The author Lynne Reid Banks has died at the age of 94.
The novelist, known for writing books including the children’s story The Indian in the Cupboard, died of cancer “peacefully with her family around her” on Thursday afternoon, her agent, James Wills, said.
Her son Gillon Stephenson said she “leaves a massive legacy of wonderful work”, adding that every day he “receives messages from people saying what a difference she has made”.
The author was born in Barnes, south-west London, in 1929 and was evacuated with her mother and cousin Christopher in 1940 during the second world war to Saskatoon in the Canadian prairies for five years.
After returning to England, Reid Banks attended the Rada drama school before becoming a secretary and a freelance journalist.
In 1955, she became one of the first female news reporters on British TV, appearing on ITN for six years where she interviewed stars including Charlie Chaplin, Audrey Hepburn, Rita Hayworth, Louis Armstrong and Agatha Christie.
She said during her downtime from journalism she wrote a novel titled The L-Shaped Room which was an unexpected hit and was later turned into a film, landing star Leslie Caron an Oscar nomination for best actress, as well as a Bafta and Golden Globe award.
Caron played a young unmarried French woman planning a pregnancy termination, but later rejected the idea and instead rented an odd room in a boarding house where she falls in love with an aspiring actor.
In 1962, Reid Banks emigrated to Israel after meeting the Liverpool-born sculptor Chaim Stephenson, whom she later married and had three sons.
Returning to England in 1971, Reid Banks said she “stumbled upon the idea of bringing a toy plastic American Indian to life in a magic cupboard” for a children’s book.
The first book from her The Indian in the Cupboard series was released in 1980 and the fantasy story, about a boy whose toy has magically come to life, was turned into a film in 1995 starring Steve Coogan and Richard Jenkins.
She wrote many children’s stories during her career, including The Red Red Dragon, Tiger Tiger, Angela and Diabola and the picture book The Spice Rack.