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For the movie film adaptation of Mrs. Miniver, see Mrs. Miniver (film) Mrs. Miniver was a fictional character created by Jan Struther in 1937 for a series of newspaper columns for The Times, later adapted into a movie of the same name.
OriginThe Times columns were short reflections on everyday life, based in part on Struther's own family and experiences. While the columns started out as lighthearted domestic scenes where the outside world barely intruded, the approach of World War II slowly brought darker global concerns into Mrs. Miniver's world. One of the more memorable pieces appears near the middle of the series, where the Minivers get gas masks. Book publicationThe columns were first published in book form in 1939, shortly after the outbreak of war. Struther stopped the regular newspaper columns that year, but wrote a series of letters from Mrs. Miniver, expanding on the character's wartime experiences. These were published in later editions. The book became an enormous success, especially in the United States, where Struther went on a lecture tour shortly after the book's release. Although the US was still neutral, the tribulations of the Miniver family as war with Nazi Germany arrived engaged the sympathy of the American public sufficiently that President Franklin D. Roosevelt credited it for hastening America's involvement in the war, and Winston Churchill claimed that it had done more for the Allied cause than a flotilla of battleships. (Actually Churchill is quoted by Bernard Wasserstein, in his book "Barbarism and Civilization", as saying that the book (and later the film) was worth.."six divisions of war effort". The bottom line of the thought is however the same.) Film adaptations
Television AdaptionIn 1960 CBS Television presented Mrs Miniver starring Maureen O'Hara, Juliet Mills and Keir Dullea See alsoExternal links |
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