrie's own desire to not want to "grow up," both literally and figuratively, after the traumatic death of his brother in a childhood accident. This confrontation with death and mortality at a very young age set his life on a course in search of an ideal world where growth and death had no negative impact. Another root of the story was Barrie's unconventional relationship with the Llewylyn Davies boys, whom he met in London's Kensington Park and regaled with stories of pirates and their misadventures. On the impossible dilemma of "not wanting to grow up" Barrie commented:

To be completely human—with its full range of both practical and imaginative potentialities—and to grow up; these are in a sense contradictories. By growing up, by co-operating in social order… one has to curtail the imagination; by doing this one is obliged to give up so much that one becomes an unacceptably diminished person.

The story in play or movie form has captivated millions and provided a platform for the emergence of some of the greatest actors of the twentieth century.

Biography

Born in Kirriemuir, Scotland, Barrie was educated at Dumfries Academy, and the University of Edinburgh. He became a journalist in Nottingham, then London, and turned to writing novels and subsequently plays. He came from a family of humble Scottish weavers and was born the ninth of ten children. When he was six, his brother David, his mother's favorite, died in a skating accident on the eve of his 14th birthday. His mother never recovered from the loss and subsequently J.M. tried to fill the void in her life through a devoted, if not overly enmeshed, relationship with her.[1] In 1897, he wrote a biography of his mother titled simply, Margaret Ogilvy. His close relationship with her is said to be the basis for more than one character in his writings, including "Wendy" in Peter Pan.

As a result of his childhood trauma, Barrie suffered from psychogenic dwarfism. As an adult he stood only four feet, teen inches tall. This growth disorder occurs between the ages of two and 15 and is brought on by extreme emotional deprivation or stress. The condition results in decreased growth hormone (GH) secretion, inappropriate height and weight, and immature skeletal age.[2]

Barrie married actress Mary Ansell in July 1894. She had played opposite Irene Vanburgh in Barrie's second play, Walker, London. It has been speculated that their marriage was platonic because it produced no children.[3] He divorced Ansell in 1909. It was during the difficult time of his divorce that he met Sylvia Llewellyn Davies and her sons in Kensington Park, London, and developed a close bond with them. Through his storytelling relationship with the boys in this family (fictionalized in the film, Finding Neverland) the idea for the play featuring Peter Pan was born. Barrie, already an established writer, created his masterpiece from this character whose first appearance was in his novel, The Little White Bird. (1902)

He was made a baronet in 1913, and granted the Order of Merit for his service during World War I. Barrie died in London, on July 19, 1937, and was buried at Kirriemuir, next to his parents and one sister and a brother.

Literary career

Peter Pan statue in Kensington Gardens, London

Barrie's early novels take place in the fictional town of "Thrums," based on his birthplace of Kirriemuir. Barrie often wrote dialogue in Scots and his early works drew extensively on his Scottish upbringing. His Thrums novels were hugely successful: Auld Licht Idylls (1888), A Window in Thrums (1889), and The Little Minister (1891). His two "Tommy" novels, Sentimental Tommy (1896) and Tommy and Grizel (1902), added to his oeuvre during this era.

After finding success with novels, Barrie then decided to challenge writing for the theater. His first play, Richard Savage closed after one performance. Undeterred, Barrie rebounded with Ibsen's Ghost (1891), a parody of Henrik Ibsen's drama, Ghosts. Ibsen's plays were known for having grim themes and Barrie mocked their pessimism with his lighthearted satire.

He turned his popular story, The Little Minister, into a play that premiered in New York City at Frohman's Empire Theater on September 27, 1897. The play, starring Maude Adams, went on to give over three hundred performances, breaking all Broadway records for that time.[4] Other dramatic successes included The Admirable Crichton (1902) and What Every Woman Knows (1908), plays that criticized the rigid and antiquated class structure of Victorian England.

Barrie's most famous and enduring work, Peter Pan, was first staged in London on December 27, 1904. Two more classic fantasy plays that he produced were Dear Brutus, which has been compared to Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, about a group of people who enter a magic wood; and his final real stage success, Mary Rose (1920) about a ghost mother seeking her lost son on earth.

His final play was The Boy David (1936), which dramatized the Biblical story of King Saul and the young David. Like the role of Peter Pan, that of David was played by a woman—Elisabeth Bergner.

Peter Pan

The Llewelyn Davies family consisted of parents Arthur (1863–1907) and Sylvia, née du Maurier (1866–1910) (daughter of George du Maurier), and their five sons George (1893–1915), John (1894-1959), Peter (1897–1960), Michael (1900–1921), and Nicholas (1903–1980).

Barrie became acquainted with the family around 1898, after meeting George and Jack with their nanny Mary Hodgson in London's Kensington Gardens. Barrie, who lived nearby would often walk his St. Bernard dog in the park. He then met the boys' mother at a cocktail party and his continued involvement with the family, which has become legendary, provided inspiration for his play, Peter Pan.

Eventually—in a story befitting one of Barrie's own—he became a surrogate father to the boys. When they were orphaned—both of their parents died at fairly young ages of natural causes—he became their guardian. Sylvia Llewelyn Davies' specified in her will that Barrie be trustee and guardian to the boys, along with her mother, her brother Guy Du-Maurier, and her husband's brother, Arthur Llewelyn Davies.

Peter Pan went on to become one of the most culturally iconic myth-figures of the twentieth Century. He represents the eternally young and along with his fairy friend, "Tinkerbell," he introduces the Darling siblings, Wendy and John, to a world in which adult rules are non-existent and children's imaginations are able to have free reign. Every good yarn must pit good against evil and Peter Pan is no exception. The infamous Captain Hook and his band of villainous pirates forces the children to leave "Never Never Land" and return to the their London home—and back to the stark reality of growing up.

In 1911, Barrie published a narrative adaption of the play, called "Peter and Wendy." The novel's epilogue makes clear the ultimate destiny chosen by Wendy who as an adult meets Peter Pan again. A New York Times reviewer said that the book is full of "the kind of lovely things one dreams about," and an Anthenaeum critic contended that the book "will survive even the play."[5]

Friendships

Barrie was part of a literary circle that included many notable writers of the day including Robert Louis Stevenson, George Bernard Shaw (who once participated in a Western that Barrie scripted and filmed), and Jerome K. Jerome, who introduced Barrie to his wife. H.G. Wells was a friend and neighbor of many years. J.M. Barrie met Thomas Hardy while the Welsh author was visiting London—both writers shared a fascination with ghosts and spirits. Other literati of the time, such as Arthur Conan Doyle, G. K. Chesterton, and A.A. Milne occasionally played cricket on a team formed by Barrie.

Barrie also befriended Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scott and was a recipient of one of the letters that Scott wrote in the final hours of his life.[6] Another close friend of Barrie's was theater producer Charles Frohman. In 1915, Barrie asked him to come to London to help out a faltering production. Frohman ignored warnings and sailed on the Lusitania. When the ship was torpedoed on May 7, 1915, Frohman is said to have met his end, intoning the last line in Peter Pan: "Why fear death, it's the greatest adventure of all." For his epitaph Frohman asked that he be remembered as "The man who gave Peter Pan to the world and Chantecler (a play by French dramatist Edmund Rostand) to America."[7]

Criticism

In 1911, the book, Peter Pan and Wendy was hailed as Barrie's masterpiece. Soon after its publication, it was "recommended for the imaginative, the eternally youthful and the pure in heart," by one reviewer.[8] However, speculation about Barrie's sexuality caused later critics of the Victorian era to dismiss Peter Pan as "one of the most fragmented and troubled works in the history of children's literature." One biographer has said of Barrie's works, "Barrie owed his popularity to a peculiar alloy of raw, unashamed sentimentality and haunting bitterness, which eventually allowed him to become the voice and imagination of a world which was slowly and inexorably losing faith in Victorian myths…"[9]

Barrie himself said of his children's writing, "Children have the strangest adventures without being troubled by them."

Books and films

In August 2004, Great Britain's leading children's hospital, Great Ormond Street Hospital in London, which holds the copyright to Peter Pan, conducted a world wide search for an author to write the official sequel. English children's author Geraldine McCaughrean was chosen and her book, titled Peter Pan in Scarlet, was published in 2006.

The 1978 BBC's award-winning miniseries Lost Boys by Andrew Birkin, (also titled J.M. Barrie and the Lost Boys) starring Ian Holm as Barrie and Ann Bell as Sylvia is considered factual. It addresses the issue of Barrie's affection for the Davies boys. The DVD is available in both the UK and U.S.

A semi-fictional movie about his relationship with the family, Finding Neverland, was released in November 2004, starring Johnny Depp as Barrie and Kate Winslet as Sylvia Llewelyn Davies.

Author's works (a partial list)

Novels

(1902) The Little White Bird ISBN 0585015945
(1921) Peter and Wendy ISBN 0404087892
(1932) Farewell Miss Julie Logan: A Wintry Tale ISBN 1841950033

Plays

(1904) Peter Pan or The Boy Who Would Not Grow Up
(1908) When Wendy Grew Up: An Afterthought ISBN 0887762077
(1917) Dear Brutus
(1920) Mary Rose ISBN 0404087949

Short Stories

(1891) "The Little Minister" ISBN 0404087841
(1893) "Two of Them"
(1893) "A Tillyloss Scandal" ISBN 0836931343


Preceded by:
Field Marshall Sir Douglas Haig
Rector of the University of St Andrews
1919 - 1922
Succeeded by:
Rudyard Kipling

Notes

  1. Anthony Lane, Lost Boys. Retrieved June 20, 2007.
  2. Questioning the Story. Chasingthefrog.com. Retrieved June 20, 2007.
  3. "James Matthew Barrie, Sir." Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. 17 Vols (Gale Research, 1998).
  4. Michelle Powell, An Awfully Big Adventure..amrep.org. Retrieved June 20, 2007.
  5. "James Matthew Barrie" Contemporary Authors Online (Gale Research, 2003).
  6. Lisa Chaney. Hide-and-Seek with Angels—A Life of J.M. Barrie. (London: Arrow Books, 2005).
  7. Charles Frohman..Answers.com. Retrieved June 19, 2007.
  8. Anita Silvey, ed., Children's Books and Their Creators. (New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1995).
  9. "James Matthew Barrie, (Sir)." St. James Guide to Fantasy Writers. (St. James Press, 1996. ISBN 1558622055 ).

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Birkin, Andrew. 2003.J. M. Barrie and The Lost Boys. Yale University Press. ISBN 0300098227
  • Chaney, Lisa. 2005. Hide-and-Seek with Angels: A Life of J.M.Barrie. London: Arrow Books. ISBN 0312357796
  • "James Matthew Barrie" Contemporary Authors Online Gale Research 2003. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2003.
  • "James Matthew Barrie, (Sir)." St. James Guide to Fantasy Writers. St. James Press 1996. ISBN 1558622055. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007.
  • "James Matthew Barrie, Sir." Encyclopedia of World Biography, 2nd ed. 17 Vols. Gale Research, 1998. Reproduced in Biography Resource Center. Farmington Hills, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007.
  • Silvey, Anita, ed. 1995. Children's Books and Their Creators. New York: Houghton Mifflin Co. ISBN 9780927663373
  • Stokes, Sewell. "The Story of J.M.B." in Theatre Arts, Vol. XXV No. 11: 845-848.
  • White, Donna R. and C. Anita Tarr. 2006. J.M. Barrie's Peter Pan In and Out of Time: A Children's Classic at 100. Lanham, Md: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 0810854287

External links

All links retrieved March 11, 2018.

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