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Lottie
Lyell 1890 - 1925 actress
Lottie
Edith Lyell (1890-1925), actress, was born in Sydney on 23 February
1890, younger daughter of Charlotte Louise (born Hancock) and Edward
Cox, real estate agent. She grew up in Balmain, Sydney. Despite
the absence of a family tradition of theatrical work, Lottie was
allowed by her parents to study elocution and in 1907 she embarked
upon a career on the stage. Assuming the stage name Lyell, she joined
Edwin Geach's Popular Dramatic Organization (where Raymond Longford
was also a travelling player) and toured Australia and New Zealand
earning a reputation as a compelling stage actress. Her career in
films began in 1911 when she went to work for Spencer's Pictures
which had also engaged Longford as a director. Thereafter she played,
to considerable commercial success and popular acclaim, lead roles
in such films as The Fatal Wedding (1911), The Romantic
Story of Margaret Catchpole (1911) and Australia Calls (1913).
Lyell became identified on the screen with the physically adept
colonial girl, at home in male company, spurning the retiring style
of nineteenth century female coyness, and she excelled at roles
which utilised her talents as horsewoman and swimmer.
The peak of Lyell's acting career came in her strikingly naturalistic
performance as Doreen in Longford's highly acclaimed film of C.
J. Dennis's The Sentimental Bloke (1919). Thereafter her
on-screen performances were curtailed by ill health and her greater
involvements off the screen. Lyell's association with Longford went
beyond artistic cooperation. She was his lover through the fourteen
years of their collaboration, and remained loyal to him, though
Longford refused to divorce his wife or publicly acknowledge their
relationship until near the end of Lyell's life. But Lyell's major
contribution appears to have been as much to Longford's reputation
as a director, as to his romantic fulfilment. Lyell scripted and
co-directed The Blue Mountains Mystery in 1921, and The
Dinkum Bloke in 1923, and was given credit as co- producer,
screen-writer or art director for a number of other Longford films.
Contemporaries gave credit to Lyell for her 'brains' and artistic
capacities, and the historian Andree Wright has recently argued
in Brilliant Careers that, in an era in which women's role
was supposed to be confined largely to child-bearing and child-rearing,
Lyell was not given official film credits by the scandal-conscious
Longford for her considerable film achievements. She certainly does
rank as one of the greatest talents to grace the Australian screen
though neither Longford nor Lyell appear to have transcended traditional
genres and themes to any great degree. Lyell died in Sydney, on
21 December 1925 of tuberculosis.
Diane Collins
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