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  1. Introduction. From about 1910 through 1922, Agnes Boulton wrote short stories, novelettes, and dramatic sketches for the early pulp magazines and a couple of glossies. The stories depict the hard-boiled reality of working women attempting to cope with modern men. They range in tone from wry to wrenching, local to exotic.

  2. http://www.theaterdance.ucsb.edu/people/william-davies-king. Quick Links. Contact; Hyper-Illuminated Books

  3. Boulton’s part did not fit so well into the myth that history was making of his life because that part could not be his alone in the aloneness of the ro-mantic artist. Agnes Boulton figured large in this story of marriage, even though Eugene O’Neill had sought to keep her absent for the latter part of his life,

  4. AGNES BOULTON (1893-1968) Agnes Boulton, who was Eugene O'Neill's second wife and a writer of popular novels and short stories, was born on 19 September 1893. After Boulton and O'Neill met in New York City in the fall of 1917, they moved to Provincetown early in 1918, and were married on 12 April. They spent the fall and winter at Boulton's ...

  5. Christopher Chaplin (born 1962) George Wheeler Dryden (1892–1957), half-brother of Charlie Chaplin, son of Leo Dryden and Hannah Chaplin (née Hill); married ballerina Alice Chapple; 1 son. Spencer Dryden (1938–2005), musician with Jefferson Airplane. He had 5 grandchildren, Aaron, Lauren, Christen, Meagan, and Jessica Dryden, and 3 sons.

  6. 5. Feb. 2024 · Agnes Boulton (September 19, 1893 – November 25, 1968) was a British-born American pulp fiction writer in the 1910s, later the wife of Eugene O'Neill. Life and career Boulton was born in 1893 in London, England, the daughter of Cecil Maud (Williams) and Edward William Boulton, an artist.