<P> Anna Leonowens met Chulalongkorn again when he visited London in 1897, thirty years after she had left Siam . During this audience the king took the opportunity to express his thanks in person but he also voiced his dismay at the inaccuracies in Leonowens' books . </P> <P> Anna Leonowens died on 19 January 1915, at 83 years of age . She was interred in Mount Royal Cemetery in Montreal . </P> <P> Margaret Landon's novel Anna and the King of Siam (1944) provides a fictionalised look at Anna Leonowens's years at the royal court, developing the abolitionist theme that resonated with her American readership . In 1946, Talbot Jennings and Sally Benson adapted it into the screenplay for a dramatic film of the same name, starring Irene Dunne and Rex Harrison . In response, Thai authors Seni and Kukrit Pramoj wrote their own account in 1948 and sent it to American politician and diplomat Abbot Low Moffat (1901--1996), who drew on it for his biography Mongkut, the King of Siam (1961). Moffat donated the Pramoj brothers' manuscript to the Library of Congress in 1961 . </P> <P> Landon had, however, created the iconic image of Leonowens, and "in the mid-20th century she came to personify the eccentric Victorian female traveler". The novel was adapted as a hit musical by Rodgers and Hammerstein, The King and I (1951), starring Gertrude Lawrence and Yul Brynner, which ran 1,246 performances on Broadway and was also a hit in London and on tour . In 1956, a film version was released, with Deborah Kerr starring in the role of Leonowens and Brynner reprising his role as the king . Revived many times on stage (with Brynner starring in revivals until 1985), the musical has remained a favourite of the theatregoing public . </P>

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