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  1. Leaving a Doll's House: A Memoir. Paperback – 1 April 1998. Writing with grace, wit, and remarkable candor, actress Claire Bloom looks back at her crowded life: her accomplishments on stage and screen; her romantic liaisons with some of the great leading men of our era; and at "the most important relationship" of her life--her marriage to ...

    • Claire Bloom
  2. 27. Juli 2020 · Analysis of Henrik Ibsen’s A Doll’s House By NASRULLAH MAMBROL on July 27, 2020 • ( 0). Whether one reads A Doll’s House as a technical revolution in modern theater, the modern tragedy, the first feminist play since the Greeks, a Hegelian allegory of the spirit’s historical evolution, or a Kierkegaardian leap from aesthetic into ethical life, the deep structure of the play as a ...

  3. Leaving A Doll's House: A Memoir. Paperback – 12 Jun. 2016. by Claire Bloom (Author) 124. See all formats and editions. In this memoir of personal discovery, loss and renewal, Claire Bloom looks beyond the stage and unveils her true identity. One of the most beautiful and gifted actresses of her generation, Claire Bloom's achievements in ...

    • Claire Bloom
  4. Leaving a Doll's House: A Memoir Claire Bloom. Little Brown and Company, $23.45 (0pp) ISBN 978-0-316-09980-6. In 1982, English actress Claire Bloom (b. 1931) published a memoir, Limelight and ...

  5. She has not left the doll’s house: rather, she is leaving it, and as with Nora, Bloom’s audience wonders, as she does, what the rest of her life will become. Sources for Further Study. Boston ...

  6. Leaving a Doll's House By Claire Bloom. I was born in the North London suburb of Finchley on February 15, 1931, the eldest of two children born to Edward Blume (originally Blumenthal) and his wife ...

  7. This poignant quote reflects Nora's awakening, as she begins to search for her own identity beyond the role assigned to her by society. 1.I have been your doll-wife, just as at home I was papa's doll-child.2.A woman cannot be herself in the society of the present day, which is an exclusively masculine society.