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With the completion of the London 1911 census on TheGenealogist.co.uk and more counties to follow shortly, a whole new wealth of information is now available to Diamond subscribers. Much had changed since the previous census of 1901, Queen Victoria had passed away and her son Edward VII reigned until his death in 1910. The 1911 census was taken on April 2nd, two months before the coronation of the new King George V. The actress Lillie Langtry, and former mistress of the future King Edward VII, is also present on the census at her residence in London Hanover Square: |
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![]() Lillie Langtry in the London 1911 Census |
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The Kelly’s handbook not only provides a short biography for Ian Malcolm but also gives the year he married Jeanne Marie, her parents as Emilie and Edward Langtry, the year Lillie married her second husband and also the year she died, and her father W C Le Breton Dean of Jersey. When Lillie’s affair with the Prince of Wales officially ended in 1880 following a row at a party, the creditors began to move in on the Langtry’s, who were unable to support their lavish lifestyle. Lillie was forced to sell many of her possessions to cover mounting debts and decided she needed to find some way of supporting herself. Her friends Oscar Wilde and the famous French actress Sarah Bernhardt introduced her to acting. She gave up her daughter Jeanne to be raised by her grandparents, and embarked on a stage career with her debut in December 1881 at the Haymarket Theatre. The following year she did her first tour of the US. She was extremely successful and continued the tour over subsequent years. Lillie became an American citizen in 1897 and divorced Edward in the same year in California. Occupational records are useful resources for researching ancestors with specific trades such as acting. TheGenealogist has many occupational records available, including ‘Who’s Who in the Theatre 1922’, which contains biographies of actors, actresses and critics here and on the continent, and includes an entry for Lillie Langtry. There are also family trees of theatrical families, theatrical and musical obituaries, and a Roll of Honour for actors, musicians, writers and workers for the stage 1914-1918.
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