Scott, Evelyn (1893–1963)

views updated

Scott, Evelyn (1893–1963)

American novelist and poet. Name variations: Evelyn Metcalfe. Born Elsie Dunn, Jan 17, 1893, in Clarksville, TN; died 1963 in New York, NY; dau. of Maude Thomas and Seely Dunn; attended Tulane University; m. John Metcalfe (novelist), 1925; children: (with Wellman) son Creighton Scott.

Became a feminist as teenager; ran away to Brazil with married man, Tulane professor Frederick Creighton Wellman (1913); to protect identity, changed her name to Evelyn Scott, while Wellman became Cyril Kay Scott; while in Brazil (1914–20), published poetry in Dial, Egoist, and Poetry magazines; lived in Greenwich Village but moved frequently, living in New Mexico, Bermuda, France, New York, and England; wrote autobiographies Escapade (1923) and Background in Tennessee (1937); published poetry collections, Precipitations (1920) and The Winter Alone (1930); novels include The Narrow House (1921), Narcissus (1922), The Golden Door (1925), and The Wave (1929).

More From encyclopedia.com

About this article

Scott, Evelyn (1893–1963)

Updated About encyclopedia.com content Print Article

You Might Also Like