Lady Caroline Blackwood

Writer

Birthday July 16, 1931

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace London, England

DEATH DATE 1996-2-14, New York City, U.S. (64 years old)

Nationality London, England

#41252 Most Popular

1931

Lady Caroline Blackwood (born Caroline Maureen Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood; 16 July 1931 – 14 February 1996) was an English writer, socialite, and muse.

Her novels have been praised for their wit and intelligence.

One of her works is an autobiography, which detailed her wealthy but unhappy childhood.

She was born into an aristocratic British family, the eldest child of the 4th Marquess of Dufferin and Ava and of Maureen Constance Guinness.

All three of her husbands were famous personalities in their own right.

Caroline Maureen Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood was born on 16 July 1931 at 4 Hans Crescent in Knightsbridge, her parents' London home.

Her parents were Maureen Constance Guinness and Basil Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, 4th Marquess of Dufferin and Ava.

Blackwood was, self-admittedly, "scantily educated" at Rockport School in County Down and Downham School near Essex, among other schools.

1949

In 1949, after a finishing school in Oxford, Blackwood was presented as a debutante at a ball held at Londonderry House.

Blackwood's first job was with Hulton Press as a secretary, but she was soon given small reporting jobs by Claud Cockburn.

In Paris she met Picasso (and reportedly refused to wash for three days after he drew on her hands and nails).

After marrying Lucian Freud, she became a figure in London's bohemian circles, the Gargoyle Club and Colony Room replacing Belgravia drawing rooms.

She sat for several of Freud's portraits, including Girl in Bed.

She was impressed by the vision of Freud and Francis Bacon and her later fiction was influenced by their view of humanity.

1953

Ann Fleming, the wife of Ian Fleming, introduced Blackwood to Lucian Freud and the couple eloped in Paris on 9 December 1953.

1957

In 1957, Blackwood moved to New York City and studied acting at the Stella Adler school.

1960

In the early 1960s, Blackwood began contributing to Encounter, London Magazine, and other periodicals on subjects such as beatniks, Ulster sectarianism, feminist theatre and New York free schools.

According to Christopher Isherwood, "she is only capable of thinking negatively. Confronted by a phenomenon, she asks herself: what is wrong with it?"

During the mid-1960s, she had an affair with Robert Silvers, the founder and co-editor of The New York Review of Books.

Her third husband, Robert Lowell, was an influence on her talents as a novelist.

During the mid-1960s, Blackwood had an affair with Robert Silvers, a founder and co-editor of The New York Review of Books, who stayed close to the family thereafter.

According to Ivana, she and Silvers both suspected that he was her biological father.

However, a deathbed admission by Blackwood revealed that Ivana's biological father was another boyfriend: the screenwriter Ivan Moffat, a grandson of actor-manager Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree.

1966

By 1966, when Blackwood and Citkowitz's youngest, Ivana, was born, their marriage was over, although he continued to live nearby and helped raise their daughters until his death.

1973

He encouraged her to write her first book, For All That I Found There (1973), the title of which is a line from the Percy French song "The Mountains of Mourne", and which includes a memoir of her daughter's treatment in a burns unit.

The sequence of poems in Lowell's The Dolphin (1973) provides a disrupted narrative of his involvement with Blackwood and the birth of their son (Lowell's friend Elizabeth Bishop strongly advised Lowell not to publish the book, advice he ignored).

1976

Blackwood's first novel The Stepdaughter (1976) appeared three years later and received much acclaim.

It won the David Higham Prize for best first novel.

1977

Great Granny Webster followed in 1977 and was partly derived from her own childhood.

It depicted an old woman's destructive impact on her daughter and granddaughter.

It was short-listed for the 1977 Booker Prize.

1978

On 22 June 1978, Blackwood's eldest daughter with Citkowitz, Natalya, died from postural asphyxia due to a drug overdose, aged 17.

Blackwood and Lowell lived in London and at Milgate House in Kent.

1980

The Last of the Duchess was completed in 1980.

1981

Her third novel The Fate of Mary Rose (1981) describes the effect on a Kent village of the rape and torture of a ten-year-old girl named Maureen and is narrated by a historian whose obsessions destroy his domestic life.

1983

After this came a collection of five short stories, Good Night Sweet Ladies (1983), followed by her final novel, Corrigan (1984), which was the least successful.

1984

Blackwood's later books were based on interviews and vignettes, including On The Perimeter (1984), which focused her attentions on the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp at RAF Greenham Common in Berkshire, and In The Pink (1987), which was a book looking at the hunting and the hunt saboteur fraternities.

Blackwood had published 10 books - but 11 are listed below.

Blackwood was married three times, and had four children.

1995

A study of the relations between the Duchess of Windsor and her lawyer, Suzanne Blum; it could not be published until after Blum's death in 1995.