MarÃÂa Carmen de Icaza y de León, 8th Baroness of Claret (17 May 1899 â 16 March 1979) was a Spanish journalist and novelist from 1935âÂÂ60. She enjoyed success with her 1936 novel, Cristina Guzmán, which was subsequently adapted for the stage, television and cinema. By 1945, she was a best-selling writer in Spain. Her father was Mexican writer and diplomat Francisco A. de Icaza.
MarÃÂa Carmen de Icaza y de León was born on 17 May 1899 in Madrid, the second daughter of Francisco AsÃÂs de Icaza y Beña, a Mexican ambassador and poet, and his wife, Beatriz de León y Loynaz, born in La Habana, daughter of Spanish aristocrats. She had four sisters: Beatriz, Ana MarÃÂa, MarÃÂa Luz and MarÃÂa Sonsoles (Marquesa de Llanzol), and one brother, Francisco de AsÃÂs.
One 1925, her father died, and she began working at El Sol newspaper. In 1930, she married Lt. Col. Pedro Montojo Sureda, and in 1932 they had her only daughter Paloma Montojo y de Icaza, mother of ÃÂñigo Méndez de Vigo.
She started to writing novels in 1935 as Valeria de León, later she used her real name Carmen de Icaza. On 14 December 1951, she obtained her noble title of 8th Baroness of Claret, by her collaboration with charity.
Her husband died on 17 March in 1978, and she died on 16 March 1979 in her native Madrid.