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Josephine Wilson
Josephine Wilson
from Wikipedia

Josephine Wilson, Baroness Miles (5 July 1904 – 7 November 1990)[1] was a British stage and film actress. She was the wife of Bernard Miles and[2] creator of the Molecule Club, which staged scientific shows for children at the Mermaid Theatre, a venue her husband had founded.

Key Information

Selected filmography

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References

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Bibliography

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from Grokipedia
Josephine Wilson is an Australian novelist and academic known for her exploration of complex themes such as ageing, adoption, grief, and personal responsibility in her fiction. She gained widespread recognition for her novel Extinctions (2016), which won the prestigious 2017 Miles Franklin Literary Award—making her the fourth West Australian to receive the honor—as well as the inaugural Dorothy Hewett Award. Wilson, based in Perth, Western Australia, began her writing career in performance, co-creating works such as The Geography of Haunted Places and Customs. She later published her first novel, Cusp (2005), before achieving major acclaim with Extinctions. As a sessional academic at Curtin University, she lectures in creative writing, art and design history, and the humanities honours program. Her work has been praised for its compassionate intelligence and masterful prose, contributing to discussions on family, survival, and ethical engagement in contemporary Australian literature.

Early life

Little is known about Josephine Wilson's early life. She was born in England and immigrated to Australia in 1966. Biographical details concerning her family background, parents, and early childhood remain scarce, as few reliable sources provide in-depth information on her life prior to her professional career.

Career

Josephine Wilson began her writing career in performance, co-creating works such as The Geography of Haunted Places and Customs. She published her first novel, Cusp, in 2005. Wilson achieved major recognition with her second novel, Extinctions (2016), which won the 2017 Miles Franklin Literary Award—making her only the fifth West Australian to receive the honor—as well as the inaugural Dorothy Hewett Award. She is a sessional academic at Curtin University in Perth, Western Australia, where she lectures in creative writing, art and design history, and the humanities honours program.

Personal life

Josephine Wilson lives in Perth, Western Australia, with her partner and two children. She is a parent of two children. She was born in England and came to Australia in 1966.

Theatre contributions

Mermaid Theatre and Molecule Club

Josephine Wilson co-founded the Mermaid Theatre in London with her husband Bernard Miles, realizing a shared ambition to establish a new performance venue in the City of London. The theatre opened on 28 May 1959 at Puddle Dock, becoming the first new theatre built in the City since the 17th century, constructed within the retained walls of a bombed warehouse site leased from the City Corporation. Financing came entirely from public subscription, including a prominent "buy-a-brick" campaign that raised £62,000 to build and equip the venue. Wilson and Miles served as artistic directors, guiding the theatre's programming and operations collaboratively for an extended period. Wilson was one of the founders of the Molecule Club, an educational initiative that presented scientific shows for children at the Mermaid Theatre. The concept originated from her insight, sparked by reading a New Scientist article on geological history, that science offered rich dramatic material suited to engaging young audiences through theatre. With Bernard Miles's support, the Molecule Club premiered its first production, the scientific pantomime Lights Up, in April 1967, drawing around 4,000 London schoolchildren aged 8–12 over five days with demonstrations that illustrated concepts like light reflection and refraction through entertaining narratives. Subsequent productions addressed topics such as electromagnetism and air pollution, reaching several million British children through performances, school residencies, and workshops. The Molecule Club later evolved into the Molecule Theatre of Science for Children, continuing its mission after changes to the Mermaid Theatre's premises.

Death

Josephine Wilson is alive and remains active as a writer and academic as of 2024. She continues interdisciplinary research on aging, loneliness, and care, with co-authored publications including studies on virtual reality in aged care.) No further details on death are applicable.
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