Lillie Langtry (1853-1929)
Some known facts:
- Born 13th October 1853 - Channel Island of Jersey (UK).
- Died 12th February 1929 - Monaco (France).
- Real Name - Emilie Charlotte Le Breton
- Married 1) Edward Langtry, 2) Hugo de Bathe.
- In USA known as Lily Langtry.
- Famously admired by notorious US lawman Judge Roy Bean.
- One time mistress of Edward, Prince of Wales.
Lillie
Langtry, birth name Emilie Charlotte Le Breton, was born in St. Saviors Parish
church rectory, on the English Channel island of Jersey, on 13th October 1853.
She was the sixth child (of seven) and only daughter to the Very Reverend
William Corbet Le Breton, Dean of Jersey, and his wife Emilie Davis (nee
Martin) who was considered a great beauty. As the only girl amongst six
brothers it was perhaps inevitable that Emilie, 'Lillie' for short, would
become something of a tomboy, playing boyish games and becoming inseparable
from her only younger brother, Reggie. The six boys all attended the local
school but Lillie received her only education at home from a French governess
during, supplemented in the evenings by her brothers' tutor.
The
family was highly respected locally and attended many social events so that
Lillie learned to socialize in good company from an early age. When Lillie was
in her early teens, her mother began to suffer from bouts of ill health, and
Lillie would sometimes substitute for her at official functions where the
Dean's wife was expected to appear. Consequently, she became quite adept at
speaking in public to an audience considerably than herself. Having inherited
her mother’s beauty, Lillie received her first marriage proposal when she was
only fourteen, from a young army Lieutenant who was promptly informed she was
far too young to marry. When Lillie was sixteen, her mother took her to London
for her debutante season as was the practice for daughters of high ranking
families. For Lillie it proved something of a shock, her Jersey manners set her
apart and made her feel awkward and clumsy in London society so that she was
glad when the time came to return home.
In
1873, at her brother William's wedding, Lillie met Edward Langtry, a wealthy
widower who was the brother-in-law of the bride, Elizabeth Price. Within six
weeks they too were married, Lillie's father performing the service.
Unfortunately this created a rift between Lillie and her beloved brother Reggie
who so disliked Edward that he refused to attend the wedding or to visit the
couple at either of their two homes in Jersey or Southampton. Married life did
not live up to Lillie's expectations, and after four years of Edward leaving
her alone for long periods whilst he pursued his own interests Lillie took
advantage of a bout of illness to persuade her husband that a move to London
would be good for her health. She returned to London a far more assured and
confident character than the young girl that had visited the capital
previously, and this time she quickly found her place in London society. Her
newfound happiness was marred when her beloved brother Reggie died suddenly in
a riding accident, leaving Lillie devastated with grief and guilt - especially
when she arrived back on the island too late to attend his funeral.
But her
own was finally taking the direction she had laid out for it. In London, she
became renowned for her exquisite beauty and was painted by a number of
artists, including John Everett Millais, Edward Poynter and Frank Miles.
Millais was responsible for the nickname by which she would be known throughout
the rest of her life, entitling his portrait of her "The Jersey Lily"
(after the flower that is a symbol of Jersey). Her gregarious nature and sense
of humor made her the toast of the London social scene where she frequently
mixed with royalty, and even began an affair with Edward Prince of Wales. In
1880 Edward Langtry, from whom Lillie was becoming increasingly estranged, was
declared bankrupt and retreated into seclusion leaving Lillie to deal with the
angry creditors. Her affair with Prince 'Bertie' having cooled, Lillie found
solace in the arms of Prince Louis of Battenberg to whom she fell pregnant.
Retreating from the public eye, Lilly returned first to Jersey then to Paris
where her daughter Jeanne-Marie was born in March 1881.
Now separated from her
husband, and with no means of financial support, Lillie placed her daughter in
the care of her own mother and became one of the first English society women to
embark upon a career on the stage. She made her debut as 'Kate Hardcastle' in
"She Stoops to Conquer" with the Bancroft’s at The Haymarket Theatre
on 15th December, 1881.
The
following year she formed her own company to play a season at The Imperial
before embarking on her first American tour. She was due to open there at the
Park Theatre on Broadway and 22nd Street in New York on 30th October 1882 but
the theatre was totally destroyed by fire on that very day. In spite of that
inauspicious beginning, the tour was a great success and Lillie instantly
became a huge favorite with the American public. She repeated the tour in each
of the next five years. In 1887 Lillie adopted American citizenship and
divorced her husband the same year in California.
Between
those tours, back in England she proved herself a shrewd and capable theatre
manageress, taking over the leases of various London theatres, including the
Prince's, St James and Princesses. She also developed a passion for horses and
horse racing and over the years acquired a stable of successful racehorses both
in England and America (where she purchased a ranch and stud farm). This
passion also led to her association with the Scottish millionaire George Baird,
owner of a stable of thoroughbreds, with whom she began an affair. Baird,
however, was an excessively jealous man and when Lillie went off on a shopping
trip to Paris with another man he set of in hot pursuit. He beat Lillie so
badly she had to spend two weeks in a French hospital and a warrant was issued
for his arrest. Amazingly, Lillie refused to press charges, though Baird did
recompense her for her injuries with a payment of £50,000 and the gift of a
yacht.
Edward
Langtry died a sad, pathetic figure in an insane asylum in Chester in 1897. He
had been recently committed there after suffering a brain injury falling down
the gangway of the Dublin to Holyhead steamer. Rumors were rife at the time that
Lillie was about to remarry to Prince Esterhazy, but it would be another two
years before she married again, and then to young Hugo de Bathe (some eighteen
years her junior). Now aged forty-five, she formally retired from the stage to
a small property named 'Merman Cottage' in Jersey which she would share with
her new husband. Another sacrifice she made for her new husband was to give up
her small stable of racehorses since he did not believe it was a fitting
occupation for a lady. But when Hugo joined the British Forces shortly
afterwards and embarked to fight in the Boer War in South Africa, Lillie
quickly reversed her retirement, returning to America to resume her stage
career.
Her
popularity in America had famously brought her to the attention of the
notorious Judge Roy Bean who had become infatuated with her even though they
never met. Bean had written to Lillie many times inviting her to visit him in
his saloon in Langtry*, Texas, and in January 1904, when her travel plans
brought her nearby, she decided to take up his offer. Her arrival came too late
for Bean, who had died some ten months earlier. She was warmly welcomed by the
people of the small town however, and was presented with gifts of a live
tarantula in a silver filigree cage, a black pet bear, a span of mules and a
six-shooter. She declined the mules, but had the bear sent to her farm in
California, taking with her tarantula and the six-shooter.
On the
same tour a month later she narrowly escaped death as the train carrying her
company was passing by the town of Terrace in Utah. As the train started down a
steep gradient at high speed her private carriage jumped the rails and bumped
along alarmingly for a quarter of a mile before the train could be stopped.
Staying remarkably calm, Mrs. Langtry held on to a table and pledged a toast to
the frightened members of her company - "Here's to the one who keeps the
coolest head." Only when the danger was over did the shock overtake her
and she fainted.
In
1907, Hugo inherited his father’s title becoming Sir Hugo and making Lillie
Lady de Bathe. Although the marriage lasted thirty years it was no more
successful than her first marriage had been, and the couple largely went their
own ways. Professionally, Lillie continued her pattern of alternating American
tours with spells in management in London.
Lillie
remained active on the stage until 1918, making her last American tour in 1915.
She spent her final years in retirement, residing with her friend and companion
Mrs. Peat in a little villa she had purchased in Monaco and which she named 'Le
Lys'. Lillie died in Monaco on the morning of 12th February, 1929, aged 75,
from pleurisy and influenza.
In
life, Lillie's private affairs had been characterized by a series of ruinous misjudgments
and extraordinary turns of fortune. Both her marriages were failures and her
only daughter Jeanne-Marie, who had been raised believing that Lillie was her
aunt (only discovering the truth on the eve of her own wedding) would have
little to do with her in later life. She had many notable lovers, all of them
prominent and well connected men of the time, and could name among her friends
such luminaries as Oscar Wilde and the American artist James McNeill Whistler.
She took advantage of her notoriety to endorse commercial products, such as
Pears soap, and even manufactured claret from her own California winery. Her
race-horses won most of the major handicaps, including the Gold Cup at Ascot,
and she was famously the first woman to break the bank at Monte Carlo. At its
height, her personal fortune was counted in millions though most of this was
gone by the time she died. It is difficult to comprehend that during such staid
times one woman could command such fame and power, and without the aid of film
or television become so recognizable that she was mobbed in the street. She was
undoubtedly a great beauty, possessed of classic features and the diminutive
waist that was considered so desirable at the time. It was this allied to her
charm and wit that attracted her many rich lovers and won her the admiration of
millions.
At her
own request, Lillie was buried back in her beloved Jersey, her life having
turned full circle as she was laid to rest in the graveyard of the same parish
church in whose rectory she had been born - St. Saviors. In her will she left
Mrs. Peat, her main beneficiary, the Monte Carlo villa they had shared, a lump
sum of £10,000, and all of her jewellery. To her four grandchildren she left a
combined total of £16,000. Numerous smaller bequests included a motor car to
her maid, Mathilde, and antique furniture to the museum of St. Helier.
*The
widely held belief that the town of Langtry, where Judge Bean dispensed his
unique form of merciless justice, was named by him in her honor is in fact not
true (the town's name pre-dates Bean and was chosen to honor an American
railroad pioneer). It may very well, however, have been the name of the town
that attracted Bean to choose it as his base of operations. And it is
unquestionably true that he did erect a small wooden saloon there and name it
'The Jersey Lillie' in her honor (the building is preserved to this day).
"Reproduced
courtesy of Don Gillan (Copyright), www.stagebeauty.net"
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