William stanley houghton biography channel
Stanley Houghton (February 22, 1881 — December 10, 1913 ...
- William Stanley Houghton (22 February – 11 December ) was an English playwright.
He was a writer, known for Fanny Hawthorne (1927), Holiday Week (1952) and Hindle Wakes (1918). | |
William Stanley Houghton (22 February – 11 December ) was an English playwright. | |
He was a writer, known for Fanny Hawthorne (1927), Holiday Week (1952) and Hindle Wakes (1918). |
Houghton, William Stanley |
Stanley Houghton - Biography - IMDb
W. Stanley Houghton: An Introduction and Bibliography
- HOUGHTON, WILLIAM STANLEY (–), dramatist, the only son of John Hartley Houghton, a Manchester merchant, was born at Ashton-upon-Mersey, Cheshire, 22 February A random education ended in with a year at the Manchester grammar school; and Houghton went at once into his father's warehouse, knowing that for many years the.
Stanley Houghton Collection - University of Salford
William Stanley Houghton (1881-1913) — Ulster University
Dictionary of National Biography, 1927 supplement/Houghton ...
- William Stanley Houghton was an English playwright.
Stanley Houghton - Oxford Reference
William Stanley Houghton - 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica
- Stanley Houghton was an early 20th century playwright born in Ashton upon Mersey, Sale.
Dictionary of National Biography, supplement/Houghton, William Stanley
HOUGHTON, WILLIAM STANLEY (–), dramatist, the only son of John Hartley Houghton, a Manchester merchant, was born at Ashton-upon-Mersey, Cheshire, 22 February A random education ended in with a year at the Manchester grammar school; and Houghton went at once into his father's warehouse, knowing that for many years the dramatic ambition which he cherished would not provide him with a livelihood. From to the selling of ‘grey cloth’ occupied him eight hours a day; what remained was devoted to literature and drama with a determination and confidence which Mr. Max Beerbohm's caricature distorts into Olympian conceit. From play-making and acting were Houghton's absorbing hobby: in – he was unpaid dramatic critic for the Manchester City News; between August and April he contributed seventeen ‘back-page’ articles and more than a hundred theatrical notices and literary reviews to the Manchester Guardian.