Maxine Elliott

Maxine Elliott

Maxine Elliott c.1901
Born February 5, 1868(1868-02-05)
Rockland, Maine
Died March 5, 1940(1940-03-05) (aged 72)
Cannes, France
Occupation Film, stage actress

Maxine Elliott (February 5, 1868, Rockland, Maine - March 5, 1940, Cannes, France) was an American stage actress.

It is said that reviewers disagreed "over whether it was her beauty or her acting ability that attracted attention"[1] In addition to her stage skills, Elliott was also a savvy businesswoman.

Born Jessie McDermott in 1868 (some sources give 1871). By age 15 in 1883 the already developed Jessie was seduced and made pregnant by a 25-year-old male whom she may have married underage according to her niece's biography. She miscarried or lost the baby. This incident left a psychological wound on Jessie for the rest of her life. What became of this first husband is unknown. Jessie adopted her stage name Maxine Elliott in 1889, making her first appearance in 1890 in The Middleman. In 1895, she got her first big break when Augustin Daly hired her as a supporting actress for his star player, Ada Rehan. After divorcing her first husband, Elliott married comedian Nat C. Goodwin in 1898. The two starred together at home and abroad in such hits as Nathan Hale and The Cowboy and the Lady.

In a production of The Merchant of Venice, she negotiated a contract for $200 and one-half of the profits over $20,000. She was billed alone when Charles B. Dillingham's production of Her Own Way opened on Broadway on September 28, 1903. From then on, Elliott was a star. When the production moved to London in 1905, King Edward VII asked that she be presented to him. Her younger sister, Gertrude, was married to the English actor Sir Johnston Forbes-Robertson.

Goodwin eventually divorced Elliott in 1908. Around this time she became friendly with financier J. P. Morgan. Some biographers of Morgan claim the seventy year old Morgan had a sexual relationship with Maxine but no evidence substantiates these rumors. Assuredly Morgan gave her financial advice of all sorts and she became a rich woman because of this advice. Shortly after divorcing Goodwin, she returned to New York City and in 1908 opened her own theater, The Maxine Elliott, located on Thirty-Ninth Street just off Broadway. She was both owner and manager, and, at the time, the only woman in the United States running her own theater. Her first production was The Chaperon. Elliott experimented with acting in silent films in 1913. In that year, she was in Slim Driscoll, Samaritan, When the West Was Young and A Doll for the Baby, but soon returned to London. In 1917 she returned to the U.S. and signed with newly formed Goldwyn Pictures to make Fighting Odds and The Eternal Magdalene. The odds are against Elliott's films surviving the decades, but evidence points to Fighting Odds surviving in Russia's Gosfilmofond. Elliott can be seen visiting Charlie Chaplin's studios in 1918 and cavorting with him and her entourage before Chaplin's cameras. Her visit to Chaplin survives and usually ends up in omnibus videos on Chaplin.

During World War I, Elliott returned to Europe and volunteered both her income and her time to the cause of Belgian relief, for which she received the Order of the Crown (Belgium). She was dating tennis star Tony Wilding and they may have planned to marry, but he died in 1915 in France during World War 1.

Elliott's last stage appearance was in 1920 in Trimmed in Scarlett, aged 52. She then retired from acting, announcing that she "wished to grow middle-aged gracefully".[2] Successful in business and investment, Elliott had homes in America and in Europe. She died in Cannes, France, a wealthy woman, at the age of 72. She was the subject of a biography titled "My Aunt Maxine: The Story of Maxine Elliot" c.1964 written by her niece Diana Forbes-Robertson.

Notes

  1. ^ Block, p. 277
  2. ^ Id. p. 278

References

External links