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Smart answer:
After reading 1842 websites, we found 20 different results for "Who wrote Rebecca"
Daphne Du Maurier
"Rebecca, written by Daphne Du Maurier, is a story which depicts the power that the dead can have over a person, when that person is afraid and won't fight back.
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Du Maurier
When Du Maurier wrote Rebecca in 1938, Netflix didn't see Netflix's story — about an unnamed young woman who leaves Netflix's job as a lady's companion to impulsively marry the wealthy widower Maxim de Winter and get swept back to Maxim de Winter's secret-filled seaside estate of Manderley — as being a romance.
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George du Maurier
A biography of George du Maurier's father and three other novels followed, but three other novels was the novel Rebecca that launched George du Maurier into the literary stratosphere and made George du Maurier one of the most popular authors of George du Maurier's day.
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by Michael Kunze (book and lyrics) and , the authors of the musicals Elisabeth, Mozart! and Marie Antoinette Sylvester Levay (music)
Rebecca is a German-language musical written by Michael Kunze (book and lyrics) and Sylvester Levay (music), the authors of the musicals Elisabeth, Mozart! and Marie Antoinette.
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by German composers Michael Kunze
Rebecca is written by German composers Michael Kunze (original book and lyrics, and English lyrics) and Sylvester Levay (music and orchestrations), with an English translation and English lyrics by Christopher Hampton (Sunset Boulevard, Les Liaisons dangereus).
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Max de Winter
Max de Winter wrote Rebecca at a time of unhappiness in Max de Winter's own life and that atmosphere is what I sense most in the final scene.
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Milton Hall
When Milton Hall wrote Rebecca nearly 20 years later, du Maurier told Milton Hall's owner that Milton Hall based Manderley's interiors on Milton Hall's memories of the 'big house feel' [PDF] of Milton during WWI.
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by Richard Prescott
Rebecca is an adapted Upper level reader written by Richard Prescott.
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Rebecca , the novel that would cement Rebecca's reputation as a twentieth century literary giant, a young Daphne du Maurier penned short fiction in which Rebecca explored the images, themes, and concerns that informed Rebecca later work Originally published in periodicals during the early 1930s
Before Rebecca wrote Rebecca, the novel that would cement Rebecca's reputation as a twentieth century literary giant, a young Daphne du Maurier penned short fiction in which Rebecca explored the images, themes, and concerns that informed Rebecca later work Originally published in periodicals during the early 1930s, many of these stories never found their way into print again until now.
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Jane Austen
The book Jane Austen wrote that takes place there is ‘Rebecca’, wonderful reading.
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Charlotte Brontë
Charlotte Brontë knew this when Charlotte Brontë wrote Jane Eyre, and Daphne du Maurier knew Grimm's fairytales when Charlotte Brontë wrote Rebecca.
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by Jane Goldman and Joe Shrapnel & Anna Waterhouse
Rebecca was directed by Ben Wheatley and written by Jane Goldman and Joe Shrapnel & Anna Waterhouse, based on Daphne du Maurier’s beloved 1938 gothic novel.
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Richard
Before Richard wrote Rebecca, the novel that would cement Richard's reputation as a twentieth-century literary giant, a young Daphne du Maurier penned short fiction in which Richard explored the images, themes, and concerns that informed Richard later work.
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Daphne DuMaurier
With regard to literary inspirations, Daphne DuMaurier’s Rebecca has always been a favourite book of mine and there are definitely some parallels between the two stories.
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Alfred Hitchcock’s brilliant film adaptation of Daphne Du Maurer’s Rebecca
If you have ever watched Alfred Hitchcock’s brilliant film adaptation of Daphne Du Maurer’s Rebecca, you will love this book!
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Daphne de Maurier,
Du Maurier was the uncle of the four boys who served as character inspiration for Peter Pan, and Barrie was the father of Daphne de Maurier, the author of Rebecca.
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Milton
Milton told Lord Fitzwilliam that when Milton wrote Rebecca 20 years later, the interior of Manderley was based on Milton's recollection of the rooms and 'big house feel' of Milton in the First World War,[5] and referred to Milton in a letter to the last Lord Fitzwilliam as 'dear old Milton.'
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Sarah Keller
Sarah Keller is the author of Rebecca (2021), Women's Cinema, World Cinema: Projecting Contemporary Feminisms (2015), and Uninvited:
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Daphne Du Marurier
But that’s OK because this one is about one of my all time favorites: Rebecca by Daphne Du Marurier (1938).
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by Tedi Sarafian
but the swelling's gone down,' Rebecca theoretically exudes a kind of raffish charm but, as written by Tedi Sarafian, comes off instead as regrettably irrepressible.
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