Jocasta Innes

Jocasta Claire Traill Innes[1] (21 May 1934 20 April 2013) was a British writer, journalist and businesswoman.

Jocasta Innes

Life

Innes was born in Nanjing, China, the eldest of three daughters born to Paul Joseph Anthony Innes, a Shell Oil executive and Alice Eileen née Traill, an Irish-Argentinian teacher who ran a school for the children of other British-born residents.[2] By the age of twelve she had lived on every continent in the world, except Antarctica. After a spell at a Coptic convent in Cairo, she was educated at Bedford High School from 1949 and Girton College, Cambridge where she read Modern Languages.[3][4]

One of her first jobs was with the Evening Standard’s Londoners Diary, where she was known for the utterly charming way in which she gatecrashed the debutante balls that were diary fodder at the time.[2]

Her first book was the bestselling The Pauper's Cookbook[5] (1971), born as she said "out of necessity" during an impecunious spell. A self-taught cook, who idolised Elizabeth David, she was determined to show that making great food does not depend on buying expensive ingredients or having special expertise. This was followed by The Pauper’s Homemaking Book in 1976[6] which took the same democratic approach to interiors and The Country Kitchen[7] which dealt with old-fashioned rural British cookery and crafts – Damson Cheese, curing hams in saltpetre and parsnip wine.

In 1981 she published Paint Magic,[8] which popularized the practices of stenciling, stippling and the pleasures of festoon blinds. It went on to sell over a million copies around the world. At a time when DIY meant rawlplugs and melamine kitchen units, Innes introduced middle England to a world of pelmets and passementerie. In 1983 she became the Design Editor of Cosmopolitan magazine. She established her own paint company, Paint Magic, which had several stores in the UK and abroad. The company, of which Innes was chief executive,[9] pioneered innovative ready-made paint finishes for customers to try out at home as well as giving popular decorating classes. Paint Magic ceased trading after a decade.[4]

Innes moved to Spitalfields in the 1979,[10] where she renovated a derelict house,[2] and was a passionate campaigner for the regeneration of the area.

Family life

Innes married twice, to Richard B. Goodwin the film producer (the relationship ended in 1967)[4] and Joe Potts the novelist.[11] Goodwin and Innes had a daughter, Daisy, born in 1961.[12] The couple split in 1979.[4]

For the last thirty years her partner was the architect Sir Richard MacCormac, a former president of the RIBA. The couple first met in 1981. Their graves are side by side in the churchyard of St. Mary’s, Laverton in Somerset.

Jocasta was survived by her partner who died in 2014, and her four children, Daisy Goodwin, Jason Goodwin, Tabitha and Chloe Potts, and nine grandchildren.

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References

  1. Levy, Paul (1 January 2017). "Innes, Jocasta Claire Traill (1934-2013)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 9 May 2020.
  2. Paul Levy "Jocasta Innes: Cookery and design writer who transformed our approach to home-making", The Independent, 26 April 2013
  3. Obituary: Jocasta Innes, telegraph.co.uk, 23 April 2013
  4. Veronica Horwell Obituary: Jocasta Innes, The Guardian, 24 April 2013
  5. The Pauper's Cookbook (Penguin Handbooks) ISBN 0140461647
  6. The Pauper's Homemaking Book (Penguin Handbooks) ISBN 0140462244
  7. The Country Kitchen (Frances Lincoln) ISBN 0711204837
  8. Paint Magic, Frances Lincoln Ltd ISBN 07112 2272 X
  9. Emma Cook "How We Met: Jocasta Innes and Richard MacCormac", The Independent, 15 June 1997
  10. Goodwin, J. (2014) 'The Innes Effect' in The World of interiors. London Condé Nast Publications Ltd. March 2014 pp. 129–137
  11. Tabitha Potts Obituary: Joe Potts, The Guardian, 31 January 2012
  12. Horwell, Veronica (2013-04-24). "Jocasta Innes obituary". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-10-14.
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