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Difference between revisions of "Frances Lear and Adoption"

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Lear, Frances. The Second Seduction. (Chatto, 1992)
 
Lear, Frances. The Second Seduction. (Chatto, 1992)
 
Koenig, Rhoda. "Queen Lear," Sunday Times [London], 28 June 1992, p.6/5
 
Koenig, Rhoda. "Queen Lear," Sunday Times [London], 28 June 1992, p.6/5
"Oliver, Myrna. "Frances Lear, Founder of Lear's Magazine, Dies at 73," Los Angeles Times, 30 September 1996. Also available at: [http://www.wcinet.com/th/News/1996/th1002/stories/28231.htm]
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"Oliver, Myrna. "Frances Lear, Founder of Lear's Magazine, Dies at 73," Los Angeles Times, 30 September 1996. Also available at: www.wcinet.com/th/News/1996/th1002/stories/28231.htm
  
 
[[Category: Adoption Celebrities]]
 
[[Category: Adoption Celebrities]]

Latest revision as of 07:01, 27 February 2018

Biography

Lear was born to an unmarried teenager and relinquished for adoption. Her adoptive mother was cold and cruel and her father, whom she loved, died when she was 10. Her step-father sexually abused her and tried to murder her when she disclosed the abuse.

She married Norman Lear, a television producer (All in the Family), but they divorced after 28 years. She used part of her divorce settlement to found and publish the influential feminist women's magazine, Lear's Magazine, from 1988 to 1993.

References

Lear, Frances. The Second Seduction. (Chatto, 1992) Koenig, Rhoda. "Queen Lear," Sunday Times [London], 28 June 1992, p.6/5 "Oliver, Myrna. "Frances Lear, Founder of Lear's Magazine, Dies at 73," Los Angeles Times, 30 September 1996. Also available at: www.wcinet.com/th/News/1996/th1002/stories/28231.htm