Nelly Moore

Nelly Moore or Eleanora Moore (1844/45 – 12 January 1869) was a British actress who died young.

Nelly Moore
Eleanora (Nelly) Moore in 1860s
Born1844/5
Died12 January 1869
NationalityBritish

Life

Moore died in London in 1869 aged 24 years old from typhoid fever. She first acted in Manchester and appeared in London at the St James's Theatre in the first showing of Cupid's Ladder by Leicester Buckingham. After that she returned to work under Alfred Wigan as Margaret Lovell in Tom Taylor's Up at the Hills. In a short life Moore appeared in the first showing of several notable performances at the Haymarket Theatre, the Queen's and the Princesses. One of her performances moved Henry Sambrooke Leigh to write a verse in her honour. She came from an acting family.[1] Her biography was included in the Dictionary of National Biography.[2]

It was said that Henry Irving who had been a colleague of Moore's died carrying a photograph of Nelly that he had pasted back to back with his own. This caused some speculation but later research identifies the woman in Irving's photograph as Ethen Western aka Zare Thalberg.[3]

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gollark: Wikipedia's main thing is CONTENT, not technical goodness of their wiki software.
gollark: I don't want this to be a huge open source project. That would be work. People would want support.
gollark: Anyway, beyond FTS, I have some ideas, no idea whether I will ever actually get round to them: Extra Markdown syntax extensions for useful features I want; tracking of page interlinks (including contextual links) and building a cool graph visualization; file attachment; a web clipper; keyboard shortcuts.
gollark: They have better IDE support, for one thing.

References

  1. Joseph Knight, ‘Moore, Eleanora (1844/5–1869)’, rev. J. Gilliland, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 8 Feb 2015
  2. "Moore, Eleanora" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  3. "The Thalbery Mystery by Alex Bisset". The Irving Society. 1 June 2002. Retrieved 8 January 2020.
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