Virginia Woolf researched the life of her great-aunt, the photographer
Julia Margaret Cameron, publishing her findings in an essay titled
Pattledom (1925), and later in her introduction to her 1926 edition of Cameron's photographs. She had begun work on a play based on an episode in Cameron's life in 1923, but abandoned it. Finally it was performed on 18 January 1935 at the studio of her sister,
Vanessa Bell on
Fitzroy Street in 1935. Woolf directed it herself, and the cast were mainly members of the
Bloomsbury Group, including Vanessa, her daughter
Angelica Garnett, Virginia's husband
Leonard and
Duncan Grant, Angelica's father.
Freshwater is a short three act comedy
satirizing the
Victorian era. It was not performed again in Woolf's lifetime. It was found among
Leonard Woolf's papers after his death in 1969 and was not published till 1976, when the
Hogarth Press produced an edition, edited by Lucio Ruotolo, who was living in Virginia Woolf's home,
Monk's House, at the time. The edition was illustrated by
Edward Gorey under the pseudonym Loretta Trezzo. == Dramatis personae ==