Alice Duer Miller

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Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox person Alice Duer Miller (July 28, 1874 – August 22, 1942) was an American writer whose poetry actively influenced political opinion. Her feminist verses influenced political opinion during the American suffrage movement, and her verse novel The White Cliffs influenced political thought during the U.S.'s entry into World War II.<ref name=TheConversation>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name=Iowa.gov>Template:Cite web</ref> She also wrote novels and screenplays.

Early life

Alice Duer Miller was born in Staten Island, New York, on July 28, 1874, into a wealthy and prominent family.<ref name=AmericanWomenWriters>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="BiblioBazaar">BiblioBazaar, LLC Prominent Families of New York New York: BiblioBazaar, LLC, 2009; Template:ISBN. P. 193</ref> She grew up in Weehawken, New Jersey with her parents and two sisters.<ref name=AmericanWomenWriters/> She was the daughter of James Gore King Duer and Elizabeth Wilson Meads.<ref name=AmericanWomenWriters/><ref name="BiblioBazaar"/><ref name="Burstyn">Burstyn, Joan N. Past and promise: lives of New Jersey women, Syracuse University Press, 1997; Template:ISBN. Pg. 171-173</ref> The family lost their fortune during the Baring Bank failure.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref>

Her mother Elizabeth Wilson Meads was the daughter of Orlando Meads of Albany, New York. Her great-grandfather was William Alexander Duer, president of Columbia College. Her great-great-grandfather was William Duer,<ref name="BiblioBazaar" /><ref>Robert F. Jones, "The King of the Alley": William Duer; Politician, Entrepreneur, and Speculator, 1768–1799 (1992), p. 1; Jonathan J. Bean. "Duer, William"; American National Biography Online, February 2000. Older sources give Duer's year of birth as 1747.</ref> an American lawyer, developer, and speculator from New York City. He had served in the Continental Congress and the convention that framed the New York Constitution. In 1778, he signed the United States Articles of Confederation. Her great-great-great-grandfather was William Alexander, who claimed the disputed title of Earl of Stirling and was an American major-general during the American Revolutionary War.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Miller was also a descendant of Senator Rufus King, who was an American lawyer, politician, and diplomat. He was a delegate for Massachusetts to the Continental Congress. He also attended the Constitutional Convention and was one of the signatories of the United States Constitution on September 17, 1787. Alice attended Barnard College in 1895, studying Mathematics and Astronomy and graduating Phi Beta Kappa.<ref name=AmericanWomenWriters/><ref name="Burstyn" /><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> She helped to pay for her studies by selling novels and short essays to Harper's and Scribner's magazines.<ref name=AmericanWomenWriters/> Alice excelled as a student with her award-winning thesis "Dedekind's Theory of the Irrational Number".<ref name=":0" /> She and her sister Caroline jointly published a book of poems.<ref name="Burstyn"/> Miller remained connected to Barnard throughout her life; she was elected as a trustee of Barnard College in 1922.<ref name=":0" />

Alice Duer Miller dressed with a fur stole. She is faced sideways.
Alice Duer Miller in 1908 or 1909

Career

Alice wrote her entire life, but before she was a full-time writer, she taught at a girls school English composition and tutored Barnard College students in mathematics.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite book</ref> Miller became known as a campaigner for women's suffrage and was an active member of the Algonquin Round Table and Heterodoxy.<ref name=":0" /> She published a series of satirical poems in the New York Tribune titled and later republished in the collection, Are Women People? These words became a catchphrase of the suffrage movement.<ref name=TheConversation/><ref name=Iowa.gov/> Part of one poem reads:

"FATHER, what is a Legislature?
A representative body elected by the people of the state.
Are women people?
No, my son, criminals, lunatics and women are not people.
Do legislators legislate for nothing?
Oh, no; they are paid a salary.
By whom?
By the people.
Are women people?
Of course, my son, just as much as men are."<ref name=TheConversation/><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> She followed this collection with Women Are People! (1917).

As a novelist, she scored her first success with Come Out of the Kitchen in 1916. The story was made into a play and later the 1948 film Spring in Park Lane. She followed it with a series of other short novels, many of which were staged and (increasingly) made into films.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Her novel in verse Forsaking All Others (1933) was about a tragic love affair; many consider it her greatest work. Miller was invited to write for Hollywood in 1921 by Samuel Goldwyn.<ref name=":0" /> Many of her stories became motion pictures, such as Are Parents People? (1925), Roberta (1935), and Irene (1940). She also became involved in a number of motion picture screenplays, including Wife vs. Secretary (1936). Her name appears in the very first issue of The New Yorker as an advisory editor.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Throughout her life, she wrote successfully for a wide range of genres and produced forty-four books.<ref name=":0" />

File:Manslaughter by Alice Duer Miller.jpg
Manslaughter by Alice Duer Miller

The White Cliffs

In 1940, she wrote the verse novel The White Cliffs, about an American girl who coming to London as a tourist, meets and marries a young upper-class Englishman in the period just before World War I. The war begins and he goes to the front. He is killed just before the end of the War, leaving her with a young son. Her son is the heir to the family estate. Despite the pull of her own country and the impoverished condition of the estate, she decides to stay and live the traditional life of a member of the English upper class. The story concludes as World War II commences, and she worries that her son, like his father, will be killed fighting for the country he loves. The poem ends with the lines:

...I am American bred
I have seen much to hate here – much to forgive,
But in a world in which England is finished and dead,
I do not wish to live.

The poem was spectacularly successful on both sides of the Atlantic, selling nearly one million copies – an unheard of number for a book of verse. It was broadcast and recorded by British-American actress Lynn Fontanne (with a symphonic accompaniment), and the story was made into the 1944 film The White Cliffs of Dover.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Personal life

Once she graduated, she married Henry Wise Miller on October 5, 1899, at Grace Church Chapel in New York City.<ref name="Burstyn" /><ref>Duer-Miller Wedding." The New York Times, October 6, 1899.</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Henry asked Alice to marry him three days after their first meeting.<ref name=":1" /> He was a Harvard graduate,<ref name="AmericanWomenWriters" /> born in 1877, the son of Lt. Commander Jacob Miller.<ref name=":1" />

File:Henry Mayer, The Awakening, 1915 Cornell CUL PJM 1176 01 - Restoration.jpg
Illustration for one of Miller's suffragist poems, as published in Puck in 1915, showing women's suffrage moving east from the states in the west that had first adopted it

They moved to Costa Rica, where Henry Miller was gambling on land speculation and rubber cultivation.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":1" /> Henry and Alice had their first son Denning Duer Miller in this time period when they were moving back and forth between New York City and Costa Rica.<ref name=":0" /> Their investment failed and the family moved back to New York City and struggled for years financially. Alice served as the primary breadwinner for the first decade of the marriage until Henry became a Wall Street stockbroker,<ref name=":0" /> funded by his wife's money. The Millers lived somewhat separate lives, deliberately spending part of each year away from each other, and Powers comments that it is possible it was an open marriage. Henry Miller had a long affair with Daisy Bacon.<ref>Queen of the Pulps: The Reign of Daisy Bacon and Love Story Magazine, pp. 25–30. Powers, Laurie. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland and Company, Inc. 2019</ref> It is not known if Alice Miller was aware of her husband's infidelity, but she may have been. Powers suggests that her long poem Forsaking All Others (1931) is a veiled reference to her own marriage: the protagonist has an affair with a younger woman, but refuses to leave his wife for her.<ref>Powers (2019), pp. 94–95.</ref>

After a long illness, Alice Duer Miller died in 1942 and was interred at Evergreen Cemetery in Morristown, New Jersey.<ref name="Burstyn" />

Selected works

File:1920 Plymouth theatre BostonGlobe May10.png
Advertisement for production of Miller's The Charm School, Plymouth Theatre, 1920
A composite Novel of American Politics by fourteen American authors

Filmography

Screenwriter

Modern works and inspiration

Composer Edna Yeh<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> set selections from Are Women People? to music. The work was commissioned and performed by Voci Women's Vocal Ensemble.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

References

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