William Maugham

@Novelists, Career and Childhood

William Maugham was an English playwright, writer and novelist

Jan 25, 1874

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: January 25, 1874
  • Died on: December 16, 1965
  • Nationality: British
  • Famous: Novelists, Playwrights, Writers, Novelists, Playwrights
  • Spouses: Gwendoline Maud Syrie Barnardo (m. 1917–1928)
  • Siblings: Viscount Maugham
  • Childrens: Mary Elizabeth Wellcome

William Maugham born at

Paris

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Birth Place

Despite being known for having homosexual tendencies, William Somerset Maugham entered into a relationship with Syrie Wellcome, who was the wife of Henry Wellcome, a renowned pharmaceutical entrepreneur. After they had a daughter together, Henry sued his wife for divorce, following which Syrie and Maugham got married in 1917.

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Personal Life

Their daughter was named Mary Elizabeth Maugham, also known as Liza, and she was his only biological child.

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Personal Life

His marriage with Syrie was a troubled one and the couple later separated. Maugham later had relationships with Gerald Haxton and Alan Searle.

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Personal Life

William Somerset Maugham was born to English parents Robert Ormond Maugham and Edith Mary, on 25th January 1874, in the UK Embassy in Paris.

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Childhood & Early Life

Both his father and grandfather were lawyers; his father handled legal affairs of the British embassy in Paris. According to French law, all children born on French soil could be enlisted compulsorily into the armed forces. Therefore, his father arranged for William to be born at the embassy, so that technically, he would be born on British soil.

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Childhood & Early Life

Maugham lost both parents at a very early age after which he was sent to the UK to live with his uncle, Henry McDonald Maugham. However his uncle proved to be cruel and unsympathetic to young William and the boy was damaged psychologically.

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Childhood & Early Life

He was sent to the King's school in Canterbury. However, French being his first language, he had very bad English, for which he was often mocked. He also developed a stammer that stayed throughout his life.

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Childhood & Early Life

At the age of 16, he refused to continue his education at the King's school anymore. His uncle had no option but to let him travel to Germany where he studied at Heidelberg University. Here, he wrote his first book, which was a biography of Giacomo Meyerbeer, who was a German opera composer.

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Childhood & Early Life

Soon, he wrote his first novel 'Liza of Lambeth’ (1897) where he wrote about his experiences as an obstetrician. The book became an instant success, which made him give up medicine and take up writing as a full-time career.

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Career

Over the next decade, he traveled and spent his time in places such as Spain and Capri. However, he struggled for the next ten years before finding massive success in 1907 with the play 'Lady Frederick.' By the next year, he had four plays running simultaneously in London.

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Career

In 1908, he wrote the supernatural thriller 'The Magician', which also proved to be a great success. However, some writers accused him of plagiarism. A film of the same name was also made in 1926, which was directed by horror film director Rex Ingram.

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Career

By 1914, he had become quite famous with ten plays as well as ten novels to his name. When the World War I broke out, he joined the British Red Cross’ “Literary Ambulance Drivers”, along with twenty-three other well-known writers. After the war he continued to write and edit works as well.

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Career

Maugham later focused on a novel based on the life of Paul Gaugin which was named 'The Moon and Sixpence', published in 1919. He also wrote books portraying the last days of colonialism in India as well as other parts of Southeast Asia.

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Career

’Of Human Bondage’ can be regarded not just as a masterpiece, but also as the best work of William Somerset Maugham. He had actually planned to name his book ‘Beauty from Ashes’, though he later decided to name it after a title which was taken from a section of the philosophical treatise known as 'Spinoza's Ethics.'

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Major Works

’Liza of Lambeth’ was Maugham's first work which he had written while he was studying to be a doctor. The book, which depicts the life of an 18-year-old factory worker named Liza Kemp, gives an understanding of the way working class people in London used to live their everyday lives at the end of the nineteenth century.

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Major Works

’The Moon and Sixpence’ written and published in 1919, ‘Cakes and Ale’ (1930), and ‘The Razor's Edge’ (1944), can also be regarded as some of his most important works, on which Maugham's reputation as a novelist stands on.

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Major Works