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DYMPHNA CUSACK

  • Dymphna Cusack
  • Australian author and playwright (1902–1981)

    Ellen Dymphna Cusack AM (21 September 1902 – 19 October 1981) was an Australian writer and playwright. She also wrote as Atalanta. Born in Wyalong, New

    Dymphna Cusack

    Dymphna Cusack

    Dymphna_Cusack

  • Cusack
  • Family name

    Cusack (politician), Australian politician Cyril Cusack, Irish actor Dick Cusack, American actor and filmmaker Donal Óg Cusack, Irish hurler Dymphna Cusack

    Cusack

    Cusack

    Cusack

  • Spartacus (radio play)
  • 1942 Australian radio play by Dymphna Cusack

    Australian radio play by Dymphna Cusack about the rebel slave Spartacus. It was the last of the ABC's Bonus Competition Plays. Cusack wrote it in 1940. She

    Spartacus (radio play)

    Spartacus_(radio_play)

  • Shallow Cups
  • 1933 Australian play

    Shallow Cups is a 1933 Australian play by Dymphna Cusack. The play was published in a 1934 collection of Australian plays Eight Plays for Australians.

    Shallow Cups

    Shallow_Cups

  • Comets Soon Pass
  • 1943 Australian play by Dymphna Cusack

    considered for merging. › Comets Soon Pass is a 1943 Australian play by Dymphna Cusack. It won the 1943 WA Drama Festival Award. (She had won it the year before

    Comets Soon Pass

    Comets_Soon_Pass

  • Miles Franklin
  • Australian writer and feminist (1879–1954)

    in the US, she also wrote Pioneers on Parade in collaboration with Dymphna Cusack and a biography of Joseph Furphy (1944) "in painful collaboration with

    Miles Franklin

    Miles Franklin

    Miles_Franklin

  • Spartacus
  • Thracian gladiator who led a slave revolt

    Armenian composer Aram Khachaturian. The 1942 radio play Spartacus by Dymphna Cusack. The "Spartacus Overture" was written by composer Camille Saint-Saëns

    Spartacus

    Spartacus

    Spartacus

  • Heatwave in Berlin
  • Novel by Australian author Dymphna Cusack

    Heatwave in Berlin (1961) is a novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. Australian Joy von Muhler is returning with her husband Stephen to Berlin, in

    Heatwave in Berlin

    Heatwave_in_Berlin

  • List of people with surname Cusack
  • Surname list

    filmmaker Donal Óg Cusack, Irish hurler Dymphna Cusack, Australian writer Henry Edward Cusack, Irish locomotive Engineer Joan Cusack, American actress

    List of people with surname Cusack

    List_of_people_with_surname_Cusack

  • Pioneers on Parade
  • Book by Miles Franklin and Dymphna Cusack

    on Parade (1939) is a novel by Australian writers Miles Franklin and Dymphna Cusack. The novel is set in Sydney during the sesqui-centenary celebrations

    Pioneers on Parade

    Pioneers_on_Parade

  • The Sun Is Not Enough
  • 1967 novel by Dymphna Cusack

    The Sun is Not Enough (1967) is a novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. Martin Belford is a wealthy solicitor who lives with his sister Alice. Their

    The Sun Is Not Enough

    The_Sun_Is_Not_Enough

  • Say No to Death
  • Book by Dymphna Cusack

    Say No to Death (1951) is a novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. It was originally published in Australia by Heinemann, and later in the US by William

    Say No to Death

    Say_No_to_Death

  • Call Up Your Ghosts
  • 1945 Australian stage play

    for merging. › Call Up Your Ghosts is a 1945 Australian stage play by Dymphna Cusack and Miles Franklin. It was a satire of the Australian publishing industry

    Call Up Your Ghosts

    Call_Up_Your_Ghosts

  • Come in Spinner
  • 1951 novel by Dymphna Cusack and Florence James

    Come In Spinner is an Australian novel by Dymphna Cusack and Florence James, originally published in 1951 and set in Sydney at the end of the Second World

    Come in Spinner

    Come_in_Spinner

  • The Sun in Exile
  • Book by Dymphna Cusack

    The Sun in Exile (1955) is a novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. The narrator of the story, Alexandra Pendlebury, is a middle-aged spinster who

    The Sun in Exile

    The_Sun_in_Exile

  • Red Sky at Morning (play)
  • 1935 play by Dymphna Cusack

    Sky at Morning is a 1935 Australian stage play by Dymphna Cusack. The play helped launch Cusack's writing career and was filmed in 1943. In 1812 New

    Red Sky at Morning (play)

    Red_Sky_at_Morning_(play)

  • Black Lightning (novel)
  • 1964 novel written by Dymphna Cusack

    Black Lightning (1964) is a novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. Tempe Caxton is an ageing television presenter who is recovering from a suicide

    Black Lightning (novel)

    Black_Lightning_(novel)

  • Southern Steel (novel)
  • Book by Dymphna Cusack

    Southern Steel (1953) is a novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. Set in Newcastle, New South Wales, during World War II, the story concerns three

    Southern Steel (novel)

    Southern_Steel_(novel)

  • John Cusack (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    in the 1940s and 1950s John Bede Cusack, pseudonym John Beede, author, younger brother of Dymphna Cusack Johnny Cusack (1927–2020), Irish Gaelic footballer

    John Cusack (disambiguation)

    John_Cusack_(disambiguation)

  • The Golden Girls (play)
  • 1950s Australian stage play

    The Golden Girls is a 1950s stage play by Dymphna Cusack set in Sydney of the 1890s. It was first turned into a radio play in 1954. The Age called it "well

    The Golden Girls (play)

    The_Golden_Girls_(play)

  • Jungfrau (novel)
  • Book by Dymphna Cusack

    Jungfrau (1936) is the debut novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. The novel tells the story of a 1930s Sydney school teacher, Thea, her affair with

    Jungfrau (novel)

    Jungfrau_(novel)

  • Two-up
  • Traditional Australian gambling game

    playing two-up in a market place. The 1951 novel Come In Spinner by Dymphna Cusack and Florence James takes its name from the call. In the 1960 film Hell

    Two-up

    Two-up

    Two-up

  • Mary Reibey
  • Australian businesswoman

    the radio plays Fulfilment (1948) by Rex Rienits and Mary Reibey by Dymphna Cusack. Australia portal Biography portal List of convicts transported to Australia

    Mary Reibey

    Mary Reibey

    Mary_Reibey

  • Marilla North
  • Australian poet, educator, administrator and biographer

    to a Distinctive Australian Literature, Woven Through the Letter of Dymphna Cusack, Florence James, Miles Franklin, and Their Congenials, Revised and expanded

    Marilla North

    Marilla North

    Marilla_North

  • Exit (play)
  • Exit is an Australian play by Dymphna Cusack. She described it as a "tongue in cheek comedy". Originally written for the stage it was adapted for radio

    Exit (play)

    Exit_(play)

  • Picnic Races (novel)
  • 1962 novel by Dymphna Cusack

    Picnic Races (1962) is a novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. Set in the fictional Australian country town of Gubba, the novel details the town's

    Picnic Races (novel)

    Picnic_Races_(novel)

  • Lure of the Inland Sea
  • 1945 Australian radio play

    Island Sea is a 1945 Australian radio play by Dymphna Cusack about Charles Sturt. It was one of Cusack's main radio plays and was recorded in Melbourne

    Lure of the Inland Sea

    Lure_of_the_Inland_Sea

  • The Half-Burnt Tree
  • 1969 novel by Dymphna Cusack

    The Half-Burnt Tree (1969) is a novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. The novel follows the story of three people living in the fictional NSW north-coast

    The Half-Burnt Tree

    The_Half-Burnt_Tree

  • A Bough in Hell
  • 1971 novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack

    novel by Australian writer Dymphna Cusack. It was originally published by Heinemann in Australia in 1971. It was Dymphna Cusack's last novel. Roslyn Blackie

    A Bough in Hell

    A_Bough_in_Hell

  • Mary Reibey (radio play)
  • 1947 Australian radio drama

    Mary Reibey was a 1947 Australian radio drama by Dymphna Cusack about the convict Mary Reibey. It aired as an episode of Lux Radio Theatre. The play is

    Mary Reibey (radio play)

    Mary_Reibey_(radio_play)

  • Red Sky at Morning
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    a drama by Australian author Dymphna Cusack Red Sky at Morning (play), a 1935 Australian stage play by Dymphna Cusack Red Sky at Morning (Kennedy novel)

    Red Sky at Morning

    Red_Sky_at_Morning

  • West Wyalong
  • Town in New South Wales, Australia

    West Wyalong New year Celebrations & Bi-annual Fireworks, West Wyalong Dymphna Cusack, author Reginald Roy Rattey, Victoria Cross recipient Terry Gathercole

    West Wyalong

    West Wyalong

    West_Wyalong

  • Collaborative fiction
  • Form of writing

    women doesn't make for a difference in their point of view or values." Dymphna Cusack wrote twelve novels, two of which were collaborations. She wrote Come

    Collaborative fiction

    Collaborative_fiction

  • Florence James
  • Australian writer

    at Sydney University 1923–26. It was there that her friendship with Dymphna Cusack began, later to become a notable collaboration. They were both involved

    Florence James

    Florence_James

  • Theatre of Australia
  • Overview of theatre in Australia

    Moment. Another feminist playwright of the Left around the same time was Dymphna Cusack, who built an international reputation across Europe in leftist communities

    Theatre of Australia

    Theatre of Australia

    Theatre_of_Australia

  • List of Australian women writers
  • poet and literary editor Jean Curlewis (1898–1930), children's writer Dymphna Cusack (1902–1981), novelist and playwright Marguerite Dale (1883–1963), playwright

    List of Australian women writers

    List_of_Australian_women_writers

  • John Cusack (Australian politician)
  • Australian politician

    area as the Australian Capital Territory. Dymphna Cusack was his niece. His great-granddaughter Catherine Cusack was elected as a Liberal Party member of

    John Cusack (Australian politician)

    John Cusack (Australian politician)

    John_Cusack_(Australian_politician)

  • Caddie (film)
  • 1976 Australian film

    real-life barmaid, Catherine Edmonds, got to know Dymphna Cusack while she was writing Come in Spinner and Cusack helped the book get published. The budget was

    Caddie (film)

    Caddie_(film)

  • Southern Steel
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    a 1991 album by Steve Morse Southern Steel (novel), a 1953 novel by Dymphna Cusack This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Southern

    Southern Steel

    Southern_Steel

  • Spartacus (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    television episode Spartacus (radio play), a 1942 Australian radio play by Dymphna Cusack Spartacus (Fast novel), a historical novel by Howard Fast, the basis

    Spartacus (disambiguation)

    Spartacus_(disambiguation)

  • Caddie, A Sydney Barmaid
  • 1953 book

    1945 as a charwoman by authors Dymphna Cusack and Florence James at their cottage in the Blue Mountains. At the time, Cusack and James were working on their

    Caddie, A Sydney Barmaid

    Caddie,_A_Sydney_Barmaid

  • Mary Gilmore
  • Australian poet (1865–1962)

    Gilmore's Quest for Love and Utopia at the World's End, Allen & Unwin. Dymphna Cusack and others, Mary Gilmore: A Tribute (1965) Gall, Jennifer (March 2014)

    Mary Gilmore

    Mary Gilmore

    Mary_Gilmore

  • Come In Spinner (album)
  • 1990 soundtrack album by Vince Jones and Grace Knight

    1989/1990 television miniseries based on the 1951 novel Come in Spinner by Dymphna Cusack and Florence James. The album is credited to Vince Jones and Grace Knight

    Come In Spinner (album)

    Come_In_Spinner_(album)

  • List of novels written by multiple authors
  • Harold Ludwick Pioneers on Parade 1939 Dymphna Cusack and Miles Franklin Come In Spinner 1951 Dymphna Cusack and Florence James. Master of One 2020 Jaida

    List of novels written by multiple authors

    List_of_novels_written_by_multiple_authors

  • Charles Sturt
  • Australian explorer (1795–1869)

    Catherine Shepherd the radio play Lure of the Inland Sea (1945) by Dymphna Cusack the documentary film Inland with Sturt (1951) The Charles Sturt Museum

    Charles Sturt

    Charles Sturt

    Charles_Sturt

  • List of women writers (A–L)
  • (1923–1984, United States), mystery writer Dymphna Cusack (1902–1981, Australia), nv. & pw. Margaret Anna Cusack (1829–1999, Ireland), biographer, social

    List of women writers (A–L)

    List_of_women_writers_(A–L)

  • 1951 in literature
  • Flannery O'Connor. Infobase Publishing. p. 315. ISBN 978-1-4381-0846-9. Dymphna Cusack; Florence James; Miles Franklin (2001). Yarn Spinners: A Story in Letters

    1951 in literature

    1951_in_literature

  • Red Sky at Morning (1944 film)
  • 1948 Australian film

    Australian melodrama set during the 19th century based on a play by Dymphna Cusack. It features an early screen performance by Peter Finch, who plays a

    Red Sky at Morning (1944 film)

    Red_Sky_at_Morning_(1944_film)

  • Esme Melville
  • Australian actress (1918–2006)

    Rumpelstiltskin as collected by Brothers Grimm Morning Sacrifice 1989 Drama by Dymphna Cusack Gilmore: A Portrait 1992 Biographical drama of Mary Gilmore by Eric

    Esme Melville

    Esme_Melville

  • Independent Theatre
  • Theatre company in Sydney, Australia

    (prod. Betty Ward) 16 Mar 1935 – Dulcy 24 Apr 1935 – Anniversary (by Dymphna Cusack) at Sydney Conservatorium of Music 27 Apr 1935 – The Distaff Side 25

    Independent Theatre

    Independent_Theatre

  • 1981 in Australia
  • Australia 29 June – Russell Drysdale (born 1912), painter 19 October – Dymphna Cusack (born 1902), writer 2 September – Dame Enid Lyons (born 1897), Liberal

    1981 in Australia

    1981_in_Australia

  • Kerry Walker
  • Australian actress

    miniseries Come in Spinner (based on the 1951 novel of the same name by Dymphna Cusack), and the 1991 Australian-British co-produced miniseries The Leaving

    Kerry Walker

    Kerry_Walker

  • Fellowship of Australian Writers
  • South Wales, Flora Eldershaw, Marjorie Barnard, Frank Dalby Davison, Dymphna Cusack; in Victoria, Nettie Palmer; and in Western Australia, Henrietta Drake-Brockman

    Fellowship of Australian Writers

    Fellowship_of_Australian_Writers

  • List of authors by name: C
  • 1619–1679, England, nf) James Oliver Curwood (1878–1927, US, f/nf) Dymphna Cusack (1902–1981, Australia, d/f/nf) Karen Cushman (born 1941, US, f) Clive

    List of authors by name: C

    List_of_authors_by_name:_C

  • List of Australian novelists
  • (born 1971) Sophie Cunningham (born 1963) Jean Curlewis (1898–1930) Dymphna Cusack (1902–1981) A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z John

    List of Australian novelists

    List_of_Australian_novelists

  • Griffin Theatre Company
  • Australian theatre company

    Press Current Theatre Series publication for 'Morning Sacrifice' by Dymphna Cusack (1986 Currency Press Pty Ltd) "Our History". SBW Foundation. Retrieved

    Griffin Theatre Company

    Griffin_Theatre_Company

  • List of University of Sydney people
  • Christopher Brennan Geraldine Brooks – winner of the Pulitzer Prize (2006) Dymphna Cusack Brook Emery — poet, educator Germaine Greer Kate Grenville A. D. Hope

    List of University of Sydney people

    List_of_University_of_Sydney_people

  • 1981 in Australian literature
  • A Company of Heralds Patrick White — Flaws in the Glass A. D. Hope Dymphna Cusack Beatrice Deloitte Davis David Ireland Jack Lindsay Alan Marshall Stephen

    1981 in Australian literature

    1981_in_Australian_literature

  • Australia: National Journal
  • Australian arts and lifestyle magazine (1939–1946)

    Preston on her trip around Australia and a satirical look at "Society" by Dymphna Cusack. February 1941 had an article on Australian dress designer, Mavis Ripper

    Australia: National Journal

    Australia:_National_Journal

  • 1955 in Australian literature
  • Justin Bayard Charmian Clift & George Johnston – The Sponge Divers Dymphna Cusack – The Sun in Exile Mary Durack – Keep Him My Country Barbara Jefferis

    1955 in Australian literature

    1955_in_Australian_literature

  • List of years in Australian literature
  • 1951 in Australian literature: Death of Daisy Bates; Come In Spinner – Dymphna Cusack & Florence James; The Great South Land: An Epic Poem – Rex Ingamells

    List of years in Australian literature

    List_of_years_in_Australian_literature

  • Sydney Writers Walk
  • Series of commemorative plaques on Circular Quay, Sydney

    seemed to be skating across a sheet of beaten bronze. Wet Graves (1981) Dymphna Cusack * 1902–1981 Around them the jacaranda broke in a purplish shower, motionless

    Sydney Writers Walk

    Sydney Writers Walk

    Sydney_Writers_Walk

  • The Ancient (poem)
  • Poem by Mary Gilmore

    Robertson, 1964 Mary Gilmore : A Tribute edited by Barrie Ovenden, Dymphna Cusack, and T. Inglis Moore, Australasian Book Society, 1965 Songs for All

    The Ancient (poem)

    The_Ancient_(poem)

  • Australian Walkabout (radio program)
  • Australian radio program 1947–1950

    remarkable machine process in the paper mill." Other contributors included Dymphna Cusack who in 1947 wrote and presented Newcastle : Blood on Coal; Bulletin

    Australian Walkabout (radio program)

    Australian_Walkabout_(radio_program)

  • Marie Byles
  • Australian lawyer, explorer, and conservationist (1900–1979)

    unpublished autobiography Source: Marie Byles in libraries (WorldCat catalog) Dymphna Cusack, a lifelong friend after they met at Sydney University First women lawyers

    Marie Byles

    Marie Byles

    Marie_Byles

  • Alice Campion
  • Pseudonym of a group of Australian writers

    Keneally and his daughter Meg Kenneally as well as Florence James and Dymphna Cusack, who wrote the classic Australian novel Come In Spinner. Alice Campion

    Alice Campion

    Alice_Campion

  • 1971 in Australian literature
  • Cleary – Mask of the Andes Kenneth Cook – Piper in the Market-Place Dymphna Cusack – A Bough in Hell Frank Hardy – The Outcasts of Foolgarah Donald Horne

    1971 in Australian literature

    1971_in_Australian_literature

  • Come in Spinner (miniseries)
  • 1990 Australian TV series

    1990 Australian miniseries, based on the novel of the same name by Dymphna Cusack, starring Lisa Harrow, Kerry Armstrong, Rebecca Gibney, Martin Vaughan

    Come in Spinner (miniseries)

    Come_in_Spinner_(miniseries)

  • Debra Adelaide
  • Australian novelist, writer and academic (born 1958)

    of, Gabrielle Carey. A Window in the Dark (1991). Autobiography of Dymphna Cusack Motherlove: Stories About Births, Babies and Beyond (1996) Motherlove

    Debra Adelaide

    Debra_Adelaide

  • Australian Society of Authors
  • council included Nancy Cato, Nan Chauncy, C.B. Christesen, Joan Clarke, Dymphna Cusack, Frank Dalby Davison, Mary Durack Miller, John K. Ewers, Sir Keith Hancock

    Australian Society of Authors

    Australian Society of Authors

    Australian_Society_of_Authors

  • List of plays adapted into feature films: R to Z
  • Roses and Petrol (2008) Tamar Simon Hoffs Red Sky at Morning (1935) Dymphna Cusack Red Sky at Morning (1944) Hartney Arthur The Red Widow (1911) Channing

    List of plays adapted into feature films: R to Z

    List_of_plays_adapted_into_feature_films:_R_to_Z

  • Nationality (poem)
  • Poem by Mary Gilmore

    Robertson, 1964 Mary Gilmore : A Tribute edited by Barrie Ovenden, Dymphna Cusack, and T. Inglis Moore, 1965 Australian Verse from 1805 : A Continuum

    Nationality (poem)

    Nationality_(poem)

  • Black Lightning (disambiguation)
  • Topics referred to by the same term

    unrelated to the DC Comics character Black Lightning (novel), a novel by Dymphna Cusack Black Lightning (radio serial), a 1952 Australian radio serial Black

    Black Lightning (disambiguation)

    Black_Lightning_(disambiguation)

  • Peter Hruby
  • Czech academic and writer (1921–2017)

    Intellectuals (Western Australian Institute of Technology, 1979) Jan Šejna Dymphna Cusack Article: The Burchett Chronicles: new evidence from 1951! containing

    Peter Hruby

    Peter_Hruby

  • You Can't See 'Round Corners (novel)
  • Novel by Jon Cleary

    Ruth Park's The Harp in the South. It was praised by such writers as Dymphna Cusack. However, Cleary was not able to support himself full time with his

    You Can't See 'Round Corners (novel)

    You_Can't_See_'Round_Corners_(novel)

  • 1935 in Australian literature
  • "Mending the Bridge" John Pickard – For the Term of His Natural Life Dymphna Cusack Anniversary Red Sky at Morning : A Play in Three Acts Dulcie Deamer

    1935 in Australian literature

    1935_in_Australian_literature

  • List of Archibald Prize 1938 finalists
  • 1938 Archibald Prize finalists

    Smith Mrs Louisa Smith Joshua Smith John Graham, Esq. Joshua Smith Miss Dymphna Cusack W. Sprenger Self-portrait E. Steitz The hunter M. Summers Self-portrait

    List of Archibald Prize 1938 finalists

    List_of_Archibald_Prize_1938_finalists

  • May Hollinworth
  • Australian theatrical producer and director

    great credit upon the director, May Hollinworth." 1939 Shallow Cups Dymphna Cusack Independent Theatre clubrooms "An evening of five one-act plays by Australian

    May Hollinworth

    May Hollinworth

    May_Hollinworth

  • Cecil Hartt
  • Australian artist

    1197. 'Mutch, Thomas Davies (1885-1958)' (in) Marilla North (editor); Dymphna Cusack, Florence James & Miles Franklin (2001), Yarn Spinners: A Story in Letters

    Cecil Hartt

    Cecil Hartt

    Cecil_Hartt

  • 1951 in Australian literature
  • corruption in Melbourne political life, Power Without Glory Dymphna Cusack – Say No to Death Dymphna Cusack and Florence James – Come In Spinner Eric Lambert –

    1951 in Australian literature

    1951_in_Australian_literature

  • 1936 in Australian literature
  • historical events and publications of Australian literature during 1936. Dymphna Cusack – Jungfrau Eleanor Dark – Return to Coolami Jean Devanny – Sugar Heaven

    1936 in Australian literature

    1936_in_Australian_literature

  • 1967 in Australian literature
  • Nothing, Say Nothing Jon Cleary – The Long Pursuit Kenneth Cook – Tuna Dymphna Cusack – The Sun is Not Enough Catherine Gaskin – Edge of Glass Thomas Keneally

    1967 in Australian literature

    1967_in_Australian_literature

  • 1946 in Australian literature
  • Image "Woman to Child" "Woman to Man" Allison Ind – Australian Bride Dymphna Cusack – Eternal Now : A Play in Three Acts Sumner Locke Elliott – The Invisible

    1946 in Australian literature

    1946_in_Australian_literature

  • 1962 in Australian literature
  • Jon Cleary – The Country of Marriage Kenneth Cook – Chain of Darkness Dymphna Cusack – Picnic Races Catherine Gaskin – I Know My Love George Johnston – The

    1962 in Australian literature

    1962_in_Australian_literature

  • 1969 in Australian literature
  • 1969. Mena Calthorpe – The Defectors Jon Cleary – Remember Jack Hoxie Dymphna Cusack – The Half-Burnt Tree Sumner Locke Elliott – Edens Lost George Johnston

    1969 in Australian literature

    1969_in_Australian_literature

  • 1981 Australia Day Honours
  • community. Professor Lloyd Woodrow Cox For service to the community. Ellen Dymphna Cusack For service to literature. Beatrice Deloitte Davis John Noel Whitefoord

    1981 Australia Day Honours

    1981_Australia_Day_Honours

  • 1945 in Australian literature
  • Ballads and Other Verses Judith Wright "South of My Days" "The Surfer" Dymphna Cusack – Lure of the Inland Sea Morris West – The Mask of Marius Melville A

    1945 in Australian literature

    1945_in_Australian_literature

  • 1961 in Australian literature
  • Bertram Chandler – The Rim of Space Kenneth Cook – Wake in Fright Dymphna Cusack – Heatwave in Berlin Nene Gare – The Fringe Dwellers Xavier Herbert

    1961 in Australian literature

    1961_in_Australian_literature

  • 1964 in Australian literature
  • Flight of Chariots Charmian Clift – Honour's Mimic Peter Cowan – Summer Dymphna Cusack – Black Lightning Lola Irish – Shadow Mountain George Johnston The Far

    1964 in Australian literature

    1964_in_Australian_literature

  • 1902 in Australian literature
  • Florence James, novelist, literary agent (died 1993) 21 September – Dymphna Cusack, novelist (died 1981) A list, ordered by date of death (and, if the

    1902 in Australian literature

    1902_in_Australian_literature

  • Felicity Pulman
  • Australian author

    Garden', 2003 Helen Wilson award for short story, 'Babes and Sucklings' Dymphna Cusack award for short story, 'The Great Tsongololo Race' CBCA Notable Book

    Felicity Pulman

    Felicity_Pulman

  • 1939 in Australian literature
  • publishes its first issue. Erle Cox – Fool's Harvest Miles Franklin and Dymphna Cusack – Pioneers on Parade Michael Innes – Stop Press Will Lawson – In Ben

    1939 in Australian literature

    1939_in_Australian_literature

  • John E. C. Appleton
  • Australian director

    (Quintero brothers trans. Harley Granville-Barker) Red Sky at Night (Dymphna Cusack – a member of SPC) Dragon's Teeth (Shirland Quin) Haunted Houses (Geoffrey

    John E. C. Appleton

    John_E._C._Appleton

  • List of Irish people
  • Catherine Cusack – stage and TV actor; daughter of Cyril Cusack Cyril Cusack – actor of stage, film and TV (born in South Africa) Niamh Cusack – TV actress;

    List of Irish people

    List of Irish people

    List_of_Irish_people

  • 1953 in Australian literature
  • and George Johnston – The Big Chariot Alec Coppel – The Last Parable Dymphna Cusack – Southern Steel Eleanor Dark – No Barrier Helen Heney – Dark Moon T

    1953 in Australian literature

    1953_in_Australian_literature

  • T. Inglis Moore
  • Australian writer, critic and editor (1901–1978)

    criticism Mary Gilmore : A Tribute (1965) edited with Barrie Ovenden and Dymphna Cusack Rolf Boldrewood (1968) biography Social Patterns in Australian Literature

    T. Inglis Moore

    T._Inglis_Moore

  • Mena Calthorpe
  • Australian writer

    meetings of the Fellowship of Australian Writers and befriended Dymphna and Mary Cusack and Florence James. Calthorpe had three novels published. Her first

    Mena Calthorpe

    Mena_Calthorpe

  • Joan Long
  • Australian producer, writer and director

    The Canberra Times (Trove) 22 June 1976: 11. Retrieved 11 March 2016 Cusack, Dymphna, et al. Yarn Spinners: A Story in Letters. Univ. of Queensland Press

    Joan Long

    Joan_Long

  • Irish diaspora
  • Irish people and their descendants living outside Ireland

    the original on 30 January 2018. Retrieved 10 December 2018. Lonergan, Dymphna, Sounds Irish: The Irish Language in Australia, Lythrum Press, 2004; ISBN 1

    Irish diaspora

    Irish diaspora

    Irish_diaspora

  • Wendy Hiller
  • English stage and film actress (1912–2003)

    nomination as Best Dramatic Actress. The production also featured Cyril Cusack and Franchot Tone. Her final appearance on Broadway was as Miss Tina in

    Wendy Hiller

    Wendy Hiller

    Wendy_Hiller

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DYMPHNA CUSACK

  • Nympha
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Greek, Netherlands

    Nympha

    Bride

    Nympha

  • Daphna
  • Girl/Female

    Hebrew

    Daphna

    Victory.

    Daphna

  • DYMPNA
  • Female

    English

    DYMPNA

    Variant spelling of English Dymphna, DYMPNA means "little fawn."

    DYMPNA

  • Daphna
  • Girl/Female

    French, German, Greek, Hebrew

    Daphna

    Victory; Laurel

    Daphna

  • Sorcha
  • Girl/Female

    Irish

    Sorcha

    From sorcha meaning “bright, radiant, light.” Popular in the Middle Ages, the name has become popular again in recent years partly due to the success of the Irish actress Sorcha Cusack in Britain. Incidentally, her actor sisters are named Sinead and Niamh.

    Sorcha

  • Dymphna
  • Girl/Female

    Australian, Celtic, Christian, Gaelic, Irish

    Dymphna

    Suitable One; Virgin Saint; Name of a Saint; Fawn; Little Fawn

    Dymphna

  • Dymphna
  • Girl/Female

    Gaelic Irish

    Dymphna

    Little poet.

    Dymphna

  • Dimpana
  • Girl/Female

    Indian

    Dimpana

    Star; Money

    Dimpana

  • DYMPHNA
  • Female

    English

    DYMPHNA

    Anglicized form of Irish Gaelic Damhnait, DYMPHNA means "little fawn."

    DYMPHNA

  • Dympna
  • Girl/Female

    Irish

    Dympna

    From the Irish name Damhnait, meaning fit or eligible. Famous bearer: The martyr St Dympna,...

    Dympna

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Online names & meanings

  • Vinochan
  • Boy/Male

    Bengali, Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi

    Vinochan

    Lord Shiva

  • Jatinderbir
  • Boy/Male

    Indian, Punjabi, Sikh

    Jatinderbir

    Brave as the Lord

  • Shumaylah
  • Girl/Female

    Arabic, Muslim

    Shumaylah

    The First Woman in Islam who Wore Coloured Garments was Shumaylah; Wife of Al-abbas and She was also the First to Prepare Perfume; Daughter of Ali Bin Ibrahim was a Narrator of Hadith

  • HILTRUDE
  • Female

    German

    HILTRUDE

    Variant spelling of German Hiltraud, HILTRUDE means "battle strength."

  • Jasapal
  • Boy/Male

    Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Sikh, Telugu

    Jasapal

    Very Famous; God Shiva

  • Crissa
  • Girl/Female

    Scottish Irish

    Crissa

    Abbreviation of Christine. Follower of Christ.

  • Gizela
  • Girl/Female

    Czechoslovakian, German, Polish, Teutonic

    Gizela

    Pledge; Hostage

  • Torr
  • Surname or Lastname

    English

    Torr

    English : topographic name for someone who lived by a tor or rocky hilltop (Old English torr, of Celtic origin), or a habitational name from any of the places named with this word, for example Torre or Torr in Devon, where the surname is frequent.English : nickname for someone thought to resemble a bull, Anglo-Norman French tor (Latin taurus).English : perhaps a habitational name from a minor place in Fife.

  • Souju
  • Girl/Female

    Indian, Telugu

    Souju

    Compassion

  • ZALMON
  • Male

    English

    ZALMON

    Anglicized form of Hebrew Tsalmown, ZALMON means "shady." In the bible, this is the name of one of king David's warriors.

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AI searchs for Acronyms & meanings containing DYMPHNA CUSACK

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Other words and meanings similar to

DYMPHNA CUSACK

AI search in online dictionary sources & meanings containing DYMPHNA CUSACK

DYMPHNA CUSACK

  • Nympha
  • n.

    Two folds of mucous membrane, within the labia, at the opening of the vulva.

  • Tympana
  • pl.

    of Tympanum

  • Nymph/
  • pl.

    of Nympha

  • Nympha
  • n.

    Same as Nymph, 3.