Aimée Stuart

Using their correspondence, Aimée wrote a cathartic memoir of their wartime life together titled An Airman's Wife: A True Story of Lovers Separated by War, which was published in 1918.

Aimée later married playwright and author Philip Stuart, and together they collaborated on several successful London West End plays in the 1930s, including Lady Clara (1930), Nine Till Six (1930), Borrowed Clothes (1934), and Sixteen (1936).

[6][7] Several of these plays were later made into movies and/or adopted for television, including Nine Till Six (1932) and Borrowed Clothes (1934).

[8][9] She received a posthumous writing credit for Michael Winner's 1983 remake of the 1945 drama The Wicked Lady.

For many years she lunched at the Ivy restaurant and shared her experience and knowledge with younger writers and actors [6] Aimée died on 16 April 1981 in Brighton, East Sussex, England, at the age of 94.