Terry, Ellen

Terry, Ellen

▪ British actress

born Feb. 27, 1847, Coventry, Warwickshire, Eng.
died July 21, 1928, Small Hythe, Kent

      English actress who became one of the most popular stage performers in both Great Britain and North America. For 24 years (1878–1902) she worked as the leading lady of Sir Henry Irving (Irving, Sir Henry) in one of the most famous partnerships in the theatre. In the 1890s she began her famous “paper courtship” with George Bernard Shaw, one of the most brilliant correspondences in the history of English letter writing.

      Terry was the second surviving daughter in a large family of which several members were to become well known on the stage. She had no formal schooling, but, trained by her parents, she rapidly developed into a celebrated child actress. At the age of nine she made her debut in the child's part of Mamillius in The Winter's Tale, which Charles Kean (Kean, Charles), son of the actor Edmund Kean, produced in London in April 1856. She remained in Kean's company until 1859 and later joined the stock company performing at the Theatre Royal, Bristol, where she played leading parts in Shakespeare and in repertory theatre.

      In 1864, at the age of 16, she left the stage to marry the painter G.F. Watts (Watts, George Frederick), whose model she had been. Watts, a neurotic man almost three times her age, made many fine portraits and sketches of her, but the marriage survived a bare 10 months. In her despair, Terry could scarcely be induced to return to the stage but eventually did so, though playing with little of her former distinction. It was in 1867 that she first appeared, by chance, with Sir Henry Irving, playing Katherina in The Taming of the Shrew.

      The following year she left the stage abruptly to live for six years in Hertfordshire with the architect and theatrical designer Edward Godwin (Godwin, Edward) (1833–86), whom she had met in Bristol and who became the father of her children, Edith and Edward Gordon Craig (Craig, Edward Gordon) (1872–1966). Edward was to become a renowned actor, stage designer, and producer. When her association with Godwin began to fail, it was the author, dramatist, and producer Charles Reade (Reade, Charles) who found her and brought her back to the stage. In the role of Portia she showed new maturity in a striking production of The Merchant of Venice (1875), designed by Godwin. On parting from Godwin (who married in 1876), she became responsible for rearing their children. Before joining Irving at the Lyceum Theatre in 1878, she completed a successful season at the Court Theatre. In 1877 she received a divorce from Watts and married an actor, Charles Kelly, mainly to give her children a “name.” They soon separated, and Kelly died in 1885.

      When Terry joined Irving, she was 31 and he 40. It was the beginning of a close association with a man whose life and resources were to be dedicated to the theatre and who was to make the Lyceum a centre for new, striking interpretations—of Shakespeare in particular. His approach to sponsorship of new plays was that of a great stage visualizer and star actor who required a scenarist to assemble a script that would give him a framework for compelling performance and spectacular stage effects. As part of his mise-en-scène, he needed a beautiful woman to lend her own glamour to his productions. Terry responded to his needs with selfless dedication, playing many great Shakespearean parts—Portia (1879), Juliet and Beatrice (1882), Lady Macbeth (1888), Queen Katharine (1892), Imogen (1896), Volumnia (1901), Ophelia (1878), Desdemona (1881), and Cordelia (1892). She also willingly undertook such humble roles as Rosamund in Tennyson's Becket (1893).

      Whether in London or on arduous provincial tours, in New York City or on exhausting excursions across North America, Terry acted as Irving's leading lady until she had grown too old for most of the parts in his repertory. They severed their partnership in 1902, three years before his death. Their relationship was as close in private as in public life, but when his affection began to wane in the 1890s Terry entered into her famous correspondence with Bernard Shaw (Shaw, George Bernard). In 1907 she married the American actor James Carew, some 30 years her junior; although they soon parted, he remained her friend.

      It was in comedy and in plays of tender sentiment, as well as in Shakespeare, that Terry's talent shone. When she left Irving it was to appear with Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree (Tree, Sir Herbert Beerbohm) in The Merry Wives of Windsor (1902), and Shaw eventually persuaded her to appear as Lady Cecily Waynflete in Captain Brassbound's Conversion (1906), one of several parts he wrote with her in mind. When she celebrated her golden jubilee in 1906 at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, all the theatrical personalities of the day shared the stage with her.

      Shaw saw Terry as a shining example of a modern, intelligent actress, capable of both naturalistic and intellectual performance. During the 1890s he constantly urged her to leave Irving, whom he regarded as reactionary, and to dedicate herself to promoting modern drama, represented in the works of Ibsen and himself. But unlike Sarah Siddons (Siddons, Sarah), her 18th-century predecessor as undisputed queen of the English theatre for a whole generation, Terry was ill suited by temperament to become a theatrical leader in her own right. Her particular, instinctual genius flowered only through her long service with Irving.

      Although Irving had paid her £200 a working week for most of 20 years, she still had to earn a living in her later years. She worked in the theatre, last appearing on stage in 1925; in films; and as a Shakespearean lecturer-recitalist, reinterpreting her successes on tours in the United States, Great Britain, and Australia. Her warm, generous personality made her a favourite wherever she went, but eyesight and memory began to fail. Belatedly, in 1925, she was made a Dame Grand Cross of the British Empire. She died three years later at her cottage, Small Hythe, in Kent, which became the Ellen Terry Memorial Museum and in 1939 was given to the National Trust by her daughter, Edith Craig.

Roger Manvell Ed.

Additional Reading
Terry's correspondence with Shaw is collected in Ellen Terry and Bernard Shaw (1931, reissued 1949), ed. by Christopher St. John (pseudonym of Christabel Marshall). Biographies include Edward Gordon Craig, Ellen Terry and Her Secret Self (1931), by her son; Marguerite Steen, A Pride of Terrys: A Family Saga (1962, reprinted 1978); Roger Manvell, Ellen Terry (1968); Constance Fecher, Bright Star: A Portrait of Ellen Terry (1970); Tom Prideaux, Love or Nothing: The Life and Times of Ellen Terry (1975, reprinted 1987); Nina Auerbach, Ellen Terry, Player in Her Time (1987, reissued 1997); Joy Melville, Ellen and Edy: A Biography of Ellen Terry and Her Daughter, Edith Craig, 1847–1947 (1987); Joy Melville, Ellen Terry (2006); and Michael Holroyd, A Strange Eventful History: The Dramatic Lives of Ellen Terry, Henry Irving, and Their Remarkable Families (2008). John Stokes, Michael R. Booth, and Susan Bassnett, Bernhardt, Terry, Duse: The Actress in Her Time (1988), analyzes the work of Terry and two contemporary actresses, while Russ McDonald, Sarah Siddons, Ellen Terry, and Judi Dench on the Shakespearean Stage (2005), considers Terry within a historical context that stretches from the 18th to the 21st century.

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Universalium. 2010.

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