Title: | Barry, Helen (Elizabeth Short) (1840-1904): Actress |
 |
Description: | Barry, Helen (Elizabeth Short) (1840-1904): With her third husband, Helen moved to America and took on a variety of roles, reprising Margaret in Arkwright’s Wife. She played the quarrel scene at the Adelphi for a benefit 1874 and, in 1879, played Mrs. Arabella Buster in the first London performance of Boucicault’s Forbidden Fruit. She became embroiled in copyright suits in England and America, where she died aged 64. |
 |
1st Performance: | Apr 14, 1875 |
 |
Theatre: | Adelphi |
 |
Source: | Photo by Mora of New York. Located on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Barry; http://www.remainstobeseen.com/index-i-1101-category-Cabinet-Card.htm., Apr 14, 1875 |
 |
 |
|
 |
 |
Photo by Mora of New York. Located on Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helen_Barry; http://www.remainstobeseen.com/index-i-1101-category-Cabinet-Card.htm., Apr 14, 1875
|
|

|
Thank
you for visiting this site. |
Copyright
© 1988, 1992, 2013 and 2016 by Alfred L. Nelson, Gilbert B.
Cross, Joseph Donohue. |
Originally
published by Greenwood Press as The Sans Pareil Theatre
1806-1819, Adelphi Theatre 1819-1850: An Index to Authors, Titles,
Performers, 1988, and The Adelphi Theatre 1850-1900: An
Index to Authors, Titles, Performers and Management, 1992.
|
 |
The Adelphi Theatre Calendar revised, reconstructed and
amplified. Copyright © 2013 and 2016 by Alfred L.
Nelson, Gilbert B. Cross, Joseph Donohue. This work is
licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License, with the
exception of graphics from The Clip Art Book, edited by
Gerard Quinn and published by Crescent in 1990. These images
are reproduced in accord with the publisher’s note, which states "The
Clip Art Book is a new compilation of illustrations that are in the
public domain. The individual illustrations are copyright free
and may be reproduced without permission or payment. However,
the selection of illustrations and their layout is the copyright of
the publisher, so that one page or more may not be photocopied or
reproduced without first contacting the publishers."
|