Difference between revisions of "Ada Edney"
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− | (b. **/**/**** - d. **/**/****). Actress. Little is known about her, but Ada Edney was a member of the [[Howitt-Phillips Company]] that performed at the Palladium in Singapore in the plays ''Diplomacy'' and ''Raffles'' in March 1915. In April the following year she was back in Singapore with the Melbourne Comedy Company, this time at the Alhambra and she was still with them in September, for in a Dutch-language newspaper published in Batavia, Tom and Eileen Melbourne and Ada Edney offered a reward for the return of three music books. In December 1926, Miss Ada Edney, “soprano and soubrette” performed at the Strand Theatre in Singleton (NSW) with the Rev. Frank W. Gorman, an American clergyman who turned to vaudeville and was popularly known as “The Singing Parson”. In between she was in South Africa and acted in [[Joseph Albrecht]]’s film version of [[H. Seton Merriman]]’s novel [[With Edged Tools]] (1919) as the girl who nurses the hero ([[Jack Sparrow]]) back to health and eventually marries him. (FO) | + | (b. **/**/**** - d. **/**/****). Actress. Little is known about her, but Ada Edney was a member of the [[Howitt-Phillips Company]] that performed at the Palladium in Singapore in the plays ''Diplomacy'' and ''Raffles'' in March 1915. In April the following year she was back in Singapore with the Melbourne Comedy Company, this time at the Alhambra, and she was still with them in September, for in a Dutch-language newspaper published in Batavia, Tom and Eileen Melbourne and Ada Edney offered a reward for the return of three music books. In December 1926, Miss Ada Edney, “soprano and soubrette” performed at the Strand Theatre in Singleton (NSW) with the Rev. Frank W. Gorman, an American clergyman who turned to vaudeville and was popularly known as “The Singing Parson”. In between she was in South Africa and acted in [[Joseph Albrecht]]’s film version of [[H. Seton Merriman]]’s novel [[With Edged Tools]] (1919) as the girl who nurses the hero ([[Jack Sparrow]]) back to health and eventually marries him. (FO) |
== Sources == | == Sources == |
Revision as of 12:56, 21 March 2013
(b. **/**/**** - d. **/**/****). Actress. Little is known about her, but Ada Edney was a member of the Howitt-Phillips Company that performed at the Palladium in Singapore in the plays Diplomacy and Raffles in March 1915. In April the following year she was back in Singapore with the Melbourne Comedy Company, this time at the Alhambra, and she was still with them in September, for in a Dutch-language newspaper published in Batavia, Tom and Eileen Melbourne and Ada Edney offered a reward for the return of three music books. In December 1926, Miss Ada Edney, “soprano and soubrette” performed at the Strand Theatre in Singleton (NSW) with the Rev. Frank W. Gorman, an American clergyman who turned to vaudeville and was popularly known as “The Singing Parson”. In between she was in South Africa and acted in Joseph Albrecht’s film version of H. Seton Merriman’s novel With Edged Tools (1919) as the girl who nurses the hero (Jack Sparrow) back to health and eventually marries him. (FO)
Sources
The Straits Times, 26 March 1915
The Straits Times, 27 March 1915
The Straits Times, 17 April 1916
Het Nieuws van de Dag, Batavia, 17 September 1916
Singleton Argus, 16 December 1926
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