Chris Korte's New Zealand Genealogy Project

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News articles about Coralie Stanley and Coralie Stanley McKellar. 


Selected Australian and New Zealand articles about Coralie Stanley, or after marriage, about Coralie Stanley McKellar.
Coralie also used a nom de plume, Lalie Seton Cray initially when publishing in Australia.


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1922 Publishing - Sydney

The following newspaper reports outline Coralie McKellar's involvement in publishing in Sydney. Coralie moved to Sydney in April 1920. She initially published under the non de plume Lalie Seton Cray.

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REVIEW NOTES.

The Triad

The Triad is out with a special Spring number resplendent in colour and sparkling with wit. While retaining all its felicity of diction and its old time values as a guide in matters "literary, pictorial, musical and dramatic art," this magazine has become a very fine example of the printer's art. Prank Morton corruscates as brilliantly as ever and Lalie Seton Cray writes from the woman's standpoint, in prose and verse, with almost diabolic cleverness. There is an appreciation of Dora Ohlfsen's work, "one of the few Australian sculptors that amount to anything," with a reproduction of her statuette of the New Zealand beauty, Miss Eve Balfour, and of her bust of Miss Nellie Stewart, which is declared to be "the finest portrait yet of Australia's best-loved actress." And how many of you have heard of Marie Bjelke Petersen, the "young Australian novelist who is honoured most outside her own country," whose latest book, "The Immortal Flame," has just been published by Harpers, London. The coloured reproduction this month is of Herman Richer's "After the Bath."

Source: Murray Pioneer and Australian River Record (Renmark, SA), 30 September 1921, Page 15.

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WOMAN'S WORLD.

MATTERS OF INTEREST FROM FAR AND NEAR

Mrs. Coralie Stanley McKellar, who contributes largely each month to the "Triad" and "Stage and Society" magazines is now on the permanent staff of the "Daily Telegraph" (Sydney). She is engaged on a book of poems dealing with slum life in Sydney, which will shortly be published. As a successful writer of songs, she is well known throughout New Zealand and America. She received her early education at Princethorpe Convent, Warwickshire, and St. Margaret's College. Edinburgh. For a year she was in the literary department of the "Evening Star," Dunedin.

Source: The Dominion (Wellington), 18 May 1922, Page 2.




Owner of original Chris Korte
File name documents/folio/coraliereports/192205181.html
File Size 2.68 KB
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Folio version v13.0.0.37 (B241124-155513)
Linked to Coralie Hope Isobel Seymour WALKER
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