- Theodora Keogh
Theodora Keogh (June 30, 1919 – January 5, 2008) was an American novelist writing in the 1950s and 1960s.
Life
Born Theodora Roosevelt in
New York , Keogh was the granddaughter of presidentTheodore Roosevelt and the eldest of three daughters born toArchibald Bulloch Roosevelt , Theodore Roosevelt’s third son. Archie Roosevelt served in the Army inWorld War II and received theSilver Star . He later was chairman of Roosevelt & Cross, aWall Street investment firm. Keogh’s mother was Grace Lockwood, daughter of Thomas Lockwood and Emmeline Stackpole ofBoston . In her later life, Keogh played down her Roosevelt connections as she wanted her writings and her talents to be judged on their own merits.Keogh was brought up on the
East River and in the country atCold Spring Harbor , New York nearOyster Bay . She attended the Chapin School and finished her education at Countess Montgelas’s inMunich ,Germany . Keogh was briefly a debutante in New York and then began her professional life as a dancer inSouth America and inCanada . In 1945, she gave up dancing when she married the costumer, Tom Keogh. The couple moved toParis ,France where he designed for thetheater and theballet and worked as anillustrator forVogue magazine from 1947 to 1951. Tom Keogh designed costumes for such movies as “The Pirate” (1948) withJudy Garland and “Daddy Long Legs” (1955) withLeslie Caron . The couple eventually divorced but stayed friends until Tom Keogh’s death in 1980.Through her friendships in Paris, Theodora Keogh became connected with writers and editors for the
Paris Review , includingGeorge Plimpton andPeter Matthiessen , co-founders of the Review; Scottish novelistAlexander Trocchi ; the poetChristopher Logue ; andAlabama poet and screenwriterEugene Walter . After Paris, Keogh lived inRome ,Italy , and New York. Influenced by theGreta Garbo film “Anna Christie,” Keogh bought atugboat , which she sailed in theAtlantic Ocean . Her interest in tugboats also led to her second marriage to Thomas (Tommy) O’Toole, a tugboat captain. After O’Toole left her, she lived in the Chelsea Hotel in New York, where she kept amargay , a South American tiger-cat similar to anocelot , for company. One night, after Keogh had drunk too much and was asleep, the margay chewed one of Keogh’s ears. Keogh remained self-conscious of the injury, which she considered disfiguring to her face and natural beauty, and spent much time adapting her hairstyles to cover the missing ear.In the 1970s, Keogh moved to
North Carolina where she became friends with the wife of Arthur A. Rauchfuss, owner of a chemical plant. In 1979, after the Rauchfusses divorced, Keogh married Arthur, who died in 1989. Keogh lived in North Carolina until her death in 2008. She spent her final years in a house with nineteen acres on which she kept cats and chickens, until she gave up on keeping chickens because they were being eaten bycoyotes .Keogh’s Writing Career
Keogh wrote nine novels during the period of 1950 to 1962, at which time she gave up writing completely. Her novels tended to focus on characters with psychological conflicts and often dark sides to their personalities. In this regard, Keogh’s themes are similar to those of novelist
Patricia Highsmith , most noted for “Strangers on a Train” and “The Talented Mr. Ripley.” Like Highsmith, Keogh created characters who seemed quite normal on the surface and in relation to the social conventions of their day, but who had another side to their lives and their identities.Keogh’s works explored such dark areas and themes as rape, incest, double lives, and a doctor’s psychological and emotional fascination with a child criminal. Keogh’s novels were also noteworthy for exploring gay and lesbian themes, which were daring topics for the era in which she was writing. Such daring themes brought Keogh a measure of notoriety in her day.
Keogh’s novels were largely neglected after the 1960s but were rediscovered and reissued by Olympia Press during 2002-2007. The attention to her work after about thirty to forty years of dormancy brought both surprise and delight to Keogh in the final years of her life.
Keogh’s works were reprinted primarily for three reasons. First, Keogh’s style is very modern and represents a transition from
Romanticism tomodernism andpostmodernism that mirrors not only writers like Highsmith but alsoRaymond Chandler andDashiell Hammett . Second, Keogh is admired for her exploration of psychological issues and in thus creating complex characters who often present one personality to the world while having a secret and immoral life that is in contradiction. Explorations of the tensions between the socially accepted and the inwardly rebellious or evil side of the same person’s psyche have made Keogh’s novels of greater interest. Third, Keogh is admired for her explorations of lesbian and gay themes, and this approach has made her popular as one of the writers, likeAnn Bannon ,Marijane Meaker , andDoris Grumbach who opened post-World War II American fiction to explorations ofhomosexuality . Given Keogh’s handling of these themes in often lurid detail also made her popular as one of the early writers oflesbian pulp fiction .Bibliography of Keogh’s Novels
“Meg” (1950); Mass Market Paperback version published in 1956 was titled “Meg: The Secret Life of an Awakening Girl.”
“The Double Door” (1952)
“Street Music” (1952)
“The Fascinator” (1954)
“The Tattooed Heart” (1954)
“My Name Is Rose” (1956)
“The Fetish” (1959); published in America under the title of “The Mistress”
“Gemini” (1961)
“The Other Girl” (1962)
References
[http://americanfiction.wordpress.com/2008/01/29/weve-all-missed-the-boat-on-theodora-keogh/]
[http://www2.nysun.com/article/70584?page_no=2]
[http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;jsessionid=VLTWU3BTAVED1QFIQMGSFGGAVCBQWIV0?view=DETAILS&grid=&xml=/news/2008/01/29/db2901.xml]
[http://www.abebooks.com/docs/Community/Featured/theodora-keogh.shtml]
[http://www.brookspeters.com/?p=610]
[http://sallythebook.wordpress.com/2008/02/06/theodora-roosevelt-dies/]
[http://januarymagazine.com/2008/01/theodora-keogh-dies.html]
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