Hubbry Logo
search
logo
2143844

Eva Moore

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Eva Moore in the 1890s

Eva Moore (9 February 1868 – 27 April 1955) was an English actress. Her career on stage and in film spanned six decades, and she was active in the women's suffrage movement. In her 1923 book of reminiscences, Exits and Entrances, she describes approximately ninety of her roles in plays, but she continued to act on stage until 1945. She also acted in more than two dozen films. Her daughter, Jill Esmond, was the first wife of Laurence Olivier.

Early life and career

[edit]

Moore was born and educated in Brighton, Sussex, the eighth of ten children, the last of whom was the actress Decima Moore. Her parents were the chemist Edward Henry Moore and his wife, Emily (née Strachan) Moore. She attended Miss Pringle's school in Brighton and then studied gymnastics and dancing in Liverpool. Returning to Brighton, she taught dancing.

In 1891 she married actor/playwright Henry V. Esmond (1869–1922). They had three children: Jack (an actor), Jill (the actress Jill Esmond, first wife of Laurence Olivier) and Lynette, who did not survive infancy. Her husband wrote more than a dozen plays in which she appeared, and they appeared together in more than a dozen plays.[1]

In Little Christopher Columbus, 1894

Moore made her first stage appearance at London's Vaudeville Theatre on 15 December 1887, as Varney in Proposals. She next joined Toole's company and appeared at Toole's Theatre on 26 December of that year as the Spirit of Home in Dot. In 1888, she was back at the Vaudeville in a play with her sisters Jessie and Decima, Partners, by Robert Williams Buchanan. In 1890, she created the role of the countess of Drumdurris in the Arthur Wing Pinero play The Cabinet Minister at the Court Theatre. In 1892, she appeared as Minestra in the comic opera The Mountebanks by W. S. Gilbert and Alfred Cellier. The next year, she created the role of Pepita in the long-running Little Christopher Columbus.[2]

In 1894, she joined Charles Hawtrey and Lottie Venne in F. C. Burnand's A Gay Widow.[3] Other stage roles included Mabel Vaughn in The Wilderness (1901); Lady Ernestone in Esmond's My Lady Cirtue and Wilhelmina Marr in his Billy's Little Love Affair (both 1903); and Kathie in Old Heidelberg (1902 and 1909) with George Alexander. In 1907, she took the name part in Sweet Kitty Bellaire (1907) and played Mrs. Errol in Little Lord Fauntleroy, Mrs. Crowley in The Explorer in 1908, the Hon. Mrs. Bayle in Best People and Mrs. Rivers in The House Opposite in 1909.[citation needed]

Later years and films

[edit]
Moore with her husband Henry V. Esmond

Moore was active in the suffrage movement (as was her sister Decima), attending meetings and appearing in suffragist plays and films.[4] She was a founder of the Actresses' Franchise League in 1908 but resigned from that organisation when other members objected to her acting in a sketch called "Her Vote", by her husband, in which the heroine prefers kisses to votes.[1] Moore later managed her husband's comedy Eliza Comes to Stay, which opened at the Criterion Theatre on 12 February 1913, transferring to the Vaudeville Theatre on 6 July 1914, and then took the play to New York City for an unsuccessful run. After the First World War began, she continued acting at the Vaudeville in the evenings but worked as a volunteer during the day for the Women's Emergency Corps, based at the Little Theatre.[citation needed]

She raised money for hospital and wartime causes and was honoured with the ordre de la Reine Elisabeth for her wartime activities. At the Royalty Theatre, she played Mrs. Culver in the 1918 play The Title, by Arnold Bennett, where she also played Mrs. Etheridge in Caesar's Wife by W. Somerset Maugham and the title role in Mumsie. In October 1920, she and Esmond began an extensive tour of Canada with Nigel Bruce as their stage manager, who played Montague Jordan in Eliza Comes to Stay, which re-opened at the Duke of York's Theatre in London on 14 June 1923.[1]

From 1920 to 1946, Moore made over two dozen films, beginning with The Law Divine (1920). Some of her best-received silent films were Flames of Passion (1922), The Great Well (1924), Chu-Chin-Chow (1925) and Motherland (1927). Her most popular 'talkies' included Almost a Divorce (1931), The Old Dark House (1932), Leave It to Smith (1933), I Was a Spy (1933), Jew Süss (1934), A Cup of Kindness (1934), Vintage Wine (1935), The Divorce of Lady X (1938, which starred her son-in-law Laurence Olivier) and Of Human Bondage (1946).[5]

Moore published her reminiscences, Exits and Entrances, in 1923 but continued to act until 1945. In later years, she resided at Bisham, Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, dying of myocardial degeneration at age 87.[1]

Notes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Eva Moore (9 February 1868 – 27 April 1955) was an English actress and suffragist whose professional career on stage and screen extended over six decades.[1][2]
Born in Brighton, she made her stage debut in 1887 at the Vaudeville Theatre in London, portraying Varney in the play Proposals.[3][4]
Moore transitioned to film in 1920 and gained recognition for character roles, including the devout and domineering Rebecca Femm in James Whale's horror film The Old Dark House (1932).[5][6]
An advocate for women's voting rights, she participated in suffrage activities, including founding the Actresses' Franchise League in 1908, though she later resigned from the organization.[5][4]
Her personal life included marriage to actor and playwright Henry V. Esmond in 1891, with whom she had children, notably daughter Jill Esmond, who became an actress and first wife of Laurence Olivier.[7][3]

Early life

Birth and family background

Eva Moore was born on 9 February 1868 at 67 Preston Street in Brighton, East Sussex, England.[8] [2] She was christened on 28 February 1868 at the Chapel Royal in Brighton.[9] The actress was the eighth of ten children of Edward Henry Moore, a chemist by profession, and his wife Emily Strachan; her youngest sibling was the fellow actress Decima Moore.[9] [8] The family's circumstances reflected the respectable middle-class standing associated with her father's occupation in Victorian England, where chemists often operated as community apothecaries dispensing medicines and maintaining local pharmacies.[9] No records indicate significant relocations or disruptions in her early childhood prior to adolescence, situating her formative years within the stable coastal town's social milieu.[8]

Education and initial training

Moore attended Miss Pringle's school in Brighton during her early years, though her formal education was constrained by weakened eyesight resulting from measles, which necessitated the use of dark spectacles.[10][8] At age 14, she pursued practical training in gymnastics and dancing under Madame Michau in Liverpool, where she worked extended hours from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. for approximately one year.[10][8] Upon returning to Brighton, Moore taught dancing locally, including lessons to a young Winston Churchill at his preparatory school.[11][4] Her initial exposure to performance came through amateur theatricals organized at home, where she encountered Harriet Young, an early influence who facilitated connections in provincial theater circles.[10] By ages 15 or 16, Moore gained practical experience in regional productions, earning 10 shillings weekly for minor roles such as a wave concealed under a cloth, a limping waiter, and villainous characters in melodramas including The Stranglers of Paris, The Corsican Brothers, Oliver Twist (as Bill Sikes), and Uriah Heep.[10] These engagements, supplemented by advice from figures like Mrs. Kendal (who cautioned against pursuing acting) and Mr. Fernandez (who critiqued tendencies toward overacting), honed her skills in character portrayal and stage movement without formal acting instruction.[10]

Stage career

Professional debut and early roles

Eva Moore made her professional stage debut in 1887 at London's Vaudeville Theatre, initially appearing in minor supporting roles such as the chambermaid in Partners and Varney in Proposals.[12] [3] These early performances, undertaken at age 19 against her father's opposition, marked her entry into a highly competitive Victorian theater landscape where female actors often contended with typecasting in domestic or comedic parts and limited access to starring opportunities.[12] Following her debut, Moore joined comedian John Lawrence Toole's company at the Toole's Theatre, where she took on roles like the Spirit of Home (Dot) in The Cricket on the Hearth during the 1887 Christmas season, earning £1 per week.[12] In 1888, she expanded her repertoire with Alice in A Red Rag, Dora in The Don, and Alice Marshall in The Butler, roles that showcased her adaptability in farcical and light comedy genres amid modest provincial tours and London engagements.[12] By late 1888, she had advanced to leading lady positions on tour, with earnings rising to £3 weekly, though financial strains persisted, including borrowing for costumes and recovering from a mugging that depleted her savings.[12] Her marriage to actor and playwright H. V. Esmond on 19 November 1891 initiated key collaborations that provided professional stability in an era of precarious contracts and gender-based constraints.[12] [8] Early joint efforts included co-managing and performing in Bogey (1894) as Fairy Buttonshaw, followed by Margaret in In and Out of a Punt (1896), Maysie in One Summer's Day (1897), and Gabrielle de Chalius in The Three Musketeers (1898).[12] These productions, often blending Esmond's writing with their on-stage partnership, highlighted Moore's transition from understudy challenges—such as substituting in The Middleman (1889) as Felicia Umfraville—to more prominent, versatile characterizations, laying groundwork for her sustained presence in Edwardian theater despite health setbacks like overwork-induced illness.[12]

Major stage successes and collaborations

Eva Moore achieved significant stage success through her long-term professional partnership with her husband, actor and playwright Henry V. Esmond, following their marriage in 1891; they co-starred in over a dozen productions, many authored by Esmond specifically featuring Moore in leading roles.[13] This collaboration highlighted her versatility in sentimental comedies and farces, with Esmond tailoring characters to showcase her technical prowess in emotional depth and comic timing.[14] A notable early success in this vein was The Wilderness (1901), written by Esmond, in which Moore portrayed Mabel Vaughn at the St. James's Theatre, contributing to the play's acclaim for its sentimental appeal and subsequent plans for New York production.[14] [3] Further collaborations included The Sentimentalists (1902), where she played Wilhelmina Marr, and One Summer's Day (1903) at the Comedy Theatre, roles that demonstrated her adaptability across intimate domestic dramas.[3] [15] The pinnacle of their joint endeavors came with Eliza Comes to Stay (1913), another Esmond farce at the Criterion Theatre, which ran for over six months in London before touring, underscoring empirical success through its extended engagement and the duo's command of farcical elements.[16] These productions, often involving family tours, solidified Moore's reputation for sustained performances in West End venues during the 1890s and 1900s, prioritizing run lengths and production scales as measures of achievement over anecdotal praise.[17]

Public activism

Involvement in women's suffrage

Eva Moore co-founded the Actresses' Franchise League (AFL) in December 1908 alongside figures such as Adeline Bourne, Edith Kelly, and Sime Seruya, serving as its vice-president and helping organize a group dedicated to constitutional advocacy for women's enfranchisement through non-militant means, including lectures, literature distribution, and propaganda performances.[18][8] The AFL explicitly avoided endorsing militant tactics, positioning itself as non-party and non-political to focus on educating the public and pressuring Parliament via persuasion rather than disruption.[19] Moore participated in suffrage demonstrations, marching in processions to demonstrate solidarity with the broader movement while adhering to the AFL's peaceful ethos.[8] She also arranged organizational meetings, such as those in early 1909 at venues like Bedford Street and the Criterion Restaurant, where she facilitated speeches by allies including her sister Emily Pertwee, emphasizing rational discourse over confrontation.[18] Her involvement reflected internal divisions within suffragism, as the AFL distanced itself from the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU)'s escalating militancy, such as window-smashing and arson, which some contemporaries and later analyses argued alienated moderates and stiffened parliamentary resistance—evidenced by the inverse correlation between WSPU violence peaks (e.g., 1912-1913) and legislative progress until wartime contributions shifted dynamics.[20][21] In June 1914, Moore delivered a public speech defending Mary Blomfield's跪-in protest at Buckingham Palace against the force-feeding of hunger-striking prisoners, declaring that "we must all take our hats off to such terrific courage," though she qualified it as potentially ill-timed; the address garnered headlines but also drew abusive correspondence, highlighting public polarization.[22] She resigned from the AFL amid tensions over a 1910 sketch, Her Vote, penned by her husband Henry V. Esmond, which critics within the league deemed insufficiently serious for propaganda.[8][18] Moore's efforts aligned with constitutional strategies that sustained long-term advocacy, contributing to the empirical outcome of the 1918 Representation of the People Act, which enfranchised women over 30 meeting property qualifications—affecting approximately 8.4 million women initially—following years of petitions and wartime labor demonstrations rather than solely militant spectacle, though full equality awaited the 1928 act.[21] No records indicate her personal arrest or endorsement of violence, underscoring her preference for legalistic persistence amid the movement's fractious phases.[8]

Other civic engagements

During the First World War, Moore co-founded the Women's Emergency Corps (WEC) with her sister Decima Moore, actress Lena Ashwell, and Evelina Haverfield shortly after Britain's entry into the conflict on 4 August 1914.[23] The organization mobilized women volunteers for relief efforts, including recruitment for nursing, clerical work, and emergency services to support the war effort on the home front.[17] Operating from offices at the Little Theatre in London, Moore volunteered there during daytime hours, coordinating activities and fundraising for affiliated nursing stations, while maintaining her evening stage commitments.[3][8] Moore also aided in promoting troop entertainment initiatives by touring British cities, including Bristol and Newcastle, alongside Lena Ashwell to garner public support and recruits for Ashwell's concert parties, which provided morale-boosting performances for soldiers near the front lines starting in early 1915.[24] These efforts complemented the WEC's broader volunteer framework, emphasizing practical aid over political advocacy.[25] Beyond wartime activities, Moore contributed to performers' welfare through participation in benefit events, such as the 1898 gala for the Actors' Benevolent Fund supporting retired actress Nellie Farren, reflecting a pattern of industry-specific philanthropy.[26] She later appeared among notable supporters of the Actors' Orphanage (predecessor to the Actors' Children Trust) in fundraising appeals during the mid-20th century.[27]

Film career

Entry into cinema

Eva Moore entered the film industry in 1920, debuting in the British silent production The Law Divine, directed by H.B. Parkinson and Challis Sanderson, where she portrayed Edie le Bas.[3] [28] This marked her initial foray into cinema after over three decades on the stage, coinciding with the medium's expansion in Britain and offering opportunities for established performers to reach broader audiences via emerging distribution networks.[28] Her early film work adhered to silent-era conventions, necessitating adjustments from theatrical immediacy to static camera framing and intertitle-dependent narratives, though Moore's experience in emotive stage roles facilitated her portrayal of character-driven parts without evident disruption to her career trajectory.[3] Subsequent credits included Flames of Passion (1922), The Crimson Circle (1922), and The Great Well (1924), all British silents that built on her reputation for versatile supporting roles, demonstrating continuity between her live performances and screen adaptations.[28] [3] As the decade progressed, Moore's filmography expanded with releases like Chu-Chin-Chow (1925) and Motherland (1927), the latter a war-themed silent produced at Isleworth Studios, underscoring her adaptability amid technological shifts toward synchronized sound by the late 1920s.)[28] These initial endeavors, totaling several dozen films through 1946, primarily in Britain, reflected pragmatic extension of her artistry into a visually oriented format suited to her mature persona.[3]

Notable film appearances

Moore's most prominent film role came in James Whale's The Old Dark House (1932), where she played the fanatical Rebecca Femm, a bedridden sister obsessed with chastity and scripture amid the film's ensemble of eccentric family members trapped in a Welsh mansion during a storm.[29] The Universal Pictures production, adapted from J.B. Priestley's novel Benighted, blended horror and dark comedy, with Moore's performance contributing to its enduring reputation as a pre-Code classic that earned a 97% approval rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes based on 30 reviews.[30] Her portrayal of Rebecca's shrill denunciations and physical intensity stood out in supporting scenes, contrasting the leads played by Boris Karloff and Melvyn Douglas.[31] In the British comedy A Cup of Kindness (1934), directed by and starring Tom Walls, Moore appeared as Mrs. Tutt, the meddlesome mother-in-law in a farce about feuding neighbors whose children fall in love, featuring musical pantomime sequences.[32] Produced by British and Dominions Imperial Studios, the film adapted a stage play and highlighted Moore's versatility in lighter domestic roles alongside Ralph Lynn and Robertson Hare.[32] Other significant appearances included the supporting part of a gossip in Alfred Hitchcock's The Skin Game (1931), a British International Pictures drama about a feud between property developers, where her brief role amplified the social tensions.[2] In The Divorce of Lady X (1938), she portrayed a minor character in the London Films comedy starring her son-in-law Laurence Olivier, focusing on mistaken identity amid high-society scandal.[2] Moore's film output totaled approximately 29 credits from 1920 to 1946, predominantly supporting roles in British productions, with fewer leads compared to her extensive stage work.[6] Later entries encompassed Mrs. Gray in the 1946 remake of Of Human Bondage, directed by Edmund Goulding for Warner Bros., and Mother Meg in The Bandit of Sherwood Forest (1946), a Columbia swashbuckler.[6]

Personal life

Marriage and family

Eva Moore married the actor and playwright Henry Vernon Esmond on 19 November 1891 in London.[8][33] The couple maintained a family life centered in England, with Moore balancing her stage commitments alongside domestic responsibilities in a traditional marital arrangement. Esmond, born Henry Esmond Jack in 1869, predeceased her on 17 April 1922.[7] They had two children: son Jack Esmond, born in 1899, who pursued a career in auto racing, and daughter Jill Esmond, born on 26 January 1908 in London.[33][34] Jill followed her parents into acting, achieving prominence on stage and screen, and later marrying actor Laurence Olivier in 1930.[35] The family resided primarily in London, where the children were raised amid the theatrical milieu but with emphasis on private family bonds separate from public professional endeavors. No public records indicate marital separations or significant family disruptions prior to Esmond's death.[36]

Relationships with notable figures

Through her daughter Jill Esmond's marriage to Laurence Olivier on July 25, 1930, Moore maintained indirect ties to one of the 20th century's leading Shakespearean actors.[37] The union produced a son, Tarquin, born August 21, 1936, but ended in divorce on January 29, 1940, amid Olivier's affair with Vivien Leigh. Olivier wed Leigh on August 31, 1940, forging a high-profile partnership that elevated both in Hollywood and British theater, thus extending Moore's familial network into these circles.[38] Records of Moore's own non-familial friendships remain sparse, with her autobiography Exits and Entrances (1924) alluding to theater contemporaries without naming specific enduring personal bonds beyond professional overlaps.[12]

Later years

Transition from performing

Following her notable film roles in the 1930s, including The Old Dark House (1932), A Cup of Kindness (1934), and Blind Justice (1934), Eva Moore's screen appearances diminished in frequency during the 1940s.[2] She took on supporting parts in Scotland Yard Investigator (1945), Of Human Bondage (1946), The Bandit of Sherwood Forest (1946), and A Son Is Born (1946), marking her final credited film work. This shift aligned with her advancing age—she turned 77 in 1945—prompting a natural tapering of physically and schedulatively intensive performing commitments typical for veteran actors of the period, absent documented health declines or industry-specific barriers like the transition to sound cinema, which she had already navigated successfully. Stage engagements similarly waned, with no major productions recorded after mid-decade, reflecting a semi-retirement phase focused on selective involvement rather than full withdrawal. Moore's 1923 memoir Exits and Entrances provides introspective summaries of her early-to-mid career roles and collaborations but predates these later developments, serving more as a capstone to her prolific theatrical phase than a bridge to retirement.[39]

Death and immediate aftermath

Eva Moore died on 27 April 1955 at her home in Maidenhead, Berkshire, England, aged 87.[2][36] Contemporary obituaries in British newspapers noted her passing, emphasizing a stage career spanning over 55 years and portraying her as one of the era's most beautiful and distinguished actresses.[40] No public funeral details were widely reported, and immediate family responses, including from her son Jack Esmond, remained private without documented statements in available records.[36]

Legacy

Cultural impact and recognition

Moore's co-founding of the Actors' Franchise League in 1908 enabled the staging of over 200 suffrage-themed plays and pageants between 1909 and 1914, exposing theatergoers to arguments for women's enfranchisement that bypassed traditional political rallies and reached an estimated audience of tens of thousands.[41] These performances, including original works like How the Vote Was Won (1909) in which she participated, integrated advocacy into mainstream entertainment, fostering public familiarity with suffrage rhetoric amid growing militancy.[42] However, the causal contribution of such cultural efforts to the Representation of the People Act 1918—granting votes to women over 30—is intertwined with non-theatrical tactics like hunger strikes and property damage, as archival records emphasize the latter's role in shifting government policy.[43] Post-enfranchisement data indicate tempered outcomes from suffrage advocacy, including cultural variants: women's parliamentary seats rose from 1 in 1910 to just 15 by 1924, while labor participation edged from 29.5% in 1921 to 31.6% in 1931, suggesting economic pressures and technological shifts exerted stronger influences than voting access alone.[44] Moore's later film roles, spanning 1920 to 1934 with appearances in over 20 productions, exemplified the era's stage-to-screen migration, applying live-performance nuances to silent and early sound cinema, though her contributions lacked the transformative metrics of contemporaries like Lilian Gish.[3] For her World War I relief work, including entertaining troops and aid coordination, Moore received Belgium's Ordre de la Reine Elisabeth in 1919, one of few formal honors amid an acting career devoid of major theatrical or cinematic awards.[8] Her 1923 memoir Exits and Entrances documents transitional theater practices, offering primary-source value for historians but without evidence of widespread revivals or citations shaping subsequent productions.[17]

Family influence on entertainment

Eva Moore's children perpetuated a familial tradition in the performing arts. Her son, Jack Esmond (born 1898), pursued acting, building on the theatrical foundation established by his parents, Eva Moore and Henry V. Esmond.[45][46] Daughter Jill Esmond (1908–1990), also an actress, debuted on stage in the 1920s and gained prominence through roles in West End productions and early films. She married actor Laurence Olivier on 25 July 1930, forging a significant industry linkage that amplified visibility for the Esmond family amid Olivier's rising stardom in Shakespearean theater and Hollywood.[35][47] The union produced one son, Tarquin Olivier (born 21 August 1936), who entered film production, contributing credits such as Atatürk: Founder of Modern Turkey (1999), thereby extending multigenerational involvement in entertainment.[48][49] Jill Esmond and Olivier divorced on 29 January 1940, after which Jill continued sporadic acting work while Olivier's career escalated further.[35] Tarquin Olivier, raised amid this high-profile separation, diverged from pure performance paths, incorporating pursuits in classical piano and rowing alongside production roles, reflecting a diluted but persistent dynastic thread from Moore's era into mid-20th-century cinema.[50][51] This pattern underscores indirect generational continuity in British entertainment, grounded in biographical records of familial professions rather than documented mentorship.[52]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.