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  1. Clare ( nickname, "Blossom") Bernstein was born November 4, 1925. Writing as Clare Elfman, she was senior literary editor of Buzzine (owned and operated by her son, Richard Elfman). She also wrote theater and book reviews and did interviews.

  2. Apr 10, 2017 · Clare "Blossom" Elfman was an American novelist and senior literary editor of Buzzine. She was the mother of director and publisher Richard Elfman and musician and composer Danny Elfman, Her novel The Girls of Huntington House was produced as a film and received an Emmy as a television movie.

    • (210)
    • April 10, 2017
    • November 4, 1925
  3. www.imdb.com › name › nm0253312Clare Elfman - IMDb

    Clare Elfman was born on 4 November 1925 in the USA. She was a writer and actress, known for CBS Afternoon Playhouse (1978), Trio and Trio. She was married to Milton Elfman. She died on 10 April 2017 in the USA.

    • Writer, Actress, Producer
    • November 4, 1925
    • Clare Elfman
    • April 10, 2017
  4. Richard Elfman was born in the Watts district of Los Angeles. His mother, Blossom Elfman (A.K.A. "Clare Elfman"), was an Emmy-winning novelist.

  5. Feb 13, 1980 · Sixteen-year-old Florrie's dreams of perfect love prove illusive when her boyfriend abandons her once he discovers that she is pregnant, leaving her to decide whether or not to have the baby alone. 160 pages, Paperback. First published February 13, 1980. Book details & editions.

    • (19)
    • Paperback
    • Blossom Elfman
  6. Nov 1, 1978 · Blossom Elfman. 3.66. 29 ratings3 reviews. To achieve independence from a domineering mother and to become women on their own terms, intellectual eighteen-year-old Molly tries to turn romantic fantasy into reality and her sixteen-year-old sister, Shera, meets Brian and becomes pregnant. Genres Young Adult Fiction.

  7. The Unmasking of Oscar Wilde by Joseph Pearce (London, HarperCollins, 2000) THE CASE OF THE PEDERAST'S WIFE by CLARE ELFMAN. Reviewed by Michael Seeney. There are three main characters in this novel: Oscar and Constance Wilde, and a young doctor called Martin Frame who develops (he believes) a 'talking cure' for women.