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df_f_writers_2_para: 19

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rowid first_name last_name gender career_sec personal_sec info seed_first_name seed_last_name occupation
19 Hattie Bunzel f Bellamy was head of the Spoken English and Expression department at High Point College, and taught dramatics; she was active in women's club activities in High Point. She worked at a travel agency in San Francisco. She taught English and wrote in Japan for five years, and in Hong Kong for two years. She edited two books by Kuni SasakiĀ , including Reluctant Bachelor (1962). She wrote poems, songs, plays, and articles, including a song titled "Blues Tokyo" that became popular in Japan. Bellamy also acted through much of her life, performing in school as a girl, and active on stage and backstage with the Morningside Players in New York, the Civic Theater in Washington, D.C., and the Tokyo Amateur Dramatic Club. Ruth Bellamy married and she had a son, David Owen Brownwood, born in Los Angeles in 1935. She married a screenwriter, William A. Golkopf, in 1946, in New York City; they divorced in 1948. She died at Duke University Hospital in Durham, North Carolina, in 1969, aged 62 years. Her papers are archived at East Carolina University. Bunzel was head of the Spoken English and Expression department at High Point College, and taught dramatics; she was active in women's club activities in High Point. She worked at a travel agency in San Francisco. She taught English and wrote in Japan for five years, and in Hong Kong for two years. She edited two books by Kuni SasakiĀ , including Reluctant Bachelor (1962). She wrote poems, songs, plays, and articles, including a song titled "Blues Tokyo" that became popular in Japan. Bunzel also acted through much of her life, performing in school as a girl, and active on stage and backstage with the Morningside Players in New York, the Civic Theater in Washington, D.C., and the Tokyo Amateur Dramatic Club.Hattie Bunzel married and she had a son, David Owen Brownwood, born in Los Angeles in 1935. She married a screenwriter, William A. Golkopf, in 1946, in New York City; they divorced in 1948. She died at Duke University Hospital in Durham, North Carolina, in 1969, aged 62 years. Her papers are archived at East Carolina University. Ruth Bellamy writers
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