Love and the French (1959) Love and the English (1960) Love and the Spanish (1961)
Nina Consuelo Epton (1913 – 29 October 2010)[1] was a British
radio producer,
broadcaster and
travel writer, particularly active in the 1950s and 1960s. She was renowned globally for her explorations and radio commentary [2] and travelled alone through Spain, North Africa, and Indonesia. In the 1970s she published a number of historical works about royalty, two books about cats, and a novel based on the life of
Jane Digby.
Her greatest commercial success was a series of literary, historical and sociological books about amorous relationships: Love and the French (1959), Love and the English (1960), Love and the Spanish (1961). In various combinations these were translated into French, German and Spanish. All three were reprinted by
Penguin Books in 1964–1965.
Life
Early life
Epton was born in
Hampstead to a Scottish father and a Spanish mother. She was educated partly in England and partly in France, graduated from the
University of Paris, and travelled widely.[3]
Career
During the 1950s she was the producer of the BBC's French-Canadian department,[4] with particular responsibility for BBC contributions to the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's French-language newsreel, Revue de l'actualité.[5][6] Between 1953 and 1969 she was also an occasional contributor to the
BBC Home Service and the
BBC Light Programme as a presenter, interviewer, and panellist.[7]
As a travel writer she was considered something of a novelty in the early 1950s, as a good-looking woman who travelled alone and engaged deeply and critically with local conditions.[3]
In the summer of 1946, Nina Epton encountered Moroccan nationalists during her travels in
Tangier, swiftly aligning herself with their cause. [2] Upon her return to London, Epton wrote critical articles about French colonial policies, giving the nationalists considerable publicity. She became the first mainstream Western journalist to portray the
Moroccan nationalist movement sympathetically.
Epton also wrote a book dedicated to the nationalists, chronicling her meetings with nationalist leaders who believed in the power of world public opinion to secure
Moroccan independence. [2] She expressed optimism that the
United Nations would address North African independence and that American support would follow. Her work was praised for portraying Morocco from a Moroccan perspective, giving credibility to the nationalist struggle on the world stage. While the Moroccans valued Epton's advocacy, the colonial authorities perceived her as a threat, leading to her arrest and interrogation in 1947.