Daisy Burrell (born Daisy Isobel Eaglesfield Ratton; 16 June 1892 – 10 June 1982) was a British stage actress and Edwardian musical comedy performer who also appeared as a leading lady in silent films and in pantomime.

Daisy Burrell
Daisy Burrell in 1919
Born
Daisy Isobel Eaglesfield Ratton

(1892-06-16)16 June 1892
Died10 June 1982(1982-06-10) (aged 89)
Chelsea, London, England
NationalityBritish
EducationGuildhall School of Music

In 1951 she appeared in The Golden Year, the first musical comedy produced for television.

Background

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Daisy Ratton was born in Wandsworth in 1892,[1] although according to Who Was Who in the Theatre 1912–1976 she was born in Singapore in 1893.[2][3]

She had a complicated family history, marred by early deaths. Her grandfather, Charles George Ratton, was a stockbroker from an Anglo-Portuguese Roman Catholic family. In 1867 he married Isabella Iphigenia de Pavia,[4] and they lived at Stoke Newington, but he died in 1873, aged 35, leaving a young son and daughter.[5] His widow, Daisy's grandmother, married Hassan Fareed the next year [6] and died in 1890, aged 42.[7] In 1891, Daisy's father, Charles Morris Ratton, married Ethel Eaglesfield Griffith, the daughter of another stockbroker,[8] but by the end of 1892 he disappears from the records. Her grandfather, E. J. Griffith, died in 1895 as a hospital clerk at Guy’s Hospital, leaving a modest £365.[9] His widow, Matilda Catherine Lovibond Griffith, the youngest child of Dr Edward Long MRCS, died in October 1898 at Lavender Hill.[10]

Daisy Burrell’s mother, Ethel Ratton, was by 1898 the partner of Henry S. Burrell, licensee of the Clarence Hotel, Stoke Newington.[11] Their son, John Griffith Burrell, was born in March 1899,[12] and christened in August 1907;[13] their daughter Edwina Ethel was born in September 1908.[14] In 1900, H. S. Burrell had the Old Star in Wapping.[15] He also had a career as a singer, using the stage name of Harry Saunders, and at the time of the 1901 census the Burrell family was in Willesden, using the name Saunders, apart from Daisy, whose name was given as Ratton.[16] In 1911, the family was in Stoke Newington, and was again called Burrell.[17] Later it lived mostly in Kent, at Hythe and Folkestone.[18] H. S. Burrell was licensee of the Swan Hotel, Hythe, during the First World War.[19] In 1939, Henry and Ethel Burrell were living at 77, Castle Road, Hythe, with their daughter Edwina.[20] Ethel Burrell died in 1944,[21] and Henry Burrell in 1955, leaving an estate valued at £5,166.[22]

Charles M. Ratton had a sister, Laura Theresa Ratton, Daisy Burrell’s aunt, who lived in Worthing and died unmarried in 1944.[23]

Early career

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Daisy Burrell with William Spray in
Franz Lehár's Gipsy Love (1913)

Taking her step-father's surname, at least as a performer, Burrell first appeared on stage at the London Hippodrome in July 1903, playing the part of Kitty in The Redskins, a water spectacular by Alicia Ramsey.[2][24] She went on to study at the Guildhall School of Music,[25] and in 1909 played the part of Youth in Give Heed, a modern morality play by Blanche G. Vulliamy, performed by students of the Guildhall School at the Court Theatre.[26][27]

On leaving, Burrell went into pantomime at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, and in 1910 The Illustrated London News noted her appearing as Cinderella at the new Palladium.[28] She first came to wide attention the same year, appearing at the Vaudeville Theatre in The Girl in the Train. After closing in London this production, starring Burrell in the title role, went on tour until 1911,[29] with the Gloucestershire Echo reporting that "Miss Daisy Burrell acts and sings delightfully Gonda Van der Loo".[30]

After that, Burrell was with George Edwardes's touring company for six years, appearing in the hit Edwardian musical comedies The Marriage Market, Peggy, The Sunshine Girl and others.[2][31] In The Marriage Market, she played a midshipman.[32] In 1912, she sang the part of Juliette in a production of Franz Lehár's operetta The Count of Luxembourg,[33][34] as one of the five principals, together with Phyllis Le Grand, Eric Thorne, Lauri de Frece, and Robert Michaelis, who were collectively described by the Musical News as "all consummate artists in their own style".[35] The next year she appeared in his Gipsy Love.[36] The manager of the Count of Luxembourg production of 1912 was J. Garret Todd, who went on to become manager of Daly's Theatre.[33]

Burrell played a boy, David Playne, in the original cast of Lonsdale, Unger, and Rubens's new musical Betty,[37] which opened at the Prince's Theatre, Manchester on Christmas Eve, 1914, and transferred to Daly's Theatre in the West End on 24 April 1915.[38] Interviewed in the Daily Sketch dated 11 May 1915, Burrell said this was the first time she had originated a part in London, and while she loved playing at Daly's, she was "tremendously envious of skirts and pretty clothes".[39] In reviewing the play, The Tatler hailed Burrell as “a Great Girl-Boy”.[40] A year later, Burrell was interviewed for The Era and was asked “And those boys’ parts you have made so famous?” She replied “Merci, Monsieur. I am now coming to that.“[41]

Also in 1915, Burrell played the title role of Cinderella in the pantomime, with the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News commenting that “the Cinderella of Miss Daisy Burrell contributes very much, for she is a sweet and attractive little heroine... As a spectacle, her adventures are all prettiness and daintiness.”[42]

Marriages

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In October 1912, under her name at birth of Daisy Ratton, Burrell married T. W. G. Carleton (1887–1957), of Stoke Newington,[43] who was then a commercial traveller.[44] During the First World War, he was commissioned into the Royal Horse Artillery, serving with it until April 1920.[45] In 1919, Burrell filed a petition for the restitution of conjugal rights,[46] and in 1920 she petitioned for a divorce.[47] By 1924 they were divorced, and in the spring of that year at Holborn Carleton married secondly Dorothy Knight, otherwise Hunt.[48]

In Westminster on 1 November 1924, as Daisy Carleton, Burrell married Herbert William Young, of Liverpool.[18][49] Young was a Liverpool cotton merchant who retired to live in France.[50] He died in 1943, aged 81.[51] At the time of his death, he was of Flat 6, 14 Pall Mall, St James's, and left an estate valued at £43,838, equivalent to £2,490,201 in 2023.[52] In his will, Young appointed his three sisters as executors and left his widow Daisy Isobel Eaglesfield Young the principal of a £9,900 marriage settlement, plus one quarter of the income from a fund of £43,000. That fund was also to go to his widow if his sisters died before her. There was a dispute over the will, and in the High Court in July 1961 Mr Justice Russell was "asked to construe the home-made will of a retired Liverpool cotton-merchant".[50]

Burrell's first husband, Carleton, died at King's College Hospital in June 1957, also leaving a substantial estate for that time, £16,162.[53]

Films and later career

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Burrell in 1919, from the cover of
Pictures and Picturegoer

Burrell's start in films came from G. B. Samuelson, and she appeared in several of his early silent movies. The first of these was The Valley of Fear (1916), an early Sherlock Holmes film, in which she was the leading lady.[54] She was offered the part after Samuelson saw her playing Cinderella at the London Palladium,[3] in a production by his brother Julian Wylie, who was also Burrell’s agent. Wylie boasted in The Stage Year Book: "During 1916 I made Contracts for the following Artistes: Bairnsfather's "Fragments from France", Daisy Burrell, Gladys Cooper, Phyllis Dare, ... Mabel Love ... Vesta Tilley, Madge Titheradge &c. &c."[55] Several other film roles followed. In her second film, Just a Girl (1916), Burrell played the Australian heiress Esmeralda, who spurns an English lord (played by Owen Nares) to marry a miner.[56]

In Little Women (1917), directed by Alexander Butler, Burrell played Amy, the youngest of the four girls.[57] In 1919, she had leading roles in The Bridal Chair,[58] Convict 99,[59] and The Artistic Temperament, and in May 1919 she was the cover girl for an issue of the magazine Pictures and Picturegoer.[60] In April 1920, a theatrical gossip column in New Zealand described Burrell as "Miss Daisy Burrell, the well-known musical comedy star",[61] while later the same year The Straits Times of Singapore called her "Daisy Burrell, the golden-haired film star".[3] In The Last Rose of Summer (1920), "a melodramatic tale of a spinster betrayed for the sake of a valuable tea set", she again had a leading role.[62] In December 1920 she received good reviews for her part in The Pride of the Fancy, a silent film about a champion boxer who woos her successfully,[63] although Variety commented that "Daisy Burrell is a charming Kitty, although she is rather inclined to overact."[64]

During her years on the silver screen, Burrell continued to appear on stage. On 23 November 1916 she took part in the first-ever performance at the new St Martin's Theatre, the first night of Fred Thompson's extravaganza Houp La!, playing Aggie,[65] and this production ran until late February 1917.[66] In April 1917 she opened in a revue called £150 at the Ambassadors Theatre.[67] In September 1918 she took the leading role of Desirée in Emmerich Kálmán's operetta Soldier Boy at the Apollo Theatre, succeeding Vera Wilkinson.[68][69] In July and August 1919 she played Mollie Maybud in Nobody's Boy at the Garrick Theatre.[70][71]

In November 1919, Burrell wrote an article for the weekly The Picture Show, in which she gave "a few hints for cinema stars". She advised that to work in films, an actor should be able to ride a horse, swim, shoot, fake a drowning, and play billiards, cards, and the piano. She noted her own aim that "In every film, I should finish as a bride" and warned that:[72]

"The most trying moment in your cinema experience is the day on which you first see the film with yourself in it. You think you ought to have done everything so much better..."[72]

In 1920 Burrell returned to pantomime in the title role of Julian Wylie and James W. Tate's Cinderella at the Empire Theatre, Sheffield, continued in 1921 at the Empire, Cardiff, with Stanley Lupino.[73] From December 1922 to March 1923 she appeared again as Cinderella for Wylie & Tate at the London Hippodrome, opposite Clarice Mayne as Prince Charming and Lupino as Buttons, this production running to 176 performances.[74] The Times said of Burrell's Cinderella "She sings, dances and acts with equal ease."[75]

 
Burrell, about 1920

In October 1920 the Leeds Mercury reported that "Miss Daisy Burrell... is said to possess the tiniest feet in film-land",[76] and in 1922 came to a report that a London theatre was offering a prize for “the lady who can wear the Cinderella slipper of Miss Daisy Burrell”.[77] In May 1924 Burrell entered a competition promoted by the sculptor and Royal Academician F. W. Pomeroy (1856–1924), who had offered a prize "for the most perfect pair of feet". She tied with the dancer Margery Prince for the first prize of £50, and The Miami News reported that Burrell had been chosen eight times to play Cinderella on account of the daintiness of her feet.[78] Pomeroy died on 26 May.[79]

In July 1924 Burrell joined a touring company for George M. Cohan's musical Little Nellie Kelly,[2] playing the lead part of Nellie. In late August, she was taken ill and Patrina Carlyon stepped into the role.[80] By this point in her stage career she was represented by the Akerman May Agency, of 16 Green Street, London WC2.[2] Who Was Who in the Theatre, 1912–1976 records no performances for Burrell after 1924,[2] which was the year of her second marriage, but until February 1925 The Stage continued to carry a notice that she was disengaged.[81] Palmer's British Film Actors' Credits, 1895–1987 identifies her with Daisy Burrell who played two minor parts in the British films Woman to Woman (1947) and Green Fingers (1947), as does the online database of the British Film Institute.[82] She later appeared on BBC Television in The Perfect Alibi (1949)[83] and in The Golden Year (1951), the first musical comedy produced for television,[84] and disappeared from the performing record again after that.

Final years

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Nell Gwynn House

At the time of the High Court challenge to her second husband’s will in 1961, Burrell was living at the De Vere Court Hotel, 32 De Vere Gardens, Kensington.[50] She ended her long life living at Flat 203, Nell Gwynn House, Sloane Avenue, London SW3.[85] The building had a restaurant, a bar, a hairdressing salon, reception rooms, its own live music club, and other notable residents.[86] She died on 10 June 1982, six days short of her 90th birthday, leaving an estate of £66,170.[85]

Burrell’s half-sister, Edwina Ethel Slade, of The Keep, Kings Road, Kingston upon Thames, died in July 1987, leaving an estate of £48,795.[87]

Portraits

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The National Portrait Gallery in London has fourteen portrait photographs of Burrell by Bassano, dated between 1919 and 1922. Several of these are in Cinderella costumes, and four include Clarice Mayne.[88]

Filmography

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Burrell appeared in the following films: [82]

Musical theatre appearances

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Burrell in Gipsy Love
This list is not complete

Notes

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  1. ^ "Ratton, Daisy Isabel E" in Register of Births for the Wandsworth Registration District, vol. 1d (July–September 1892), p. 690.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Who Was Who in the Theatre, 1912–1976 vol. 1, p. 339
  3. ^ a b c d The Straits Times, 2 November 1920, p. 8
  4. ^ Register of Marriages for Islington Registration District, vol. 1b (1867), p. 504
  5. ^ "RATTON Charles George late of 24 Clissold-road Stoke Newington", in Probate Index for 1873.
  6. ^ "FARREED, Hassan, & RATTON, Isabella Iphigenia", in Register of Marriages for Hackney Registration District, vol. 1b (1874), p. 699
  7. ^ "Farreed Isabella" in Register of Deaths for Portsea Registration District, vol. 2b (1890), p. 262
  8. ^ "Ratton Charles Morris & Griffith Ethel Eaglesfield" in Register of Marriages for Croydon Registration District, vol. 2a (1891), p. 521
  9. ^ ”GRIFFITH Edward John” in Probate Registry Index for 1895
  10. ^ Frederick George Cleeve LONG 1897 - 1920 at fadedgenes.co.uk, accessed 7 April 2020
  11. ^ Clarence Tavern at pubshistory.com, accessed 25 July 2016
  12. ^ ”John Griffith S. Burrell” in Births for Wandsworth, vol. 1d (1899), p. 792: on 31 March 1899
  13. ^ “Aug 21 1907 no. 1880 John Griffith [son of] Henry & Ethel Burrell” in Register of Baptisms solemnized in the parish of Stoke Newington, p. 235
  14. ^ "Burrell, Edwina Ethel", in Index to Births for Hackney, vol. 1b (1908), p. 348: the birth was on 21 September 1908
  15. ^ Post Office London Street Directory 1900, Commercial Directory p. 964 at ancestry.co.uk (subscription required)
  16. ^ 1901 United Kingdom census return for 118, Craven Park Road, Willesden, at ancestry.co.uk, accessed 16 April 2020 (subscription required)
  17. ^ Henry S. Burrell, 1911 United Kingdom census return for 84, Church Street, Stoke Newington, at ancestry.co.uk, accessed 7 April 2020 (subscription required)
  18. ^ a b Folkestone, Hythe, Sandgate & Cheriton Herald dated Saturday 8 November 1924: “MARRIAGES ... YOUNG—CARLETON— On Nov. Ist, 1924, in London, Herbert William Young, of Liverpool, to Daisy Isobel Eaglesfield Carleton (Daisy Burrell), eldest daughter of Mrs. H. S. Burrell, of 9, Langhorne Gdns, Folkestone.”
  19. ^ Kelly's Directory for Kent (1913 & 1918)
  20. ^ Register for Hythe made for National Registration Act 1939: “Henry S. Burrell, b. 15 April 1863, Ethel E. Burrell, b. 5 March 1870, Edwina E. Slade, b. 21 September 1908”
  21. ^ “Burrell Ethel E, 73 6a 731” in Index of Deaths for Weobley (1944)
  22. ^ “BURRELL Henry Saunders of 4 Earlsfield-rd Hythe Kent” in Probate Index for England and Wales, 1995, accessed 7 April 2020
  23. ^ ”RATTON Laura Theresa of 11 Wenban-road Worthing spinster died 8 April 1944 Probate Llandudno 20 June to Claude Christina Digby spinster and Leonard Cyril Bunce estate agent. Effects £2919 11s 8d.” in Wills and Administrations 1944, p. 580
  24. ^ a b Walter James MacQueen-Pope, The melodies linger on: the story of music hall (1950): "The Bandits was followed by The Redskins in which Indians in canoes shot rapids seventy feet high, or deep"; 'London Hippodrome', in Marquee, vols. 25–26 (Theatre Historical Society, 1993): "water spectacles which made history at the Hippodrome were "Siberia," "The Bandits," "Tally Ho," "The Redskins" (in which a one-legged diver plunged into the seething waters below from a height of 30 feet)"
  25. ^ "The Guildhall School of Music", The Musical Times, Vol. 58, No. 890 (April 1917), p. 177 (subscription required)
  26. ^ a b The Era Almanack (1910), p. 163
  27. ^ The Playgoer and Society illustrated (1909)
  28. ^ “Cinderella at the Palladium”, Illustrated London News, Volume 58 (1910), p. 2
  29. ^ a b Swansea Grand Theatre Archive 1911–1925 at swanseasgrand.co.uk, accessed 22 January 2012
  30. ^ a b "The Girl in the Train" in Gloucestershire Echo (Gloucestershire, England) dated 27 October 1911
  31. ^ Who's Who in the Theatre (Pitman, 1930), p. 135
  32. ^ a b c Phyllis Ismay Inshaw Rodway, Lois Harford Slingsby, Philip Rodway and a tale of two theatres (1934), p. 239: "The Cinderella of the season, Daisy Burrell, had been hitherto unassociated with such a part, as her latest appearance in Birmingham had been that of a midshipman in The Marriage Market."
  33. ^ a b c W. J. MacQueen-Pope, Shirtfronts and sables: a story of the days when money could be spent (Hale, 1953), p. 59
  34. ^ a b Daisy Burrell at Scottish Theatre Archive, accessed 16 January 2012
  35. ^ Musical News and Herald, vol. 42 (1912), p. 194
  36. ^ Rodway & Slingsby (1934), p. 177: "In these months were also comprised the first visit of Gipsy Love (with Blanche Tomlin, Leonard Mackay, Daisy Burrell, Ian Colquhoun, and Billy Spray)."
  37. ^ W. J. MacQueen-Pope, Nights of Gladness (1956), p. 192
  38. ^ Colin Johnson, Betty Original Cast, Gilbert and Sullivan Archive, 2005, accessed 31 March 2018
  39. ^ Mrs. Gossip, What Women Are Doing: Behind the Scenes With "Betty", The Daily Sketch dated 11 May 1915, p. 14, digitized by University of Pretoria, 2015.
  40. ^ Ben Macpherson, Cultural Identity in British Musical Theatre, 1890–1939: Knowing One’s Place (Springer, 2018), p. 98
  41. ^ “Miss Daisy Burrell” in The Era (London) dated 2 February 1916, p. 7
  42. ^ Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, Volume 84, Part 2 (George S. Maddick, 1915), p. 525
  43. ^ "Ratton, Daisy I E & Carleton, Thomas W G" in Register of Marriages for Hackney Registration District, vol. 1b (1912), p. 1,144
  44. ^ Bowdens F179 at ancestry.com, accessed 22 July 2016
  45. ^ The London Gazette, Supplement dated 18 January 1921, p. 539
  46. ^ Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes, File 5666. Appellant: Daisy Isobel Eaglesfield Carleton. Respondent: Thomas William G Carleton. Type: Wife's petition for restitution of conjugal rights; Reference: J 77/1479/5666
  47. ^ Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes, File 1396. Appellant: Daisy Isobel Eaglesfield Carleton. Respondent: Thomas George William Carleton. Type: Wife's petition for divorce; Reference J 77/1653/1396
  48. ^ "CARLETON, Thomas William George, and KNIGHT otherwise HUNT, Dorothy" in Register of Marriages for St. Giles in the Filelds & St. George Bloomsbury Registration District, vol. 1b (1924), p. 1,092
  49. ^ "Young, Herbert W., and Carleton, Daisy I. E." in Register of Marriages for St Martin's Registration District, vol. 1a (Dec 1924), p. 1,236
  50. ^ a b c “Home-Made Will Problem of City Merchant's Estate” in Liverpool Echo (Lancashire, England), Thursday 6 July 1961, p. 18
  51. ^ "Young Herbert W., 81" in Index to Register of Deaths for Westminster Registration District, Dec 1943
  52. ^ Probate index for 1944 at probatesearch.gov.uk, accessed 31 March 2018: "YOUNG Herbert William of Flat 6 14 Pall Mall London died 20 December 1943"
  53. ^ Probate index for 1957 at probatesearch.gov.uk, accessed 12 March 2019: "CARLETON Thomas William George of 4 Claremont-court Queensway London W. 2 died 8 June 1957 at Kings College Hospital Denmark-hill London... Effects £16,162 16s 6d." (equivalent to £492,184 in 2023)
  54. ^ R. Haydock, Deerstalker!: Holmes and Watson on screen (1978), p. 38
  55. ^ The Stage Year Book (1917), p. xv
  56. ^ a b Connelly (1988), p. 132: "Just a Girl** (1916, Brit.) 7 reels Samuelson/Moss bw Owen Nares (Lord Trafford), Daisy Burrell (Esmeralda), J. Hastings Batson (The Duke), Minna Grey (The Duchess), Paul England (The Miner). In another of those British social-class soap operas, an Australian heiress rejects an impoverished lord to marry the miner she really loves. d, Alexander Butler; w, Harry Engholm (based on the novel by Charles Garvice)."
  57. ^ Connie J. Billips, Arthur Pierce, Lux Presents Hollywood: A Show-by-show History of the Lux Radio Theatre and the Lux Video Theatre, 1934-1957 (McFarland & Company, 1995), p. 88
  58. ^ a b Robert B. Connelly, The silents: silent feature films, 1910–36, vol. 40 (December Press, 1998), p. 35
  59. ^ a b Connelly (1998), p. 334
  60. ^ Pictures and Picturegoer magazine, 10–17 May 1919 (cover, illustrated)
  61. ^ Fra Diavolo, 'Theatre Gossip' in Marlborough Express (New Zealand), 3 April 1920, p. 6
  62. ^ Kenton Bamford, Distorted images: British national identity and film in the 1920s (1999), p. 8
  63. ^ "The Film World", The Times, issue 42598, 20 December 1920, p. 8, col. C; "Films of the Week", The Times, issue 42968, 1 March 1922, p. 8, col. C
  64. ^ Variety Film Reviews 1921-1925 (1983), p. 32
  65. ^ a b J. P. Wearing, The London stage, 1910–1919: a calendar of plays and players, vol. 1 (Scarecrow Press, 1982), p. 542; Lionel Carson, The Stage Year Book (Stage Offices, 1917), p. 125
  66. ^ a b "Theatres" in The Times dated 24 February 1917, p. 8
  67. ^ a b "Theatrical Plans: Last Performances and New Revues", The Times, issue 41453 dated 16 April 1917, p. 11, col. E
  68. ^ a b Caption to quarter-page photograph in Everyweek magazine dated 12 September 1918: "Miss Daisy Burrell, who is appearing in "Soldier Boy" at the Apollo"
  69. ^ a b Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, vol. 89 (1918), p. 725: "...the next witness, who was MISS DAISY BURRELL, who is now appearing as Desirée, in succession to Miss Vera Wilkinson, in “Soldier Boy” at the Apollo Theatre..."
  70. ^ "The 'Old Mogul' in New Guise Mr. Huntley Wright's Return"' The Times, issue 42088 dated 1 May 1919, p. 15, col. D; The Times, issue 42147, 9 July 1919, p. 12, col. F
  71. ^ a b J. P. Wearing, The London Stage 1910-1919: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel (London: Scarecrow Press, 1982), p. 872
  72. ^ a b "Daisy Burrell: Heroine of Filmland Gives a Few Hints to Would-be Cinema Stars", The Picture Show, Vol. 2, no. 29, Monday 15 November 1919
  73. ^ a b "The Impresarios: Wylie-Tate" at Its-behind-you.com, accessed 15 January 2012
  74. ^ a b 'Cinderella. Hippodrome Theatre, London', in cin8 at lib.rochester.edu, accessed 16 January 2012: "Opened 21 December 1922 to March 1923. 176 performances... Cast: Daisy Burrell (Cinderella)..."
  75. ^ a b 'Cinderella's Slipper. New Pantomime Incident at the Hippodrome' in The Times, issue 43221, dated 22 December 1922, p. 8, col. A
  76. ^ "Daisy Burrell's Feet" in Leeds Mercury dated 22 October 1920
  77. ^ “Prize being offered at a London theatre” in Birmingham Daily Gazette (Warwickshire) dated 31 October 1922, p. 3
  78. ^ The Miami News dated 29 May 1924, p. 9, col. 2[permanent dead link]
  79. ^ 'POMEROY, F. W., RA 1917 (ARA 1906)' in Who Was Who 1916–1928 (London: A. & C. Black, 1992 reprint; ISBN 0-7136-3143-0): "died 26 May 1924"
  80. ^ "LOCAL AMUSEMENTS" in Nottingham Evening Post dated Tuesday 26 August 1924: “Miss Patrina Carlyon plays Nellie attractively in the absence through indisposition of Miss Daisy Burrell... ”
  81. ^ The Stage dated Thursday 19 February 1925, p. 1
  82. ^ a b c d Daisy Burrell at bfi.org.uk, accessed 19 January 2012; Scott Palmer, British Film Actors' Credits, 1895–1987 (McFarland, 1988), p. 102
  83. ^ a b BBC tv listings for 6 August 1949 at bbc.co.uk, accessed 7 May 2020
  84. ^ a b The Annual Register of World Events: A Review of the Year, Volume 193 (Longmans, Green, 1952), p. 400
  85. ^ a b Young, Daisy Isobel Eaglesfield Ratton in Probate Index for England and Wales, 1982, at probatesearch.gov.uk, accessed 22 July 2016: “Young, Daisy Isobel Eaglesfield Ratton otherwise Daisy Isobel Eaglesfield of 203 Nell Gwynn House Sloane Av London SW3 died 10 June 1982 Probate London 8 September £66170 820015182A"
  86. ^ Nell Gwynn Chelsea Archived 14 January 2018 at the Wayback Machine homepage, accessed 25 July 2016
  87. ^ SLADE Edwina Ethel... died 12 July 1987 in Probate Index for England and Wales, 1987, at probatesearch.gov.uk, accessed 16 April 2020.
  88. ^ Daisy Burrell portraits at npg.org.uk; accessed 15 January 2012
  89. ^ Scott Allen Nollen, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle at the Cinema (1996), p. 255
  90. ^ Connelly (1998), p. 219
  91. ^ Jay Robert Nash, Robert Connelly, Stanley Ralph Ross, Motion Picture Guide Silent Film 1910-1936 (1988), p. 145
  92. ^ "Plays of the Year" in The Stage Year Book, p. 86
  93. ^ a b "Burrell, Daisy" in Who's Who in the Theatre (1922), p. 112

References

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  • Robert Connelly, ed., Motion Picture Guide Silent Film 1910–1936 (Cinebooks, 1988) ISBN 978-0933997103
  • Who Was Who in the Theatre, 1912–1976: a biographical dictionary of actors, actresses, directors, playwrights, and producers of the English-speaking theatre, vol. 1 (Detroit: Gale Research Co., 1978)
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