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Lottie Lyell

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Other names
  
Lottie Lyell

Siblings
  
Lynda Cox

Role
  
Actress

Name
  
Lottie Lyell

Years active
  
1911–1925


Lottie Lyell Lottie Qwerty Girls

Full Name
  
Charlotte Edith Cox

Born
  
23 February 1890 (
1890-02-23
)

Occupation
  
Actress, screenwriter, editor, film producer

Died
  
December 21, 1925, Roseville, Sydney, Australia

Movies
  
The Sentimental Bloke, The Blue Mountains Mystery

Similar People
  
Raymond Longford, Arthur Tauchert, C J Dennis, Steele Rudd, John Faulkner

Lottie lyell in the woman suffers australia 1918


Lottie Lyell (born Charlotte Edith Cox) (23 February 1890 – 21 December 1925) was an Australian actress, screenwriter, editor and filmmaker. She is regarded as Australia's first film star, and also contributed to the local industry during the silent era with her collaborations with Raymond Longford.

Contents

Lottie Lyell Lottie Lyell ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation

She was born in Balmain, a suburb in Sydney, New South Wales in 1890. By 1912, Lyell had become romantically involved with Longford. The couple lived together in Brisbane and formed the most influential and pioneering partnerships in Australian cinema history. Although Longford was separated, his Catholic wife would not divorce him and he was never able to marry Lyell. Lyell fell ill with tuberculosis and died at her home in Roseville, North Sydney on 21 December 1925.

Lottie Lyell Lottie Lyell the sentimental girl Writer Michael Burge

Lottie Lyell trailer


Career

Lottie Lyell image2findagravecomphotos200514311017538111

Charlotte Cox started her acting career at the age of 17. She took the stage name of Lottie Lyell, and in 1910 at age 20 had her theatre breakthrough, when she performed as Maggie Brown in An Englishman's Home. The travelling theatre company took Lyell on tour for the show and she performed across Australia, including Tasmania, and New Zealand. After visiting 85 towns, the tour ended when a flood held up the production in Murtoa, Victoria. Lyell's later theatre successes continued when she joined the Clark and Meynell Company.

Raymond Longford

Lottie Lyell National Museum of Australia Lottie Lyell

The following year, Lyell exchanged live theatre for a new, modern medium – film. She debuted in Alfred Rolfe's Captain Midnight, The Bush King and by late 1911 her lead role in Raymond Longford's The Romantic Story of Margaret Catchpole (1911) transformed her into Australia's first international film star. The British magazine Punch wrote of the film, "This big film is the best that has been made in Australia".

Lyell and Longford formed the most influential and pioneering partnerships in Australian film history. In 1913 Lyell starred in ‘Neath Austral Skies as Eileen Delmont. Notably in this role she performed her own stunts, which included riding a horse with a knife between her teeth and diving into the sea. Another Longford/Lyell film made in 1913, Australia Calls, contained some ‘special effects’ such as cardboard planes flying down wires, annihilating some Sydney landmarks.

Although Longford offered to film battlefronts during the Great War from 1914 until 1918, the Australian Government declined his offer. Longford and Lyell would never make a war related feature during the First World War.

In 1919, Lyell portrayed Doreen in The Sentimental Bloke, which is now regarded as the landmark piece of the Longford/Lyell collaborations. Lyell is believed to have also contributed to the screenplay, art direction, editing and production. In 1921, Lyell wrote, edited and co-directed The Blue Mountains Mystery to much critical acclaim. Longford and Lyell formed Longford-Lyell Australian Motion Picture Productions in 1922. Lyell also returned to acting in 1922 with Rudd's New Selection.

She was active until her death in 1925, and two of her screenplays, Peter Vernon's Silence and The Pioneers, were made into films the following year.

Final years

In the early 1920s, Lyell's health declined. Lyell's sister, Lynda Cox, died in September 1925. Lottie Lyell died on 21 December the same year, from Tuberculosis and was buried at Macquarie Park Cemetery and Crematorium. Raymond Longford passed away on 2 April 1959 and was buried beside her.

Writer

  • Australia Calls (1913)
  • The Mutiny of the Bounty (1916)
  • The Sentimental Bloke (1919)
  • On Our Selection (1920)
  • Ginger Mick (1920)
  • Rudd's New Selection (1921)
  • The Blue Mountains Mystery (1921)
  • The Dinkum Bloke (1923)
  • Australia Calls (1923)
  • The Bushwhackers (1925)
  • The Pioneers (1926)
  • Sons of Australia, screened as Peter Vernon's Silence (1926)
  • Editor

  • The Mutiny of the Bounty (1916)
  • The Sentimental Bloke (1919)
  • Producer

  • The Dinkum Bloke (1923)
  • Assistant director

  • The Dinkum Bloke (1923)
  • Director

  • The Blue Mountains Mystery (1921)
  • Theatre Credits

  • The Land of Gold by George Darrell (1907)
  • vaudeville (1908)
  • Geach touring company (1909)
  • An Englishman's Home (1909)
  • The Midnight Wedding (1910) – tour
  • Why Men Love Women by Walter Howard (1910)
  • The Fatal Wedding (1910) – tour with Raymond Longford and Gilbert Emery
  • Her love against the world
  • Filmography

    Actress
    1923
    The Dinkum Bloke as
    Nell Garvin
    1921
    Rudd's New Selection as
    Nell
    1920
    Ginger Mick as
    Doreen
    1919
    The Sentimental Bloke as
    Doreen
    1918
    The Woman Suffers as
    Marjory Manton
    1917
    The Church and the Woman as
    Eileen Shannon
    1916
    The Mutiny of the Bounty as
    Nessy Heywood
    1916
    A Maori Maid's Love
    1915
    We'll Take Her Children in Amongst Our Own
    1914
    Taking His Chance
    1914
    The Swagman's Story
    1914
    Trooper Campbell
    1914
    The Silence of Dean Maitland as
    Marion, Henry's sister
    1913
    'Neath Austral Skies as
    Eileen Delmont
    1913
    Pommy Arrives in Australia
    1913
    Australia Calls as
    Beatrice Evans
    1912
    The Midnight Wedding as
    Princess Astrea
    1912
    The Tide of Death as
    Sylvia Grey
    1911
    Queen of the Smugglers (Short) as
    Margaret Catchpole
    1911
    The Convict Hero
    1911
    The Fatal Wedding as
    Mabel Wilson
    1911
    Captain Starlight, or Gentleman of the Road
    1911
    The Bushranger's Bride
    Writer
    1926
    The Pioneers
    1925
    The Bushwhackers
    1923
    Australia Calls (writer)
    1923
    The Dinkum Bloke (writer)
    1921
    Rudd's New Selection
    1921
    The Blue Mountains Mystery
    1920
    On Our Selection
    1920
    Ginger Mick
    1919
    The Sentimental Bloke (writer)
    1916
    The Mutiny of the Bounty
    1913
    Australia Calls (writer)
    Art Department
    1919
    The Sentimental Bloke (assistant art director - uncredited) / (intertitles - uncredited)
    Editor
    1919
    The Sentimental Bloke
    1916
    The Mutiny of the Bounty
    Director
    1921
    The Blue Mountains Mystery
    Assistant Director
    1923
    The Dinkum Bloke (assistant director)
    Editorial Department
    1919
    The Sentimental Bloke (assistant editor - uncredited)
    Location Management
    1919
    The Sentimental Bloke (location assistant - uncredited)
    Producer
    1923
    The Dinkum Bloke (producer)
    Miscellaneous
    1919
    The Sentimental Bloke (production assistant)
    Archive Footage
    1997
    Century of Cinema (TV Series documentary) as
    Doreen
    - 40,000 years of dreaming (1997) - Doreen
    1995
    The Celluloid Heroes (TV Mini Series documentary) as
    Self
    1985
    Don't Call Me Girlie (Documentary) as
    Self

    References

    Lottie Lyell Wikipedia


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