To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Margaret Fairchild

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Margaret Fairchild
Fairchild in 1989
Born
Margaret Mary Fairchild

(1911-01-04)4 January 1911
Died28 April 1989(1989-04-28) (aged 78)
23 Gloucester Crescent, Camden, London, England
Burial placeSt Pancras and Islington Cemetery
Other names
  • Mary Teresa Sheppard
  • Miss Shepherd
  • M T Sheppard
EducationÉcole Normale de Musique de Paris
Occupation(s)Concert pianist, nun
Known forDramatised by Alan Bennett in The Lady in the Van

Margaret Mary Fairchild (4 January 1911 – 28 April 1989), also known as Mary Teresa Sheppard, Miss Shepherd and M T Sheppard,[1] was a British homeless woman.

Her life was depicted in the 2015 film The Lady in the Van by Alan Bennett in which she was played by Dame Maggie Smith. Smith had previously played her in a 1999 play of the same name and a radio adaptation for BBC Radio 4 in 2009. She had also been a concert pianist and nun.

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/3
    Views:
    135 068
    64 611
    4 801
  • Alan Bennett The Lady in The Van Interview [ Subtitled ]
  • The Lady in the Van | Official US Trailer (2015)
  • Making of The Lady In The Van

Transcription

Biography

The former Convent of the Society of the Helpers of the Holy Souls on Gloucester Avenue where Fairchild was a novice in 1936, now the North Bridge House School.

Margaret Fairchild was born in 1911 in Hellingly in East Sussex, the daughter of Harriett (née Burgess; 1879–1963) and George Bryant Fairchild (1866–1944), a surveyor and sanitary inspector. Her brother was Leopold George Fairchild (1908–1994).[2]

A gifted pianist, according to her brother, around 1932 the middle-class and well-spoken Margaret Fairchild studied at the École Normale de Musique de Paris in Paris under the virtuoso Alfred Cortot, and it has been said that she later played in a promenade concert;[3][4] however, she does not appear in the BBC's online Proms performance archive.[5]

In 1936, as Mary Teresa, she became a novice in the Convent of the Society of the Helpers of the Holy Souls on Gloucester Avenue in Regent's Park (later the Japanese School in London and now the North Bridge House School),[6] a short distance from Gloucester Crescent where she famously returned decades later. Later in 1936 she was at St Joseph's Priory on Harrow Road West in Dorking.[7]

In 1939, Fairchild was a Religious Sister and schoolteacher at St Gilda's Catholic School in Yeovil, Somerset.[8] Her brother related that in the convent Fairchild was forced to abandon her love of music and playing in order to concentrate on her faith and she left the order following a breakdown. Her fellow nuns described her as "argumentative".

During World War II, Fairchild was trained to drive ambulances by the ATS, which began her love for vehicles and driving.[9] From at least 1950 to 1957 she lived with her mother at 98 Elgin Crescent in Notting Hill.[10]

A commanding figure at nearly 6 ft (1.8 m) tall, Fairchild became increasingly erratic in her behaviour and constantly argued about religion with her mother with whom she lived. Her brother had her committed to Banstead Hospital, a psychiatric hospital, from which she escaped. She was to abscond from various other mental hospitals until she remained at large for a year and a day which legally demonstrated her competence to live unsupervised.[11] Later she had an accident when the van she was driving was hit by a motorcyclist who subsequently died. Fairchild believed she was to blame for the accident and left the scene without giving her details, thereafter living in fear of arrest.[3] At this time she changed her name to Sheppard to avoid detection and made her way back to the vicinity of the convent on Gloucester Avenue where she had taken her vows. However, she had little to do with the nuns, or they with her.[citation needed]

Bennett and Gloucester Crescent

23 Gloucester Crescent in 2019
For 15 years Fairchild lived in her van where the car is in this image

In the late 1960s Fairchild, calling herself 'Miss Mary Sheppard', began to park her Bedford van in front of the houses in affluent Gloucester Crescent in Camden Town where she would annoy the well-heeled homeowners by parking in front of a house and then pile rubbish-filled plastic bags around the vehicle until told to move on. Over time her hand-painted yellow van moved down the road until in 1971 it stopped outside the home of playwright and author Alan Bennett,[4] who said of her "She was there in full view of my window while I was working. She used to get pestered by people. I used to go out and tell [those] people to clear off. This distracted me from my work, and it gradually got to the point when it was harder for me to work than it should be, and the only way to break through the situation was to invite her into the drive, where no one else would bother her.” Bennett added, "She was difficult to like. She never smiled, she had no sense of humour, her politics were very different from mine . . . And all these things made her an aggressive personality." However, he allowed her to temporarily park her dilapidated van on his narrow driveway at 23 Gloucester Crescent in Camden, expecting her to leave in a few months.

She was to stay until her death 15 years later. In her van Fairchild would write political pamphlets for her right-wing Fidelis party with titles such as "True View: Mattering Things" that Bennett would type up for her and have copied in a local printers; he was concerned that the workers would believe that the extreme views expressed in the pamphlets were his own. Her political aspirations caused her to ask Bennett, "When I'm elected do you think I shall have to live in Downing Street or could I run things from the van?"[4]

Periodically, local nuns would bring her food to supplement what Fairchild had bought with her Social Security payments, though she had neither means of cooking in the van nor a toilet. Bennett ran an electric cable from his house to the van so that Fairchild could run a heater and a television. He was only to discover her true identity from her brother after her death.[3]

The 'genteel vagrant'[12] Margaret Fairchild died in her van on the driveway at 23 Gloucester Crescent in Camden in 1989 aged 78.[1] After a funeral service in the Catholic church of Our Lady of Hal in Camden Town she was buried in an unmarked grave in St Pancras and Islington Cemetery.[13]

Fairchild's collection of self-penned political pamphlets, hand-written notes and shopping lists are in the Alan Bennett Archive at the Bodleian Library at the University of Oxford.[14]

The Lady in the Van

Bennett wrote The Lady in the Van based on his experiences with the eccentric woman. Fairchild/Shepherd's story was first published in 1989 as an essay in the London Review of Books. In 1990 Bennett published it in book form. In 1999 he adapted it into a stage play at the Queen's Theatre in London which starred Maggie Smith who received a Best Actress nomination at the 2000 Olivier Awards[15] and which was directed by Nicholas Hytner. The stage play includes two characters named Alan Bennett. On 21 February 2009 it was broadcast as a radio play on BBC Radio 4, with Maggie Smith reprising her role[16] and Alan Bennett playing himself. He adapted the story again for the 2015 film The Lady in the Van with Maggie Smith reprising her role again, and Nicholas Hytner directing again.

Other theatrical representations

References

  1. ^ a b England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858–1995 for Margaret Mary Fairchild (1989)Ancestry.com (subscription required)
  2. ^ 1911 England Census for Margaret Mary Fairchild in Sussex, Hellingly, Ancestry.com. Accessed 2 December 2022. (subscription required)
  3. ^ a b c Why a playwright let a homeless woman live in his driveway for 15 yearsThe New York Post 28 November 2015
  4. ^ a b c "Maggie Smith on the real Lady in The Van: 'Nobody will ever understand why she ended up like that'", 'The Daily Telegraph, 24 December 2016.
  5. ^ [1] Archived 22 October 2020 at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ London, England, Electoral Registers, 1832–1965 for Margaret Mary Fairchild – Camden St Pancras 1936Ancestry.com (subscription required)
  7. ^ Surrey, England, Electoral Registers, 1832–1962 for Margaret Mary Fairchild – Reigate 1935Ancestry.com (subscription required)
  8. ^ 1939 England and Wales Register for Margaret M Fairchild – Somerset, Yeovil, Ancestry.com. Accessed 2 December 2022.(subscription required)
  9. ^ Alan Bennett, The Lady in the Van: The Complete Edition Faber & Faber Ltd (2015), p. 89
  10. ^ London, England, Electoral Registers, 1832–1965 for Margaret M Fairchild – Kensington and Chelsea -Kensington North, – Ancestry.com. Accessed 2 December 2022.(subscription required)
  11. ^ Bennett, p. 90
  12. ^ The Lady in the Van by Alan BennettSamuel French
  13. ^ Bennett, pg. 37
  14. ^ Nicholas Hytner’s Foreword to The Lady in the Van: The Screenplay by Alan Bennett – Talk House
  15. ^ "The Lady in the Van". The Telegraph. Telegraph.co.uk. 27 May 2015. Retrieved 26 December 2016.
  16. ^ Christopher Orr (22 January 2016). "Review: In 'The Lady in the Van,' Maggie Smith Dazzles Yet Again". The Atlantic. Retrieved 31 March 2017.
  17. ^ Review of The Lady in the Van (2008) – British Theatre Guide
  18. ^ Review of The Lady in the VanThe Guardian 26 April 2011
  19. ^ Review: The Lady in the Van, (Theatre Royal, Bath) WhatsOnstage.com (2017)
  20. ^ The Lady in the Van – Melbourne Theatre Company
This page was last edited on 2 January 2024, at 14:05
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.