Online Encyclopedia

WILLIAM TERRISS (1847–1897)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 660 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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WILLIAM TERRISS (1847–1897)  ,
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English actor, whose real name was William Charles James Lewin, was born in
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London on the loth of
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February 1847 . After trying the merchant service,
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medicine, sheep-farming in the Falkland Isles, and tea-planting in Bengal, in 1867 he took to the stage, for which his handsome presence,
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fine voice and gallant bearing eminently fitted him . His first appearance in London was as Lord Cloudrays in Robertson's Society, at the old Prince of Wales's theatre . He quickly came into fawur in " hero " parts, and appeared at the
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principal London theatres from 1868 onwards . In 188o he joined Irving's
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company at the
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Lyceum, playing such parts as Cassio and Mercutio, and in 1885 he acted there with Mary Anderson, as Romeo to her Juliet, &c . He was then engaged to take the leading parts in Adelphi melodrama, and it was in this capacity that for the rest of his career he was best known, though he occasionally acted elsewhere, notably with Irving at the Lyceum . His last appearance was in Secret Service . On the 16th of December 1897, as he was entering the Adelphi theatre, he was stabbed to
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death by a madman, Richard Arthur Prince . Terriss married
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Miss
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Isabel Lewis, and his daughter Ellaline Terriss (Mrs Seymour Hicks) became a well-known actress in musical
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comedy, in association with her
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husband
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Edward Seymour Hicks (b . 1871), proprietor of the Aldwych and Hicks theatres in London . Sec Arthur J . Smythe, The
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Life of William remiss (London, 1898) .

End of Article: WILLIAM TERRISS (1847–1897)
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