£2.40
Elusive Pimpernel
“It is only in our beautiful France that wholesale slaughter is done lawfully, in the name of liberty and of brotherly love”
Early Life and Background
Emma Magdolna Rozália Mária Jozefa Borbála Orczy de Orci, or more familiarly known as Baroness Emmuska Orczy, was born on September 23rd, 1865, in Tarnaörs, Heves County, Hungary. The family lived in their ancestral home; a great, rambling farmhouse on the river Tarna. Emmuska’s memories of the time were of sophisticated parties, sparkling conversation, joyful dancing and gypsy music. But soon fear of a peasant uprising meant their moving to Budapest and then 12 years of semi-nomadic travels across Europe.
Move to London and Artistic Pursuits
Arriving in London in 1880, Emmuska, aged 15, was studying painting and, a few years later, had them chosen for exhibition at the Royal Academy. London, she felt, was home, her spiritual birthplace. Art school also provided a husband. It was here she met a young illustrator, Montague Barstow, the son of an English clergyman.
Transition to Writing and The Scarlet Pimpernel
Fearful of mediocrity she plunged headlong into a writing career. And in the weeks after the birth of her son, she wrote the adventure classic for which she is so famed: The Scarlet Pimpernel. Originally rejected, after being re-worked as a successful play, it was published as a book in 1905 and was an instant best-seller.
Later Life and Legacy
In the coming years, they lived on an estate in Kent, a busy and tasteful London home, and an extravagant villa in Monte Carlo. All the while, Emmuska’s pen continued to write adventures for that elusive hero; Sir Percy Blakeney. In 1934, the famed movie producer Alexander Korda turned it into a film starring Leslie Howard. The quintessential Pimpernel of everyone’s imagination now made visual reality. Baroness Orczy, at the age of 82, died on November 12th, 1947, at Henley-on-Thames in South Oxfordshire.