Evelyn D'AlroyEvelyn D'Alroy (1881–1915,[1] née Evelyn May Tegg, and on marriage Evelyn Watson), was an Edwardian English stage actress of considerable renown. She took to the stage in 1899,[2] and made her London debut as the Duchesse de Longueville in a period piece, The Bond of Ninon by Clotilde Graves, at the Savoy Theatre in April 1906.[1] Her first considerable success was as Mrs. Cray in “The Builders” by Norah Keith at the Criterion on 10 November 1908.[3] She then joined the Lewis Waller Players and regularly worked at London's Lyric Theatre.[1][4] In September 1909 she was taken on by Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree at Her Majesty's Theatre.[1][3] Her favourite role to play was reputedly Shakespeare's Ophelia.[5] Portraits of Evelyn in various theatrical productions are held by the National Portrait Gallery.[6] In April 1915 while on tour she was taken ill suddenly in Sheffield with appendicitis. She was operated on at the hospital, and her appendix removed, and taken to a nursing home to recover, but died three days later of pneumonia with her husband—theatre critic Thomas Malcolm Watson—at her side.[4] References
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