Lady Mary Wyndham  


THE TIMES
Tuesday April 7, 1931


OBITUARY
Lady WYNDHAM
A DISTINGUISHED COMEDY ACTRESS
  We record with regret that Lady Wyndham (Miss Mary Moore), the distinguished actress and widow of Sir Charles Wyndham, not less distinguished as an actor, died yesterday at her home in York-terrace, Regent's Park.
  The daughter of a Parliamentary Agent named Charles Moore, she was born in London on July 3, 1861.   She went first on the stage at the Gaiety Theatre, under the management of John Hollingshead, but soon retired into private life on her marriage in 1878 to James Albery, the author of Two Roses and other successful plays.   In 1885 she returned to the stage under the management of Charles Wyndham, who had taken the Criteron Theatre, and under that management she acted throughout the remainder of her long professional career.   The year 1886 was that in which she began to emerge from the crowd.   In that year she first played Ada Ingot in David Garrick, and a little later she played it before the Prince of Wales at Sandringham, and in Berlin and St, Petersburg, where she and Wyndham acted in German.
  The successful association between these two was thenceforward established.   In all Wyndham's productions Miss Mary Moore took the leading feminine parts   When Wyndham began to produce the plays of Mr. Henry Arthur Jones Miss Mary Moore was there to play the heroines in The Bauble Shop, in The Case of Rebellious Susan, in The Liars.
 
  Hubert Henry Davies was another dramatist who wrote first-rate parts for her: Miss Mills in Captain Drew on Leave; best of all, Mrs. Baxter in The Mollusc.   She accompanied Wyndham on all his American Tours, and continued to act with him until his retirement, after which she occasionally appeared on her own account.   The partnership was financially very profitable, thanks partly to Miss Mary Moore's excellent head for business; and she was Wyndham's partner in the Criteron, the New, and Wyndham's Theatres, all three very remunerative investments.   After James Albery's death, which was followed by that of the first Lady Wyndham, Sir Charles Wyndham and Miss Mary Moore were married in March, 1916.
  Miss Moore's forte, especially in the last half of her career, was the acting of pretty and alluring fools.   She knew to a shade how to make them foolish without making them tiresome, and helpless without being intolerably silly.   Contrasted with the voluble wisdom of the characters chiefly affected by Sir Charles Wyndham, these alluring fools made good material for any number of plays, and Miss Moore succeeded in varying the comedy of the type so that each was distinguished from the others,   She kept her youthful looks till well past middle age, and could play young women almost to the last.   After Wyndham's death, in 1919, she appeared as Lady Bagley in Our Mr. Hepplewhite, but since then only in charity performances.   She was president of the Actors' Benevolent Fund.   She leaves, by her first marriage, three sons - namely, Mr. Irving James Albery, M.C., Unionist member for Gravesend, who married Jill, daughter of Mr Henry Arthur Jones, Mr. Bronson Albery, theatre manager, and Mr. Wyndham Albery, an Accountant.