Edna May
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Edna Pettie, known as Edna May, was an American actress and singer. She was born on September 2, 1878 in Syracuse, New York, and died January 1, 1948 in Lausanne, Switzerland.
[edit] Life and career
At the age of 5, May played Little Willie Allen in a production of "Dora". By the age of 7, she had joined a children's opera company and performed Gilbert and Sullivan productions in Syracuse. She studied music at the New York Conservatoire and made her professional debut in 1895 in Si Stebbings in Syracuse. She then moved to New York to join the chorus of an Oscar Hammerstein production of Santa Maria. That year, she married Fred Titus, who held a world record for cycling. They divorced in 1904.
In 1897, May played Violet Grey in The Belle of New York with only moderate success. The following year the production played in London, becoming a hit and running for 697 performances, making May a star. After that, among others, she played Gabrielle Dalmonte in An American Beauty in London (1900), Olga in The Girl from Up There (1901) in New York and then London, Edna Branscombe in Three Little Maids (1902), Lillian Leigh in The School Girl (1903-1914) in London and New York, Alesia in La Poupée (1904) in London, and Angela in The Catch of the Season (1905) in New York. The Belle of Mayfair followed in London in 1906. May played the title character in Nelly Neil in London in 1907.
May was known for her beauty and received tremendous attention from male admirers. She was involved in a passionate but failed relationship with Prince Raj Narayan Bahadur(of the erstwhile kingdom of Cooch Behar in India) but could not marry him due to his parent's disapproval as she did not belong to one of India's royal families. Finally, in 1907, she agreed to marry millionaire Oscar Lewisohn and retired from the stage. The couple settled in England.
May lived at Winkfield in Berkshire during her retirement, but made brief returns to the stage in 1911 benefit performances of The Belle of New York at the Savoy Theatre in London and 1915's The Masque of Peace and War in London. Also in 1911, she appeared in the film Forgotten; or An Answered Prayer. She also starred in a 1916 film version of The Belle of New York called Salvation Joan.