Margaret Larkin

American musician (1899–1967) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Margaret Larkin (July 7, 1899 – May 7, 1967) was an American writer, poet, singer-songwriter, researcher, journalist and union activist.

Born(1899-07-07)July 7, 1899
DiedMay 7, 1967(1967-05-07) (aged 67)
Occupationwriter, poet, singer-songwriter, researcher, and union activist
NationalityAmerican
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Margaret Larkin
Born(1899-07-07)July 7, 1899
DiedMay 7, 1967(1967-05-07) (aged 67)
Occupationwriter, poet, singer-songwriter, researcher, and union activist
NationalityAmerican
Period1922-1967
Genrefiction, non-fiction
Notable worksThe Six Days of Yad Mordechai
Seven shares in a Gold Mine
Singing Cowboy
Notable awardsKansas Authors' Club Poetry Prize
David Belasco Cup
Samuel French Prize
SpouseListon Oak
Albert Maltz
RelativesMira Larkin
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She wrote The Six Days of Yad Mordechai on a kibbutz in Israel and its stand against the Egyptian Army in 1948, Seven Shares in a Gold Mine about a murder conspiracy in Mexico, and the Singing Cowboy, a collection of Western folk songs.[1] She won awards for her poem Goodbye—To My Mother and her play El Cristo.

Life

Larkin was born on July 7, 1899, in Las Vegas, New Mexico, to parents from English and Scottish descent.[2] She studied at the University of Kansas.[3] In 1922 she won the Poetry Prize of the Kansas Author Club.

After moving to the East Coast, she married Liston Oak and became a trade union activist.[3] In 1926 she wrote the titles of the silent film The Passaic Textile Strike.[4] In the thirties she was active as a singer/songwriter and composer of folk songs.[3]

After divorcing her first husband she met writer Albert Maltz in 1935. Maltz was 9 years younger. They married in 1937.[3] Maltz was blacklisted as one of the Hollywood Ten due to his refusal to tell the House Un-American Activities Committee whether he was a member of the American Communist Party.[2][3]

Larkin, her husband, their son Peter and daughter Katherine moved to Mexico City in 1951.[2] In 1964 they were officially divorced, after Maltz had already returned to the United States.[2][5]

Larkin assisted anthropologist Oscar Lewis in the research and writing of La vida: a Puerto Rican family in the culture of poverty--San Juan and New York (1966).[3] Her last book was The Hand of Mordechai, on kibbutz Yad Mordechai around the 1947–1949 Palestine war. It was published in Hebrew (1966), Yiddish (1967), English (1968), German (1970), and Russian (197?). The Israeli edition was published by Ma'arachot, the official publishing house of the Israeli Defense Forces, with a preface by General Haim Laskov. Larkin was represented by the literary agent Barthold Fles.[3]

Margareth Larkin died in Mexico City on May 7, 1967, aged 67. Her granddaughter born Gabriela Maltz Larkin, is an actress and production manager, more recently known as Mira Larkin.[6]

Bibliography

Books

Poetry

  • 1922 - "Goodbye—To My Mother" in The Poets of the Future, A College Anthology for 1921-1922: 156
  • 1924 - "Four Poems", The Midlands 10: 385.

Articles

Filmography

Awards

  • 1922 - Best Poem submitted to the Kansas Authors' Club[8] for Goodbye—To My Mother
  • 1926 - David Belasco Cup for El Cristo
  • 1926 - Samuel French Prize for El Cristo

References

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