the Heald sisters prior to the Gluck years. Edith is on the right

NOTES

‘GLUCK: NO PREFIX, NO QUOTES’

1.

Sheila Graeme, Things Have Gone to Pieces, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, 1970.

2.

Gluck, Biographical Notes (undated).

3.

Ibid.

4.

Gluck, ‘Credo’, The Fine Art Society exhibition catalogue, London, 1973.

5.

Gluck, Notes on the Philosophy of Painting, 1940.

6.

Ibid.

7.

Diary entry, 31 March 1957.

8.

Gluck, ’On the Quality of Paint’, Tempera, Society of Painters, 1969.

9.

Gluck to Nesta Obermer, October 1936.

10.

Gluck to Andrew McIntosh Patrick, 24 May 1972.

11.

Gluck to Nesta Obermer, 22 January 1937.

12.

Gluck, Notes (undated).

‘THE FAMILY’

1.

Yvonne Mitchell, The Family, Heinemann, London, 1969, p. 138–9.

2.

Joseph Gluckstein to Mr and Mrs Louis Hallé, 8 August 1894.

3.

Louis Hallé Gluckstein, Biographical Notes (undated).

4.

Francesca Gluckstein, Biographical Notes (undated).

5.

Joseph Gluckstein to Mr and Mrs Louis Hallé, 8 August 1894.

6.

Francesca Gluckstein, Biographical Notes (undated).

7.

Sir Harry Verney to Francesca Gluckstein, 11 October 1921.

8.

Francesca Gluckstein, Biographical Notes (undated).

9.

Ibid.

10.

Louis Hallé Gluckstein, Biographical Notes (undated).

11.

Gluck to her brother (undated, 1918).

12.

Gluck, Biographical Notes (undated).

13.

Ibid.

14.

Ibid.

15.

Laura Knight, The Magic of a Line, William Kimber, London, 1965.

16.

Gluck, Biographical Notes (undated).

STAGE AND COUNTRY

1.

Gluck, Notes on Landscape Painting (undated, 1940).

2.

Ibid.

3.

Gluck to her brother Louis (undated, 1918).

4.

Ibid., 29 August 1918.

5.

Ibid. (undated, 1918).

6.

Gluck, Notes on Landscape Painting (undated, 1940).

7.

Laura Knight, Oil Paint and Grease Paint, Nicholson & Watson, London, 1936.

8.

Gluck to her brother Louis (undated, 1918).

9.

Joseph Gluckstein to Louis, 12 October 1918.

10.

Ibid.

11.

Ibid., 8 July 1918.

12.

Francesca Gluckstein to Louis, 8 December 1917.

13.

Gluck to Louis (undated, 1918).

14.

Ibid.

15.

Ibid., 7 October 1918.

16.

Francesca Gluckstein to Louis, 30 November 1918.

17.

Gluck to Louis, 7 October 1918.

18.

Evelyn Waugh, Vile Bodies, Chapman & Hall, London, 1930.

19.

Gluck, Notes on Portrait Painting (undated, 1940).

20.

Conversation with Tony Carroll, 15 January 1988.

21.

Gluck, Notes on the back of a photograph of her painting of Romaine Brooks.

22.

C. B. Cochran, Cock-A-Doodle-Do, London, J. M. Dent & Sons, 1941.

23.

Ibid.

24.

Ibid.

BOLTON HOUSE

1.

Sir James Crichton-Browne, ‘Reminiscences’ (unpublished), 1932.

2.

Crichton-Browne to Gluck, 30 November 1934.

3.

By 1926 Eve was edited by Madge Garland, who subsequently became a close friend of Ivy Compton-Bumett.

4.

Joseph Gluckstein to his wife, Francesca, February 1930.

5.

Joseph Gluckstein to his son, Louis Hallé, 6 February 1930.

6.

Gluck to her mother, 1931–6.

7.

Motley, a team of three women costume designers, Elizabeth Montgomery, Margaret ‘Percy’ Hains and her sister Sophie, were, by the late thirties, the principal designers for John Gielgud, Laurence Olivier, George Devine and Michel St Denis.

8.

Georgina Cookson to author, 6 April 1988.

WHITE FLOWERS

1.

Elizabeth Coxhead, Constance Spry, London, William Luscombe, 1975.

2.

Martin Batters by, The Decorative Thirties, Studio Vista, London, 1969.

3.

Constance Spry, Flower Decoration, London, Dent, 1934.

4.

Conversation with Val Spry, 16 March 1987.

5.

Constance Spry, Flower Decoration, p. 3.

6.

Gluck, Notes on Flower Painting, 1940.

7.

Constance Spry, Flower Decoration, p. 7.

8.

Lord Vernon to Gluck, 27 June 1933.

9.

Gluck to Nesta Obermer (undated, probably January 1937).

10.

Conversation with Val Spry, 16 March 1987.

11.

Gluck to her mother, 11 July 1936.

12.

Gluck to Nesta Obermer, July 1936.

13.

Ibid.

14.

Ibid.

15.

Ibid.

16.

Ibid.

THE GLUCK FRAME

1.

Gluck, Notes on ‘The Gluck Frame’, undated.

2.

Letters from Francesca Gluckstein and Sir Harry Verney, September and October 1932.

‘YOUWE’

1.

Gluck to Nesta Obermer (undated, autumn 1936).

2.

Nesta Obermer to Liz Drury, 26 May 1981.

3.

Conversation with Diana Menuhin, 10 January 1987.

4.

Gluck to Nesta (undated, 1937)

5.

Ibid., 15 January 1937.

6.

Conversation with Tony Carroll, 6 January 1987.

7.

Conversation with Liz Drury, 12 May 1987.

8.

Gluck to Nesta, undated (1936 and 1937).

9.

Ibid, (undated, 1936).

10.

Ibid, (undated, 1937).

11.

Gluck to Nesta, 9 January 1937.

ROOTS AND BRAMBLES

1.

Gluck to Nesta Obermer, January 1937.

2.

Ibid., 12 December 1936.

BLAZE WITH A FIRE

1.

Gluck to Nesta Obermer (undated, 1936).

2.

Ibid.

3.

Ibid.

4.

Ibid.

5.

Ibid.

6.

Ibid.

7.

Ibid.

8.

David Hicks to The Fine Art Society, 8 February 1973.

9.

Conversation with Tom Parrington, 16 March 1987.

THE QUEEN WORE PEACOCK BLUE

1.

Lady Clare Brooke to Francesca Gluckstein, 2 October 1937.

2.

Sir Harry Verney to Francesca Gluckstein, 25 October 1937.

3.

Lawrence Haward to Ernest Dawbarn, 17 December 1937.

4.

Lady Helen Graham to Francesca Gluckstein, 4 January 1938.

5.

Francesca Gluckstein to Lady Helen Graham, 7 January 1938.

‘THE BRIND AND THE WHEEZE’

1.

Conversations with David Yorke and Winifred Vye, January 1987.

2.

Nesta Obermer to Francesca Gluckstein (undated, Spring 1939).

3.

Airey Neave, who was murdered by the IRA at the House of Commons in 1979, was the architect of Margaret Thatcher’s takeover of the Conservative Party from Edward Heath.

THE WAR EFFORT

1.

Gluck to Nesta Obermer (undated, 1937).

2.

Gluck to her mother, 16 August 1942.

3.

Gluck, The Petition (undated).

4.

Gluck to Mrs Bromley-Martin, 22 May 1943.

5.

Virginia Woolf, A Writer’s Diary (11 September 1940), Hogarth Press, 1954

THE WAR WITHIN

1.

Gluck to her mother, 16 January 1942.

2.

Conversation with Liz Drury, 22 December 1986.

3.

Clifford Muagrave to Gluck, 31 August 1944.

4.

Wilfrid Greene to Gluck, 31 August 1944.

THE ETERNAL TRIANGLE

1.

Edith Shackleton Heald, ‘Women in Fleet Street’, in Thomas Michael Pope (ed.), The Book of Fleet Street, Cassell, London, 1930.

2.

Edith Heald, Sunday Express, 8 October 1925.

3.

Ibid.

4.

ESH, Sunday Express, 27 September 1925.

5.

Sidney Dark, Ivan Heald, Hero and Humorist, London, 1917.

6.

Conversation with June Casares, 26 November 1986.

7.

Yeats to ESH, 18May l937.

8.

Ibid., 4 September 1938.

9.

Ibid., 2 August 1937.

10.

George Yeats to ESH, 6 and 12 May 1938.

11.

ESH to Mr Price, 24 August 1968.

12.

James Agate, Ego, London, Hamish Hamilton, 1935.

13.

James Agate, Ego 3, London, George Harrap, 1938.

14.

Gluck to Bertram Nicholls, 10 January 1944.

15.

Nesta to Gluck, September 1945.

16.

Conversation with Marjorie Watts, 5 May 1987.

17.

Gluck, diary entries, 1946.

YEATS’S BONES

1.

Gluck, Notes for a book, 1940.

2.

‘Alan’ to Nesta Obermer, 30 August 1939.

3.

Nesta to Gluck, 2 February 1959.

4.

Duke of Buccleuch to author, 21 February 1987.

5.

Nesta to Gluck, 4 August 1958.

6.

Dulac to ESH, 27 June 1947.

7.

George Yeats to Edmund Dulac, 9 January 1948, and transcription of phone call from

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