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Full Description
With the outbreak of World War I, German-born Kitty Marion, suspected of being a German spy and placed under surveillance, sailed from Liverpool for New York. She left a dramatic and colourful life behind: a hectic and fascinating 20-year career as a performer crisscrossing Britain first as a singer, dancer and actress on the musical comedy and pantomime stage, and then in music hall as a 'refined comedienne'. She campaigned against the sexual abuses rife in the theatre of the day which led her eventually into the suffragette movement where she became a 'notorious' militant, responsible for numerous acts of arson. She was imprisoned, went on hunger-strike, and was force-fed more than 300-times. In America, she became a celebrated 'foot-soldier' in Margaret Sanger's birth control movement. Her autobiography, written in the 1930s is published here for the first time.
Contents
List of illustrations
Acknowledgements
The Editors
List of abbreviations
Introduction
The Autobiography
1. Germany
2. England
3. Militant Suffrage
4. War
5. 'Hail Columbia'
6. Birth Control
7. Peace
Epilogue
Appendix I: Home Office Papers: Prison Reports
Appendix II: Prison Letters
Appendix III: Home Office: Citizenship Reports
Select Bibliography
Index