Dorothy Massingham (12 December 1889 – 30 March 1933)[1] was a British actress and playwright.
Dorothy Massingham was born on 12 December 1889 in Highgate, daughter of the journalist H. W. Massingham and Emma Snowdon. She was educated at the Graham High Street School and the Academy for Dramatic Art and studied under Rosina Filippi.[2]
Massingham wrote a number of plays, most famously The Lake, which is remembered for starring film actress Katharine Hepburn in an early stage appearance. The Lake was poorly received, prompting Dorothy Parker's infamous quip “Miss Hepburn runs the gamut of emotions from A to B.”[4]
Dorothy Massingham committed suicide on 30 March 1933 in Hampstead.[5]
Bibliography
Glass Houses (1918)
The Goat (1921)
Washed Ashore (1922)
Not in Our Stars (1924), a stage adaptation of the novel by Michael Maurice
^Dictionary of women worldwide : 25,000 women through the ages. Anne Commire, Deborah Klezmer, Thomson Gale. Detroit, Mich.: Thomson Gale. 2007. ISBN978-0-7876-9394-7. OCLC71817179.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)