H. Marion Stephens

{{Short description|American actress and writer}}

File:Harriet Marion Stephens.jpg

Harriet Marion Stephens (1823–1858) was an American actress and writer.

Stephens was born in Maine in 1823 to Reverend John Atwell of the Maine Methodist Conference.

She began her career as an actress, appearing as Mrs. Rosalie Somers before taking up writing instead. Her first pieces, such as a eulogy for Edgar Allan Poe published in Godey's Lady's Book in February 1850, appeared in various periodicals. In 1853 she issued Home Scenes and Home Sounds. The novel Hagar, the Martyr appeared in print the following year (1854);{{Cite web|url=https://librarycompany.org/women/portraits/stephens_hm.htm|title=H. Marion Stephens (1823 – 1858)}} a melodrama featuring a Southern heroine whose ambiguous racial identity serves as a point of tension throughout the story.{{cite book|author1=Louis Antoine Godey|author2=Sarah Josepha Buell Hale|title=Godey's Magazine|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_wI8AQAAMAAJ&pg=PA282|year=1855|publisher=Godey Company|pages=282–}}{{cite book|author=Janet Gabler-Hover|title=Dreaming Black/writing White: The Hagar Myth in American Cultural History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CtBZAAAAMAAJ|year=2000|publisher=University Press of Kentucky|isbn=978-0-8131-2143-7}} It received favorable reviews.{{cite book|title=Norton's Literary Gazette and Publishers' Circular|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A3JWAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA41|year=1855|publisher=C. B. Norton|pages=41–}} Stephens died in East Hampton, Maine.

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