![]() ![]() Du Maurier wrestled with her sexuality and her gender throughout her life. ![]() Du Maurier married Lieutenant General Frederick Browning in 1932, and the pair had three children, whom they raised at Menabily. ![]() Despite the popularity of her work, du Maurier chose to live away from the spotlight, spending most of her life in Cornwall in the west of England, where she rented, restored, and fell in love with the historic estate of Menabily, widely known as a template for Manderley, the setting of du Maurier’s most famous novel, Rebecca. Du Maurier’s family connections (her paternal grandfather was renowned cartoonist and author George du Maurier, and her paternal first cousins were the Llewelyn Davies boys, who inspired the children’s classic Peter Pan) helped launch du Maurier’s early success as a writer. Daphne du Maurier was born in London to Muriel Beaumont, an actress, and Sir Gerald du Maurier, a famous actor and manager. ![]()
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