Our hearts were young and gay 1942
Our Hearts Were Young And Same-sex attracted, Dodd, Mead & Company,
Our Hearts Were Young And Lgbtq+ (, First Edition):
by Cornelia Otis Skinner and Emily Kimbrough
Publisher: Dodd, Mead & Company
This delightful memoir recounts the comical and sometimes chaotic adventures traveling through Europe in the s as fresh women fresh out of college.
"Our Hearts Were Young and Gay" is a humorous memoir by Cornelia Otis Skinner and Emily Kimbrough, recounting their adventures as young women on a trip to Europe in the s. The book chronicles their experiences with travel, culture shock, and the often-comical situations they meeting as they navigate unfamiliar surroundings and social customs. Skinner and Kimbrough's narrative is filled with wit, self-deprecating humor, and affectionate observations of their own youthful naiveté, offering a delightful and entertaining look at the joys and challenges of youthful exploration and friendship.
Cornelia Otis Skinner was an American actress, writer, and monologist, celebrated for her witty and insightful observations of social behavior and her eng
Hardcover. Condition: Near Decent. 1st Edition. Fine gray linen-like cloth on boards with gilt line drawing of a couple dancing on front and gilt lettering to spine, mildly faded. Decorated endpapers with the names of the destinations that the two young women traveled to and from. Book is tight, square, sharp-cornered and free of major flaws or markings - Proximate Fine. No DJ. Stated as 10th printing, , on copyright page. Skinner and Kimbrough did a Grand Tour after their graduation from Bryn Mawr in the late 's. Very popular with readers, as evidenced by the tenth printing that this book represents within the first months of publication, it spent weeks atop the New York Times Non-Fiction Best Seller list in the winter of and was was made into a motion picture in and a 3 Act comedy play for Broadway in by Jean Kerr; and later, in , a CBS television comedy series. During the Second World War, Hugh Trevor-Roper discovered that this book was used as a codebook by German intelligence.
Our Hearts Were Fresh and Gay by Cornelia Otis Skinner and Emily Kimbrough
Tess Press. Hardcover. pages.
Review:
In the early s, Cornelia Otis Skinner and Emily Kimbrough, freshly graduated from Bryn Mawr, took a transatlantic voyage to England and then to Paris. As far as travel memoirs are concerned, this does not fall into the camp of intrepid daring or visiting obscure corners of the ground. On the scale of adventure, it was perhaps the equivalent of the backpack-and-hostel trip my friend and I undertook in France when we were college students, except Skinner and Kimbroughs trip was much longer and was without 21st century conveniences such as planes and internet cafes. Cornelias parents make appearances in England and in Paris, careful to let the fresh women have their independence, but thankfully on-hand for various health crises (a bout of German measles, bedbugs) and nice hotel meals.
The memoir is told completely from Cornelias first-person perspective though Emily is credited for remembering most of it. Cornelia and Emilys ship departs from
Special Collections Blog
Program for Philadelphia premiere of Our Hearts Were Young and Gay
For the past several months, I have been privileged enough to work with the Bryn Mawr oral histories as part of my work for The Albert M. Greenfield Digital Center for the History of Women’s Education. The oral histories are comprised of hundreds of ancient cassette tapes, containing interviews, speeches, and lectures with Bryn Mawr alumnae, professors, staff, and other members of the college collective. Although they are not available to the common at the moment, my job includes listening to the tapes and digitizing them. The long-term aim is that they will one day be a part of a common digital archive. In the meantime, I want to share some of the fun, surprising, and enlightening facts I have learned about Bryn Mawr through my work.
Today, I listened to a speech by Emily Kimbrough, Class of , which she delivered at the Senior Dinner for the Class of Her speech was riotously funny, and after I finished listening, I decided to look up her alumna file. It turns out that Emily Kimbrough