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Elsie Smeaton Munro

Elizabeth "Elsie" Smeaton Munro was a Scottish writer, singer, and performer.

Early life
Munro was born in Glasgow, the daughter of John M. M. Munro and Margaret Dunlop Smeaton. Her father was a noted electrical and civil engineer, as was her older brother, Donald Smeaton Munro. Her younger brother, Ion Smeaton Munro, was a diplomat, journalist, and book collector. Neil Munro was a relative. ==Career==
Career
illustration for Munro's "Six Dead Secrets" in Topsy-Turvy Tales (1923), from the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art Munro starred in a 1904 production of La fille de Madame Angot in Glasgow in 1904. Her short plays Rosemary and The Cottage of Content were performed in Glasgow in 1916, as a wartime benefit for the Limbless Sailors' and Soldiers' Hospital. Munro wrote scripts for the ''Children's Hour programme on BBC Radio, She also wrote two books, Glasgow Flourish (1911), and Topsy-Turvy Tales (1923), a collection of "utterly ridiculous" fairy tales called "refreshingly original" in The Publishers' Circular''. ==Publications==
Publications
Glasgow Flourish: Short Sketches (1911) • Topsy-Turvy Tales (1923, illustrated by W. Heath Robinson) • "Passing Sheep" (poem, in a 1971 anthology of Scottish verse) ==Personal life and legacy==
Personal life and legacy
Munro married engineer William Inglis Bilsland in 1913. and she died in 1961, at the age of 79. The Elsie Smeaton Munro Collection of Theatre Memorabilia is in the Scottish Theatre Archive at Glasgow University Library. ==References==
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