One of the most beautiful women of her time, Lillie Langtry (1853–1929) became the first woman in English upper-class society to pursue a career as a stage actress. Known as the Jersey Lily after her birthplace in the United Kingdom, she had many distinguished admirers, including the Irish playwright Oscar Wilde and the oldest son of Queen Victoria, who became King Edward VII. A sensation wherever she went, Langtry performed to full houses and influenced English fashion, and had a town named after her in Texas.
Langtry was born Emilie Charlotte Le Breton on October 13, 1853, on the Isle of Jersey, United Kingdom. The only daughter of the dean of Jersey and rector of St. Saviour’s Parish, Langtry was always called Lillie because of her beautiful white skin. Desperate to escape her quiet life, she married Edward Langtry in 1874 and persuaded him to move to London. Both her beauty and her intelligence quickly attracted scores of admirers, including a number of artists eager to paint her portrait. After English artist John Everett Millais painted her holding a lily, she became known as the Jersey Lily. She was one of the most popular of the professional beauties, aristocratic women whose mass-reproduced images appeared widely in store windows and were collected by the public.
In 1881 Langtry, who often was in need of money, created a sensation in London society by making her stage debut as Kate Hardcastle in She Stoops to Conquer at the Haymarket Theatre. Although the critics did not take her seriously for some time, she eventually won acceptance as a competent actress. Her most successful part was Rosalind in William Shakespeare’s As You Like It. Langtry also toured successfully throughout England and the United States.
Edward Langtry died in 1897, and two years later she married Hugo de Bathe, who became a baronet in 1907. In 1901 Langtry turned the old Aquarium Theatre in London into the Imperial Theatre, modeled on a Greek temple, and opened it under her own management. She appeared in a film directed by D.W. Griffith in 1913. Her last appearance on the stage was in 1917. Langtry wrote the novel All at Sea (1909) and her autobiography The Days I Knew (1925). She also maintained a successful racing stable at Newmarket and a winery in California. Langtry died on February 12, 1929, in Monte-Carlo.
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