Wright was born in the Thornhill section of Vaughan, Ontario, Canada, but spent her childhood in the United States, growing up in Cleveland, Ohio. Her parents divorced when she was young, and she was raised by her mother, the portrait artist Edith Stevenson Wright, while her brother, Blaine, went to live with his father, Ivan Wright, a theater critic in New York City. The siblings did not meet again until Dare moved to New York City in her twenties. Wright spent her formative years in Cleveland Heights.[1]
Wright graduated from Laurel School in Shaker Heights in 1933 at the top of her class, and relocated to New York to attend the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.[2] In 1935, she was cast in a small role as a maid in a stage production of Pride and Prejudice, which she performed in Washington, D.C. and on Broadway.[3]
Career
In 1957, she photographed her childhood Lenci doll, Edith, along with two teddy bears bought at FAO Schwarz, for her first children's book, titled The Lonely Doll.[4] The book made The New York Times Best Seller list for children's books.[5] In November 2010, The British Newspaper The Guardian named The Lonely Doll one of the 10 Best Illustrated Children's Books of all time.[6] It was followed by eighteen other stories. Out of print for many years, it was reissued in 1998, introducing Wright to a new generation of readers. Another children's work, Lona: A Fairy Tale, features photographs of Wright herself dressed as a fairy princess, while using another doll in identical costume to give the illusion that Wright's character has been "transformed" to doll-size by a wicked wizard. Make Me Real, which features another of Wright's childhood dolls, and Ocracoke in The Fifties, her only book written for adults, have been published posthumously.
Dare Wright's photographs were exhibited for the first time in 2012 by Fred Torres Collaborations.
Personal life
Throughout her adulthood, Wright remained close to her mother and never married despite receiving a number of proposals.[7] Her brother, to whom she also was very attached, was estranged from their mother. [8] Her mother died in 1975 and her brother in 1985. [9] She was admitted to Goldwater Memorial Hospital on Roosevelt Island in May 1995 after suffering respiratory failure.[10] She remained hospitalized for the next five and a half years until she died on January 25, 2001, at the age of 86.[11]
Bibliography
The Lonely Doll. Doubleday, (1957) - Kirkus Star recipient "will be pet of the nursery"[12]
Holiday for Edith and the Bears. Doubleday, (1958)
The Little One. Doubleday, (1959)
The Doll and the Kitten. Doubleday, (1960)
De vakantie van Liesbet en de beren. Den Haag, Breughel [1960].
Date with London. Random House, (1961)
The Lonely Doll Learns a Lesson. Doubleday, (1961)
Lona, a Fairy Tale. Random House, (1963)
Edith and Mr. Bear. Random House, (1964)
Take Me Home. Random House, (1965)
A Gift from the Lonely Doll. Random House, (1966)
Look at a Gull. Random House, (1967) - "Against striking full-page photographs focused on descriptive and dramatic essentials, a gull tells the story of his life. As the simple rhythmic text takes over, the reader sheds his distrust of the method of telling and his assumed identity becomes quite natural....Come fly away with me somewhere between nature study and poetry."[13]
Edith and Big Bad Bill. Random House, (1968)
Look at a Colt. Random House, (1969)
The Kitten's Little Boy. Four Winds Press, (1971)
Edith and Little Bear Lend a Hand. Random House, (1972) - "Fans of Edith and her ursine companions may find them adorable in beads and fringe and miniature picket signs, but we'd prefer our ecology lessons with more substance and less fancy wrapping."[14]