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Ethel
Kelly 1875 - 1949 actress and author
Ethel
Knight Kelly (1875-1949), actress and author, was born on 28 January
1875 at St John, New Brunswick, Canada, elder daughter of Margaret
(born Millen) and William Knight Mollison, merchant. She was brought
up partly in Britain; her education at St John was sketchy, consisting
of piano, elocution and French lessons twice a week. She loved reading,
especially the novels of 'Ouida' and Rider Haggard.
From her childhood Ethel 'enjoyed dramatic action'. In December
l893 she played the lead when her three-act play, A Mischievous
Miss, was staged at St John. It was a roaring success as she
had satirised the 'local society in general and one or two families
in particular'. While very young she married a Mr Moore and lived
in New York. Widowed within a year, she was engaged to play with
Olga Nethersole and Maurice Barrymore in Camille in 1894.
For some eight years she was associated 'with the best companies
in the United States', using her maiden name. Her favourite roles
were Rozanne in Cyrano de Bergerac and Katharina in The
Taming of the Shrew.
Engaged by J. C. Williamson, Miss Mollison arrived in Sydney on
14 March 1903 and opened in the farcical comedy Are you a Mason?
The company went to Newcastle, New Zealand, back to Sydney, and
to Melbourne, where at Christ Church, Hawthorn, on 29 August, she
married Thomas Herbert Kelly, metal merchant. She left the professional
stage in October. Between 1904 and 1913 Mrs Kelly bore two sons
and two daughters. An Edwardian beauty, with a vibrant personality,
wit and boundless energy, she soon established a reputation for
'original ideas'. She helped arrange elaborate fancy-dress balls
and acted in matinees to raise money for the Women's Hospital, St
Vincent's Hospital and the Australian Bush Nursing Scheme. She visited
India and on her return wrote Frivolous Peeps at India (1911).
During the 1914-18 war Mrs Kelly, among her many fund-raising activities,
organised a dolls' carnival for which she 'reproduced in miniature
a whole theatre of Russian ballet'; she acted in matinees, including
in her own play Swords and Tea. She organised an Elizabethan
musical water pageant in October 1918 and, as Queen Elizabeth accompanied
by her court and madrigal singers, travelled slowly down the harbour
on the royal barge (a brilliantly lit ferry). Ethel Kelly loved
clothes and always ensured that every detail was historically correct.
From 1919, while her sons were at Eton and Oxford, the Kellys made
frequent visits to Britain and Europe. In 1922-23 Mrs Kelly conducted
the woman's page of Smith's Weekly and was allowed as a journalist
to visit Tutankhamun's tomb in Egypt. It inspired her novel, Why
the Sphinx Smiles (1925). From about 1925 Mrs Kelly lived mainly
in Florence, Italy, while supervising her daughters' education.
She wrote another novel, Zara (1927), and her memoirs, Twelve
Milestones (1929). While in Italy she became a Catholic. She
returned to Sydney in 1934 at her husband's request; they built
an Italianate villa at Darling Point. In 1937 she was president
of the Pageant of Nations advisory committee for the 150th Anniversary
Celebrations.
During World War II Ethel Kelly was president of the French-Australian
League of Help and the Victoria League, a vice-president of the
St John Ambulance Association and the French Red Cross Societies,
honorary treasurer of Colonel de Basil's Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo,
a committee-member of the Actors' Benevolent Fund and a trustee
of the Women's and St Vincent's hospitals and the Kindergarten Union
of New South Wales. She helped to raise money for all of them -
and for many other causes. She enjoyed meeting and entertaining
'interesting people' and shared her husband's love of music. She
collected antique furniture, Persian rugs and rare Venetian wine
glasses. She died on 22 September 1949.
Martha Rutledge
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