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  1. Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory, nascida Isabella Augusta Persse, (Roxborough, 15 de março de 1852—22 de maio de 1932) [1] foi uma dramaturga e folclorista anglo-irlandesa. Com William Butler Yeats e Edward Martyn, co-fundou o Irish Literary Theatre e o Abbey Theatre, e escreveu numerosas obras curtas para as duas empresas.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lady_GregoryLady Gregory - Wikipedia

    Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory (née Persse; 15 March 1852 – 22 May 1932) was an Anglo-Irish dramatist, folklorist and theatre manager. With William Butler Yeats and Edward Martyn, she co-founded the Irish Literary Theatre and the Abbey Theatre, and wrote numerous short works for both companies.

  3. 18 de mai. de 2024 · Augusta, Lady Gregory was an Irish writer and playwright who, by her translations of Irish legends, her peasant comedies and fantasies based on folklore, and her work for the Abbey Theatre, played a considerable part in the late 19th-century Irish literary renascence.

  4. Gregory, (Isabella) Augusta (1852–1932), Lady Gregory, writer, folklorist and patron of the arts, was born Isabella Augusta Persse at Roxborough House, Co. Galway, on 15 March 1852. She was the ninth of thirteen children (eight boys and five girls) of Dudley Persse and his second wife Frances (née Barry).

  5. Isabella Augusta, Lady Gregory, née Isabella Augusta Persse, most commonly known as Lady Gregory, was an Irish writer, a playwright, and a translator. Her commitment to works in the Irish language was vital to the Irish literary revival of the late 1800s.

  6. Lady Augusta Gregory, herself a member of the Ascendancy, was – ironically – one of the primary agents of that change, helping to revitalize Irish culture and bring its literature and drama to world acclaim.

  7. Isabella Augusta Persse was born on March 15, 1852, the youngest of sixteen children in her Irish family. When she was twenty-eight years of age, she married Sir William Henry Gregory, thirty-five years her senior and a landowner and politician, which perhaps influenced Lady Gregory’s own engagement in politics later in her life.