C. Antoinette Wood (Jul 1867 – 29 May 1942), was an early 20th century American author and playwright. She was known for being an author of Easy Parliamentary Procedure (3rd ed. published) and for being an author of ten plays which were produced and several of which were published. She published articles in the Boston Transcript and other magazines, winning two prizes for her stories. Wood also lectured on drama and dramatists.
Early life and education
She was born in Brownville, New York. Her parents were Catherine Vogt and Henry Binninger, a German immigrant to New York.
She was a professional writer, lecturer, and dramatist from 1918 onward. Both a poet and a painter.
She also saw 10 of her plays produced.
She worked with George Pierce Baker's Harvard Workshop 47 at Boston, Massachusetts.
Afterwards, she stayed and married husband, George E. Wood, whom she lived with in Brookline, Massachusetts until her death in 1942.
An authority on parliamentary law, she was well known for her book, Easy Parliamentary Procedure
A well-known playwright and a director of the "47 Workshop", she had to her credit a number of poems, several plays, and the book and lyrics of a musical play Why Not? produced in Boston.[3]
"A collection of five plays. One of them being "Buying Culture" by C. Antoinette Wood, - one male, two females. These unusual plays have been selected because they were especially liked by the audiences which attended the first performances of them by the Theatre Guild of Boston. They differ in mood and purpose..."
Ten years later, Buying Culture, one of her more performed plays, was still growing strong and a winner for final selection for one-act plays in 1935.[6]
At the 1940 biennial convention of the National League of American Pen Women, she won first prize for her feature writing Martha Washington at Valley Forge. She was awarded a black onyx compact brought back from Paris by Miss George Elliston, of Cincinnati.[7][8]
Also in 1940, she won for her play A Fighting Chance at a rally of U.S. Pen Women. The headline read Brookline Woman Wins First Prize. Her play was "played before an audience by an all-professional cast".[9]
One Hundred Selected Recipes From the Experience of Chafing Dish Enthusiasts Buffalo, McLaughlin Pr., cop. 1904, 1937.[11]
Our Common Cause, Civilization [Proceedings of the International Congress of Women, July 16-22, 1933, Chicago, Illinois] (New York, NY: National Council of Women of the United States, 1933), 1-992. With Anita Browne.[12]
Partners
The Spellbinder
The Split Second
Trent of the Navy
Under the Thorn Tree
The Unknown Lady
A Wash-lady
Why Not?, a musical
Why Save Time?
Wired Together
The Women Builders
The World's Fair Anthology, 1939 (includes the poem 'Fidelity')[13]
^Browne, Anita; Wood, C. Antoinette. "International Women Writers' Conclave". Alexander Street, Part of Clarivate. National Council of Women of the United States.
^Wood, C. Antoinette (11 July 1940). "Today's Poem: Fidelity". Times Herald (Olean, New York). Newspapers.com.