Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, September 27, 1922, Night Extra, Page 18, Image 18

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGfeB-.gHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27. 1922
i
BEAUTY TRIPS BLITHELY OVER BALD HE AD ROJV
TO BEJEIVELED LUXURY OF OLD-WORLD NOBILITi
War 's Aftermath Emphasizes
Rise te Position of Many
Fair Stage Celebrities
Girls of the Gaiety Choruses Deff Pin
Tights and Paste Gems te Reign in
Hemes of Wealth and Name
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Mr
Rffl
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Seme day I mean te wed a Duke, don't doubt me!
And none will dare te hint rebuke about mc.
The biggest swells will come te me
On Thursday afternoons for tea,
And Emperors will make their bows
When I'm at Cowes.
Gaiety Girl's Seng.
Frem the stage te the peerage!
Prem pink tights and paste gems te glittering coronets nnd ancestral
pwwala.
Frem the glare of footlights te the gallantry and glamour of the
British court of royalty.
Net the easiest read te travel 1 But a romantic and thrilling one,
trad ena which has attracted chic and gay chorines even as it has the dark
fend stately ladies of Shakespearean repertoires.
It may seem a far cry from mimicry te reality, but It really Is no
farther than the distance from twinkling legs of alluring ladles of the
chorus te baldhead row; no farther than from back stage te proscenium.
Events prove It, despite the well- , .
known antipathy of nobility te the j
tunning daughters of the Play. I
Events prove it, because even
younger sons of noble houses and
fcelni presumptive have no mere
erviceable defensive against a bat
tery of provocative eyes than the
veriest commoner.
Events prove it, because the little
youngster with wings and quiver is
no respecter of persons at all,
coupling the hearts of downstairs
and upstairs, of poverty and riches,
of beauty and stupidity, ugliness
and brains and the permutations
and combinations of all these quali
ties. May Ethcridge, former Gaiety
girl, married Lord Edward Fitz
gerald, third son of the Duke of
Leinster, in 1914. Today she is the
Duchess of Lelnster and the first
actress-duchess during the last hun
dred years.
About a hundred years age, Har
riet Mellen, famous Drury Lane
star, became the fifty-year-old bride
of tlif twenty-six-year-old Duke of
St. Albans. This young Pendennis
lived happily with his Fetheringay
until 1832, when she died.
Between the dates of her death
and the assumption of the Duch
essship by May Ethcridge this year,
there have been no actress-duchesses.
Weds the Sweet Little,
Neat Little Pajama Girl
But May, the "sweet little, neat
little pajama girl," en the stage
since she was thirteen, knew there
was going te be another one seen.
for hadn't she gene te an old gipsy,
bark te her Rinsing. She fane at Mur
ray's famous night club. She had no
one te take rare of her haby, he she
carried him with her. And Oerald I
was a rollicking baby. He learned te
Bleep In the wnrdrebe this future
duke among the umbrellas and the
gentlemen's wrap.
One night he refu&d te go te sleep,
and his beautiful mother perched hira
en the "wagon" filled with bottles of
wine and champagne, and wheeled him
out among the guests. He intantlv
Countess Peulctt, for
merly Lillian Syhla
Storey, daughter of an
actor and herself an
actress
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"Indeed! Really I" fluted her polished
acquaintance, who knew quite well
enough. "Ladles In our position
wouldn't ahem ah enjoy It at all I"
"Ne," came back the answer, firmly
polite. "I'm sure you wouldn't. Stage
life would be far tee serious for you.
Nearly every Qalcty girl Is obliged te
think occasionally."
It was a knock-out, but it waB by
these tactics, used many times, that
the newest Marchioness, showed. In
plte of the silly songs she may have
once sung, she was a woman of resource
and some thought nnd dignity.
Scrubwoman Beauty Dens
$100fi00 Werth of Jewels
When Frances Belment, of Hrook Hreok Hroek
lyn, daughter of a bricklayer, played
In "My Lady," shs was enst as a
scrubwoman, and sang:
"ll'acn Magpie Deelan tentfrn the fleer
Yeu can bet the fleer is clean!"
At that time, if you had told her
the was going ,te marry- Francis Dcnzfl
Edward Daring, Fifth Lord Ashbur Ashbur
ten, she would have laughed at you,
and perhaps, basing of a merry nature,
would have sprinkled you with a few
eeapsuds. '
While she was playing this energetic
and very capable scrubwoman, Lord
Aphburten was Ambassador te the
United States. lie was helping direct
the affairs of the world, while Frances
scrubbed the stage fleer and delight
ed the hearts of jaded business men.
Nevertheless, strange things are
bound te happen when strange things
are net anticipated. Frances Dclment
was se seductively beautiful that nhn
was placed In the famous "Florodora
Sextet" In 1001, and, as did each
one of that sextet of beauty and rol
licking gaiety, she became known the
world ever.
A year or se previous te 1000 Lord
Ash burten was presented te her, and
In 1000, at Papsy, the two were mar
ried, And It was a brilliant marriage,
the like of which had, net been seen
for many years. Instead of dragging
his bride off te a secret wedding, Lord
Ashburton gathered titled folk about
him and did the thing up brown. Ills
wife were the Ashburton jewels, vnl-
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Duchess of Lelnster, who
was May Etherldge, a
Gaiety girl
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Marchioness of Headfert, who
was pretty Ilesic Roote
ml hadn't the old gipsy read her i
hand ?
"I nee love, nchc3 and the straw
berry leaves of a Duchess for you," j
whispered thu fceeress, ami May
believed her.
And one nlshr kin' met tlm twntv- J
one-At'iir-eld I ri IMwunl, I linn lieu
tenant in the Iriili iStiurds. Me was I
jKxir, lie wnHii'l likely te rarry en his
father's title, but !'in Cunld didn't i
givu a hang about that It un.s hi Id
le be a lae of hue at tlrst wslit--ciT-talnly
the "jiujnina girl" wn net d.
Ilberatn'v "out" after a title, nnd rcr
talnly l.ieiitenniit Kltrgernld wasn't
fceekliig a heavy dn ry.
Ills parents HtienuniiIy ehjerteil te
their meeting each ether, kidnapped
their son and took him abtead. He
as allowed te rt'tuni te Lonilen, how
ever, when ln premised te Iticiik his
fiigagement with May. ItenchitiL' Iin-
den, he derided all li fair In love and
war, anil tan nwuy with tils singing
ctress.
They hone) mooned In Canada, lived
in a woodman's hut, and returned te
England with but little in the family
Mchequer and war Just peeping ever
the horlren.
When the Hermans swept across lie!
Lily Langtry,
wife of Hen.
Huge de Rathe
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beraree a fn vet lte - almost as great an I
attraction as his talented mother this
little ililld who will one dnv he Puke
of l,eltiNicr, Marquis of Klldare, Karl
of Offal y.
When Gerald was one year old he
wan made an honerarv iiii'tiiber of the
club. And Iiih Introdti'Mien wnn at
tended li a uniqiti' celebration, heated
en a bellewered high rlinlr, t he ba'iy
looked in emul upon a worshiping au
dit nu with bilm and milk beltlep
rentaltiing Miiuethiug a little Htrengcr
then milk; In fact . Hnnetbing mi dell dell
cleus that It Is new known as "Ger
ald's milk puneh."
Th" It,ke of Lelnster died this veir.
filu. tint title fnll te r.enl IMunril. tint '
j l, nirlcil with It no wealth. And tint.
nw and Durness have learned 'hat
Last year, a merchant and the Duke
overheard him declared that a meter-
fir couldn't Iwat the fast Great North Nerth
ern KrpreHS ever the rJ'J miles fieci
Londen te Aberdeen The Duke In
fisted that It could, ami said 1m was
v tiling te preve It.
Daredevil Duke Wagers
en Race and Wins $15,000
Dander up, the merchant wagered
Sl.VKW that it couldn't t done. The
J.ilke of Lelnster took Mm up, wen Ills
run- and the stakes (
Shortly after, the dnredell Duke '
published the fact that for n round sum I
'his singing "pajama glrT' aa one of
'heir own.
But she li net the only pureju)
Gaiety girl who la new a woman of
Infinite charm and distinction among ths
titled heads of Europe.
In 1008, Sylvia Lilian Btereyf daugh
ter of ed Storey, actor, dancer and
srene painter, married William Jehn
Lydston, seventh Earl of Peulett. She
was seventeen and he twenty-four, and
they married In spite of vigorous dhj.
approval.
fhe was playing In "The Gay Gor Gor
eons" when the Earl met hr. He
wnsn't at that time an EarL In fact,
his succession te the title was dlspated
by the notorious "organ-grinder EarL.
whose story was gesslpea in two conti
nents. William's father, the sixth Earl,
when he was a young man, was "wild "wild
eatier" than hts son. One night, while
intoxicated, he lest an Important bet,
nnd his penalty was te marry the first
woman be met after leaving the victor.
Meeting Elizabeth Lavlnfa Newman,
daughter of a pilot, he married her.
Their child become the "organ-grinder
Prince."
The sixth Earl later would have
nothing te de with the pilot's daughter.
There was a dlverre and he remarried
twice. The present Earl Is Issue of the
third rasrrlsge.
King's Wrath Is Visited
I en Pretty Resle's Hubby
Fourth Marquis of Headfert, Lieu
tenant Geoffrey Themas Tayler, quar
' reled with the family, reslgned his lieu
tenancy In the rasnienanie rirsi iiie
Guard and Insulted King Edward for
the sake of Resle Roote, of the Gaiety
Theatre.
The twcnty-two-year-eld officer sat
In a box one evening and Resle, singing
"Mal.ie, Malzle, you're a daisy,"
walked ever toward lilin and showered
him with her graces. lie succumbed,
hint In his card, and was charmingly
received.
The courtship (leveleped rapidly, ges
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ued at $100,000, and her trenaseaa
was reported te have cost her husband
$10,000.
Today they are very happy. Dur
ing the war Lady ABhbutfen nursed
the wounded, and was active In all
the wnr service of the community In
which she lives.
The fifth Earl of Reslyn get Inte the
public print originally net by marrying
an actress, but by becoming an actor
himself. He played Indifferently under
the name of Jnmcs Ersklne, and his
first matrimonial venture was with
Beatrice Irwin, n member of the same
company. Hut they were shortly after
divorced and Enrl Reslyn ventured a
second time with the American actress,
Anna Robinson, of Minneapolis.
In 1005 Anna Robinson was a
household name. Originally she had
been nn artist's model, and then she
wnt en the stage. Her Inexpressible
Wennty nnd her ability wen her net only
fnme but nn Immense fortune, which
she Js said te have spent lavishly.
Her life was one of excitement and
overwhelming adulation. Old King
Leepold, of Belgium, had been one of
her most Intense admirers, and it is
told hew he showered her with Jewels.
In 1005 she met nnd married Earl
Reslyn. In 1007 she divorced him.
"I didn't marry him for his title.
I married him," she declared, "be
cause I couldn't get rid of bun. He is
one of the most persistent men I hare
ever met. And it was most difficult
even te get rid of him through divorce
proceedings. He wouldn't work, he
gambled nnd he was demlneerlns."
Anna Robinson's career certainly did
net end with her divorce. She lived
fervently, and spent her geld ex era va
cantly. When the wnr came en, she
lest most of her fortune, and she died
In the Manhattan State Hospital for
the Insane, in 1017.
Her broken life the descent from the
heights of admiration, wealth, society
te her ultimate loneliness and shattered
reason In a madhouse furnishes one
of the most tragic stories In the annals
of stnge history.
Mabel Scott Found Title
Wasn't Werth Trouble
The eccentric Lord Russell, who later
manled the woman who wrote "Eliza
beth and her German Garden," met and
married Mabel Scott, a Gaiety girl. In
1800. Mabel said that she married him
for his title, and then left him after
four months. According te Mabel, the
tltle wasn't worth the trouble.
She said her husband forced her te
net as his valet, beat her, locked her
in her room without leaving her a stitch
of clothing, was rtnfalthfal, eresl i
her pet cat, and niggardly witi d.
rettea.
"He would only allow me six
a day," she said.
The trial was ena of the most
travagant in recent years, and if MsS
get no alimony, she certainly get u
of publicity, v , " "
"I lows her and she leres me . .
the excuse the Honorable Henry LrTJ
burst Brace, son and heir of Lord Aims
dare, made when he married Cmi
Clifferd, of Bosten, Maw., jSE
She was a statuesque blonde, bernH
OhrlsUanla, Norway J a children's ibsi
up te her fifteenth year, Bhe steemi
te America.
The Honorable Henry wu
wealthy in his own right, and he cool
ngeeqsly opened a public garage. 11
met Miss Clifferd while she played la tk
'Trince of Pllsen." ' ,ww"
Immediately after their marrli
which -was very quiet and nnassumS
the husband took his new bride te v3
his father. And that irate gentleaj
slammed the deer in their faces t
When the war began, Lady Brw'
husband joined his regiment and
slain at tpres. She tried te east It
bitter less by plunging into war servlei
nursing the wounded, making banduS
nnd doing the thousand and one etC
kinds of work that were open te nebl
women, during the world conflict fS
gained the love and respect of her Htl!
neighbors. "
There are many ether examples of ft
union of stags and peerage. ViseeS
Torrlngten, a former page of honor t
:,5c?ry,ct?-r,, and KlD Edward, mt
rled Miss Eleaner Cpuray, a mZL
comedy actress. "
Miss Rachel Estelle Berrldge. new fc
Obnntesa of Cleninell, who en the its
before her. marriage was Denlse OrS
starring In the "Hen'ble Phil," ia iSn
married Captain Jehn R. Yarde-BuHsi
eldest son of Lord Churaten. The nar
rlage was kept secret for some tlan. hi
when the news leaked out, peerage n
quite ready te receive the actress.
One of the catches of the seassa t
1006 was Jack Southwell BasM
twenty-fifth Baren de Clifferd. iA
owned 18,000 acres In County Mue
Ireland, and ether large estates. Tmb
tr-one-year-eld Era Oarrlngten, a sk
feet-high beauty, played at the fete
In a comedy called, "The Catch el sV
Season."
It was a oelnddsac, but Mlas In
really caught the catch. She was nst i
very geed actress, the critics aver, k
she waa beautiful te an unusual fe
gree, and the Lord de Clifferd w
quite willing te have her renounce rs
stage for his drawing room, 'i
he would cress the Atlantic Ocean sin- sip flourishing, and their betrothal
gle-hiindeil in n twelve. tun ketch, hutiltiiall) w ns sealed. The Marquis' family
before he had opportunity te select his ' hit tlic celling. He declared stoutly that
egghhell of a bout, internal tieublea, he would marry the girl, nnd his mother,
In Ireland broke out following pence i Hip Dowager Mnrrhleness, locked him
A'd the Duke, who Iiuk tried bin 'V'1.1 ''."S1?"'1' ""! he Joined the army in his room
. I.V ."...., mn,. f Uv I ""'' nt " number of join, decided llui i inn irisn r rc niiue
Wby Just come, In the month of Mej, .. ., t honorariums would cumc . He is new tightlng, and his wife waits
sm ui nurn win emnu h w. . with mat x-lak. 19 n,m wiiu ncr sturdy little boy
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5; S..,, il, r.m,I.M. h.Ip lte l,.f. Il'ven titled folk ran t I ve solely en love
wife sorrowful! there was u little
Lady Ashbuiten, ne Just
Frances Dennelly
hts attachment te hts King. Bui he did
It unwisely.
He wrete:
"The lady I am about te rearrv Is
Miss Resle Boete, of the Gaiety The
atre, who doubtless is known te your
Majesty."
Whether the Marquis Intended it or
net, the Implication In the letter dis
turbed the King. King Edward was a
rather lively young man himself years
before, it Is reported, and the subject
wns a delicate one. The Insinuation in
the letter seemed te him te be crass
effrontery.
And he let the young Marquis realize
it. The King declared that If the Mar
quis married Hesle Boeto, they both
would be lcllms of a most complete and
telling kind of social ostracism.
The note that shocked a king brought
forth, tee, n vituperative denunciation
of the "mtwilllnnceH between the peer
ate and cheniH girls."
But the Mnrquls was determined, and
se was Resle. Since shn was a Catholic
and the Marquis a Trotestent. she ob
tnlned a special dispensation te marry
hlrn. and she did. In 1001.
Today, the Marchioness, mother of
two golden haired sons nnd a daughter,
is a devoted parent nnd nn honor te the
peerage. But she had n difficult time
living down the coolness of the society,
te which her title gave her carte
blanche.
It Is reported that en one occasion,
at a ball, a fashionable and n pro
foundly titled woman, lifted her nrched
eyebrows a little iiigber nnd purred :
ire iinuersinnu you were en the
ij4 brftvaly, May
mobility H England has learnsd, te lert
fill I VMII. ,1 11
lifflcei-H' mens instated that he was ntnun't"
wrecking his career, and he resigned the j "IVn," replied the chorus girl girl
Llfe Guards, marchioness, "1 wits wlmt was called
OourWeus always, as sent notice, of I a Gaiety Girl."
aw W.
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Camille Clifferd married Hen. Henry Lyndhurbt UrUC j,cir uf
nucruare
Lady ClenmeU, formerly s
Rnchael Estelle Berrldge- t
Vesta Ttlley, from whom mts IjJ
their fashions, was one of the f"1""
impersonators te appear en the wft
and she Is sold te have been the vt
eat. Her "Algy," In spats and ft
coat, or in monocle and dress suit, J
in flannels, was a sight for tired T
And when Sir Walter de Frjcj J
her, he straightway stumbled Inte vm
deepest sort of love, and married her. ,
When Sir Henry de Bathe lew"
that his twenty-elght-year-eld nn,m
Honerablo Huge Gernlde de Hatne, ass
married forty-sevcn-year-ehl wg
Itngtry famous en the stage ns V
Jersey Lily" or "Mrs. Lily Lanrtrf.
although her name was Eml Is 0W
lette he threw all his son's cWMjm
of the window and refused him i J1
sien te the house. That was In 181W.
But he repented. Mrs. Langtry
considered ,rthe most beautiful wow"
In the world." Her Lady Macbeth, M
Rosalind, were milestones by te";
mark the history of the best that u a
tnc theatre. . . a.
Fashions of women throughout J
world followed her lead. T3!
Langtry hats. Langtry paraseis.
try boas. Ne father-ln-la
,rv;
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aw ceuw wji
diiieii nucn a tiutDiiii.
Hefere her marriage te the. w
nuce. her name had been
that of the Prlnce of
linked
Wales, 11
.'., a
Ivlnp Kilwnrd. Thav were geed WT1
.".. . . ..I,.. .n iiiruui
anu tneir iriennsmii wu uj "::":.
after, it Is snld, Mrs. Langtry drePF
a plece of iee down the Prlnce'a baca.
plece or iee uewn tne rn ,;r
Lady de Bnthe toured.. Anwncs
inin will, ii nbert nlav. hhe was z
sixty-two, end her beauty as no
thy ns ever. . .. . .... .Ltrii
-. j
.'. ". ' ,v" .. . .. , il,.eM
And mi en go tne a.- .-he-j
nun cast, .mhiiihk " ,:Uk.u
whether II is huts te kick MfW"j
te ceniiier. ome ei mi." .ty:m
la the end nre disastrous, hut IM-TJ
leritr or tntm ara Kustmtmm m
r.v
!, j -CSL ki
V..Kj
b!V."f.t. -
-