Alma Stanley
Lenore Alma Stuart Stanley was a British actress and vocalist once popular on both sides of the Atlantic Ocean. She was perhaps best remembered as Lady Teazle in Sheridan's The School for Scandal and Aphrodite in George Procter Hawtrey's Atlanta. In a career of more than thirty years she appeared in some sixty plays and made two North American tours. Her later years were spent in reduced circumstances, culminating with her death at a London prison hospital following an arrest for public intoxication.
Early life
Lenora Alma Stuart Stanley was born in the parish of Saint Helier, in Jersey, Channel Islands. Her father, Stuart Stanley, reportedly was once a captain in the bodyguard of Maximilian I of Mexico. Stanley first trained as a dancer and made her stage debut at age 18 in Milan, Italy.Career
Stanley's British debut came at the Theatre Royal, Hull in 1873, in Victor Hugo's tragedy Lucrezia Borgia. The following year she was chosen by John Hollingshead to join the cast at Cremorne Gardens, London, in productions of Black-Eyed Susan and English adaptations of Offenbach's La rose de Saint-Flour and La fille de Madame Angot. In 1876 Stanley became a cast member at the Gaiety Theatre, London when Nellie Farren, Kate Vaughan, Edward O'Connor Terry, and Edward Royce were at the pinnacles of their popularity. She joined Kate Santley at the Royalty Theatre, London playing Adonis in the Edward Rose and A. Harris 1879 extravaganza Venus. Stanley later participated in various theatrical tours of Britain.In 1880 Stanley signed with M. B. Leavitt's Grand English Operatic Burlesque Company and that April sailed from Liverpool for New York aboard the steamship Helvetia. Her first known appearance in America was in August 1881 at the Fifth Avenue Theatre as Laura Smiff in G. F. Rowe's Smiff. That September, Stanley joined Leavitt's company at Haverly's 14th Street Theatre, New York playing Pasquillo to Selina Dolaro's Carmen in Frank W. Green's Carmen; or, Soldiers and Seville-ians. At the same venue that October Leavitt's company performed for the first time in America an English adaptation of La fille du tambour-major, with Stanley in the role of Duchess Della Volta. It was about this time, when Leavitt ran into financial difficulties, that Stanley chose to resign rather than take a pay cut. Later that month she assumed the role of Lady Ella, previously played by Miss Burville, in the original American production of the Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera Patience.
Stanley's first big success in America came in February 1882 at Wallack's Theatre playing the cigar-toting boy, Willie Spratley, in the English extravaganza Youth. She next signed with Lytell's Canadian Tour for the summer season, and that fall toured in a less than successful adaption of Abraham Benrimo's novel, Vic. Stanley ended her American tour in the summer of 1883 and returned to England to appear at the Adelphi Theatre in a revival of Dion Boucicault's Streets of London.
For nearly twenty years afterward, Stanley would star or play significant roles in scores of productions in London or elsewhere. She was a leading lady to Augustus Harris for two seasons late in his career and toured with Mckee Rankin in America. A sampling of plays she performed in over her career include;
- Dragona, Folly Theatre, 14 April 1879;
- Cupid, Theatre Royalty, Southampton, 14 April 1882;
- The Beggar Student, Alhambra Theatre, London, 3 April 1884;
- Paintin' 'Er Red, North American Tour, fall, 1885;
- Pepita; or, the Girl with the Glass Eyes, Union Square Theatre, New York, 16 March 1886;
- The Bridal Trap, Bijou Opera House, New York, 31 May 1886;
- Cinderella, Theatre Royal, Birmingham, 27, December, 1886;
- Aesop's Fables, the Comedy Theatre, London, October 1889
- Domestic Economy, Comedy Theatre, 7 April 1890;
- Struggle for Life, Avenue Theatre, London, 25 September 1890;
- Carmen up to Data, Gaiety Theatre, London, 27 October 1890;
- The Sleepwalker, Royal Strand Theatre, London, 24 July 1893 ;
- The Derby Winner, Drury Lane Theatre, London, 6 October 1894;
- The Cotton King, Adelphi Theatre, 10 March 1894
- Fanny, Royal Strand Theatre, London, 15 April 1895;
- Mrs. Ponderbury's Past, Avenue Theatre, London, November, 1895;
- A Man about Town, Avenue Theatre, London, January, 1897