Olivia Dahl

Olivia Twenty Dahl (20 April 1955 -17 November 1962) was the eldest child of the writer Roald Dahl and the American actress Patricia Neal. Dahl died at the age of 7 from measles.
Dahl was born in New York City and grew up in the Buckinghamshire village of Great Missenden. She was named for Olivia, the heroine of William Shakespeare's Twelfth Night, a favourite play of her mother. Her middle name, Twenty, originated from the date of her birth, and the fact that her father had $20 in his pocket when he saw her in hospital for the first time. Neal struggled with Olivia shortly after her birth, but found her behaviour transformed after spending a few weeks with her paternal aunt, Elsie Logsdail. Roald Dahl constructed his writing hut in the orchard of the couple's Gipsy House for peace and quiet to write after her birth. Olivia came home from her school, Godstowe Preparatory School, in November 1962 with a note informing her parents of an outbreak of measles. Neal contacted her brother-in-law, Ashley Miles, who sent them gamma globulin, then common in the United States to boost children's immunity against measles. Miles only provided a small amount, which the Dahls used for their son, Theo. Neal recalled in her autobiography, As I Am, that Miles said that "Let the girls get measles...It will be good for them". Olivia subsequently contracted measles, and had a mild fever for a few days before suffering convulsions after growing increasingly lethargic. She quickly became unconscious and was rushed to Stoke Mandeville Hospital where she died the next day.
Neal recalled that a doctor rang to abruptly tell her that Olivia was dead, and she "couldn't believe how cold he was". Neal later regretted not seeing Olivia after her death, having been persuaded not to by her sisters-in-law. According to Neal, her husband "really almost went crazy" with Neal keeping the family together for the sake of their two other children. Neal's grief was helped by talking about Olivia, whereas Roald kept silent about her until his own death. Olivia was survived by her siblings Theo (born 1955) and Tessa (born 1957). The Dahl's fourth and fifth children, Ophelia and Lucy, were born in 1964 and 1965 respectively. Roald Dahl wrote an account of Olivia's death in a notebook which he kept in a drawer of his writing hut; it was discovered after his death 28 years later.
Olivia was buried in the churchyard of St John the Baptist in Little Missenden. Roald Dahl constructed a rock garden above her grave.
Legacy
Roald Dahl became increasingly depressed and withdrawn after Olivia's death, spending hours at her grave in silence. His grief affected his relationship with his surviving children and he suffered from depression.
Roald Dahl later became a pro-vaccination advocate, writing an account of Olivia's death in a 1988 pamphlet called Measles, a Dangerous Illness for the Sandwell Health Authority. Dahl wrote that
Dahl wrote in the pamphlet that "Today a good and safe vaccine is available to every family and all you have to do is to ask your doctor to administer it". In a 1997 interview Neal recalled that the suddenness of Olivia's death, which occurred less than a week after contracting measles. Olivia's sister, Lucy, interviewed in 2015 by CBS, states that her father did not understand why people choose not to vaccinate their children against measles, "because he didn't have the choice". In Dahl's public letter he stated it is "'almost a crime' for some parents not to immunize their children". "I do agree with that", Lucy states; "I think that it is a crime".
In tribute to her daughter Neal donated a silver cup to Olivia's school for the best high jumper and insisted that the name of her character, Olivia Walton, that she played in The Waltons television film, The Homecoming: A Christmas Story, be kept as Olivia, and not changed to Mary as the producers wished. Dahl dedicated his children's novels James and the Giant Peach (1961) and The BFG (1982) to Olivia. The BFG was published on the twentieth anniversary of her death.
The book Melanie's Marvelous Measles by the anti-vaccination activist Stephanie Messenger has been criticised for the similarity of its title to Roald Dahl's George's Marvellous Medicine.
 
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