doollee banner
The Playwrights Database
contact doollee



Virginia Cowles

VIRGINIA COWLES

  (1910 - 1983)

Nationality:    USA
email:    n/a     Website:    n/a

Literary Agent:    n/a

Virginia Cowles (1910-1983) was an author and journalist. Born in Vermont, USA she became a well-known journalist in the 1930s with her columns appearing on both sides of the Atlantic. Her autobiography, Looking for Trouble (Faber Finds) covers with brio her reporting of the main events between 1935 and 1940. During the Second World War she covered the Italian campaign, the liberation of Paris, and the allied invasion of Germany. In 1945 she married the politician and writer aidan Crawley. She wrote many biographies including Winston Churchill; the era and the Man and Edward VII and His Circle. In his memorial address, Nigel Nicolson recalled the first time he met her, her appearance was doubly startling: that she should be there at all at so critical a moment; and that she was the most beautiful young woman on whom, until then, I had ever set my eyes.'

Buy Plays with Doollee

Each page of doollee.com has links to play/book outlets, either directly to the Publisher, through Stageplays.com and Amazon to the second hand and 1st editions of AbeBooks. These links will automatically take you to the relevant area obviating the need for further search.
AbeBooks.co.uk   AbeBooks.com   Stageplays.com   amazon.com   amazon.co.uk   amazon.ca
whether you are a Playwright who wishes to make their entry definitive, an unlisted Playwright or a User with a tale to tell - we want to hear from you.
download WORD submission template

below is a list of Virginia Cowles's plays - click on a Play Title for more information

        Love Goes To Press



Love Goes To Press

Love Goes To Press
Written on a lark by a pair of veteran war correspondents who had never written a play before but had time on their hands in the months after the end of World War II, this marvelously witty farce enjoyed a long, healthy run in London's West end but died on Broadway after a mere four-day run. It garnered an impressive array of blistering reviews that accused it of being everything from "callous" to "frivolous" to "a libel on the profession" of journalism. Nearly 50 years later, after Catch-22 and M*a*S*H, it seems pretty innocuous, though much of its humor remains fresh and lively. Semiautobiographical, the comedy concerns a pair of female correspondents who brave World War II, outdo their male colleagues, yet remain torn between their profession and the tugs upon their heartstrings. especially noteworthy is the play's remarkably unglamorous view of life in wartime, particularly of the conditions in which wartime journalists lived and wrote. Jack Helbig

Notes:
written by Martha Gellhorn And Virginia Cowles. Written immediately After the war, Love Goes to Press opened in London in June 1946 And in New York in January 1947. then A relief for the survivors of Blitzkrieg And ration cards, it is now A devilishly entertaining portrayal of the Battle of the Sexes. This romantic farce, published here for the first time, is set on the Italian front in World War II, where two women war correspondents - smart, sexy, And famous for scooping their male competitors - struggle to balance their professional lives with their love lives. the American literary tradition is rife with stories of men without women, but in Love Goes to Press Gellhorn And Cowles have created A world of women without men. the plot focuses on A pair of daring, quick-witted female buddies in bold pursuit of Accomplishment And Adventure while narrowly eluding the entanglements of marriage And domesticity.

1st Produced:
London    1946

Organisations:
-

1st Published:
University of Nebraska Press (May 28, 1995), edited by Sandra Spanier   978-0803221543

Music:
-

To Buy This Play:
If Publisher (above) is underlined then the play may be purchased by direct click from the Publisher, otherwise (below) are AbeBooks for secondhand, signed & 1st eds and other Booksellers for new copies

Booksellers:

Genre:
romantic farce in three acts

Parts:
Male:  6            Female:  5            Other:  -

Further Reference:
-

Top of Page Top of Page