May Tully
May Tully was a Canadian actress, writer, director, and producer in theatre and film, and, according to sportswriter Damon Runyon, "perhaps the greatest woman baseball fan that ever lived."
Early life
Mary Gertrude Tully was born in Nanaimo, British Columbia, the daughter of Frank Tully and Nancy Hague Tully. After her father died in the 1887 Nanaimo mine explosion when May was a girl, she and her widowed mother moved to Victoria, British Columbia, where her mother remarried. May Tully attended McGill University, and Mrs. Wheatley's Dramatic School in New York.Career
Tully was credited as a writer on eight silent films: The Winning of Beatrice, Mary's Ankle, His Wife's Money, Bucking the Tiger, The [Old Oaken Bucket (film)|The Old Oaken Bucket], Chivalrous Charley, Kisses, and That Old Gang of Mine. In addition, she directed That Old Gang of Mine and The Old Oaken Bucket, and had producer credit on The Old Oaken Bucket.On stage, Tully acted in shows such as The Christian, In the Good Old Summer Time, and The Two Mr. Wetherbys. She wrote the play Mary's Ankle, "an improbable but delectable farce" starring Irene Fenwick, Zelda Sears, and Bert Lytell on Broadway; it was also a success in other cities.
Tully performed in vaudeville in sketches she wrote, Stop! Look! and Listen!, The Late Mr. Allen, The Battle Cry of Freedom, and Mona Lisa. "She has long been recognized as the over-time worker of the vaudeville world," explained another writer in 1917, adding "She is perhaps the most businesslike of all the lady playwrights." She was the sketch writer for the Palace Theatre in New York, and in 1915 produced a fashion show there, with models, expensive gowns, and jewelry; a popular attraction, The Fashion Show toured the Keith circuit for months, and was refreshed with new fashions in later seasons.
In Curves, a vaudeville sketch she wrote about baseball, she co-starred with off-season professional players Christy Mathewson and Chief Meyers, bringing sports fans to the theatre. Her love of baseball was often noted in reports about the show. "She knows more inside baseball than 99 percent of the fans," acknowledged New York Giants coach Muggsy McGraw.