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Anna Leonowens



Anna Leonowens
Born November 5 1834(1834--)
Flag of Wales Caernarvon, Wales
Died January 19 1915 (aged 80)
Flag of Canada Montréal, Québec, Canada

Anna Leonowens (November 5, 1834 - January 19, 1915) is chiefly famous for being the British governess portrayed in the book and film Anna and the King of Siam and in the musical adapted from it, The King and I. The musical play, based on adaptations of her factually controversial memoirs, provides a fictionalised look at her life in the royal court of Siam (present-day Thailand).

Early life and family

Leonowens claimed in her memoirs to have been born Anna Harriette Crawford in Caernarfon, Wales, on 5 November 1834, daughter of Thomas Crawford, a British Army captain, who died in action after her birth. However, contemporary research by W.S. Bristowe has discovered no record of her birth in Wales, nor can her alleged father be found in the Army records. The same research has suggested that she was born in India in November 1831, of an English father, Thomas Edwards, a cabinetmaker turned British Army sergeant who died soon after her birth, and a partly East Indian mother, Mary Anne Glasscott, and that her maiden name was Ann Harriet Edwards. If true, this would not be consistent with Leonowens' claim that she moved to India at the age of fifteen to live with her mother, after growing up with relatives and in boarding school.

Leonowens' widowed mother married Patrick Donohoe (an Irish corporal awarded the Victoria Cross circa 1857 for bravery) in Bombay, India. In 1845, her elder sister, Eliza Julia, married Edward John Pratt, a British civil servant who had served in the Indian Navy. Eliza and Edward had a son, Edward John Pratt, Jr., who in 1887, with his wife, Eliza Sarah Millard, produced a son named William Henry Pratt, better known as film star Boris Karloff.

Marriage and widowhood

It was in India that she met and married in 1849, Thomas Leon Owens, a civilian clerk (and not an Army officer as she wrote in her books). After the death of their first child they reportedly set out for England, eventually settling in London where they brought up two healthy children, Avis and Louis. W.S. Bristowe's research has suggested, however, that the young Owens family moved frequently throughout Asia.

Avis would go on to marry Thomas Fyshe, a Canadian banker. Louis T. Leonowens moved to Siam with his mother during her stay at the Siamese court and became an officer in the Siamese royal cavalry. He married Caroline Knox, a daughter of Sir Thomas George Knox, the British consul-general in Bangkok (1824–1887), and a Siamese wife, Prang Somkok, who died in 1888. Louis went on to found the trading company that bears his name to this day.

Thomas Leon Owens found work as a hotel keeper in Malaya but died of apoplexy in Penang in 1859, at age 33, leaving Anna an impoverished widow. She had never before needed, or planned, to work outside the home. The only way she now had of supporting herself, however, was to become a teacher, and so she opened a school for the children of officers in Singapore. She also changed her surname to Leonowens, which was how her husband's surname was written on his death certificate.

Royal governess

Though successful, the school could not support the family financially, and Anna decided to accept an offer made by the Siamese consul in Singapore to become a teacher of the children of the King Mongkut. She succeeded Dan Beach Bradley as teacher of the English language.

It is not clear why she sent her daughter to school in the United Kingdom, and took son with her to Bangkok, though no doubt the position of women in the royal palace would not have allowed her children to be treated equally. Around the time of her arrival, the King's eldest son, Chulalongkorn, was elevated to a position equivalent to Crown Prince, whilst his eldest daughter was enduring quite a different ceremony, that of the tonsure. With 82 children and 39 wives, it was hardly likely the King and his ministers would take much notice of a woman, even a European woman responsible for the education of the King's children. King Mongkut, however, was a learned and cultured man, who was breaking new ground simply by deciding to educate his wives and children.

Relations with King Mongkut

King Mongkut was a complex individual. Educated and intelligent, he was nevertheless constrained by his own upbringing and traditions. He may have felt a degree of respect for the European woman — otherwise he would not have employed her as one of the teachers of his much-loved children.

Leonowens wrote of the King's alleged torture and execution of a girl, Tuptim, in her second book, Romance of the Harem, a collection of stories about oppressed Siamese. However, historians argue that this incident was not recorded by any other Bangkok expatriates, which makes it unlikely to have happened.

Anna's departure from Siam had nothing to do with the King's death, and he did not plead with her to remain[citation needed]. However, she was in the process of negotiating a return to his court when he was taken ill and died. Fifteen-year-old Chulalongkorn wrote her a warm letter of thanks for her services, but did not invite her to return to Siam.

That the King held Anna in some regard is indicated by the fact that she and her son were both mentioned in his will, though they never received the legacy.

Relations with King Chulalongkorn

The young Chulalongkorn, who succeeded his father, made many reforms, including the abolition of the practice of prostration before the royal person. Anna cannot be given complete credit for this[citation needed], but she no doubt had some influence on him. By this time she was already contributing articles based on her experiences to the Atlantic Monthly, which were later expanded into two volumes of memoirs which earned her immediate fame[citation needed].

She became personally acquainted with Harriet Beecher Stowe, author of Uncle Tom's Cabin, a book whose anti-slavery message had not been lost on some of Anna's pupils in Siam. She visited the United States, Imperial Russia and other European countries, and eventually met King Chulalongkorn again when he visited London in 1897, thirty years after she had left Siam. He himself expressed his debt to her on that occasion.

Later years

Anna came to the United States and after her first book was published, worked as a teacher at the Berkeley School in New York City beginning in the fall of 1880. Her name appears in ads for the school in the New York Times in the late summer of 1880. Later she went to live in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada, where she became involved in women's education, and was a suffragette and one of the founders of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design. After 19 years, she moved to Montreal.

Anna Leonowens died on January 19, 1916, at 83 years of age, and was interred in the Mount Royal Cemetery in Montreal, Quebec.

Truth or fiction?

Leonowens presented her own account as factual, and for most of the 20th century it was accepted by most in the West[citation needed] as such, despite being strongly disputed in Thailand. The regular appearance of the story in various dramatic productions, plus Anna Leonowens' own ability to obscure the truth during her own lifetime, meant that the fictional and true accounts of Anna Leonowens' life became very confused.

It was, in the end, a chance discovery by a scientist which brought inconsistencies in her accounts and the historical record to more general attention. In the 1970s, Dr. W.S. Bristowe, a regular visitor to the Far East in search of spiders, was researching a biography of Leonowens' son, the successful businessman Louis T. Leonowens. After meticulous research Bristowe came to believe that significant parts of the famous tale were fictional. He located her actual birth certificate, marriage record and other pertinent legal documents and published a book about his findings called Louis and the King of Siam in 1976. Nevertheless, Bristowe's work is not universally accepted, and accounts of Leonowens' life still vary. The true story of Anna Leonowens' life may never wholly be clear.

Anna Leonowens in fiction and film

It was only after Margaret Landon's novelisation of the original Leonowens memoirs in 1944 that the story of Anna and her stay in Siam became popular. It was quickly made into a film, Anna and the King of Siam, which took artistic liberties with the plot; and the musical by Rodgers & Hammerstein followed not long afterwards, making even more drastic changes. In 1972 an American TV series with Samantha Eggar playing Leonowens was produced. In 1999, Jodie Foster starred in Anna and the King, and a cartoon version of The King and I was released. Revived many times on stage, the musical has remained a favourite of the theatre-going public. However, the Rodgers and Hammerstein film is still banned in Thailand.

References

Most Thai were shocked by the portrayal of their revered nineteenth-century king, Mongkut, in the musical The King and I. The stage and screen versions were based on Margaret Landon's 1944 book entitled Anna and the King of Siam. To correct the record, well-known Thai intellectuals Seni and Kukrit Pramoj wrote this account in 1948. The Pramoj brothers sent their manuscript to the American politician and diplomat Abbot Low Moffat 1901-1996), who drew on it for his biography entitled Mongkut the King of Siam (1961). Moffat donated the Pramoj manuscript to the Library in 1961. (Southeast Asian Collection, Asian Division, Library of Congress)
  • Louis and the King of Siam, W.S. Bristowe, Chatto & Windus, 1976, ISBN 0-7011-2164-5
  • Anna Leonowens: A Life Beyond The King and I, Leslie Smith Dow, Pottersfield Press, 1992, ISBN 0-919001-69-6

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