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Amy Roselle (28 May 1852 – 17 November 1895), born Amy Louise Roselle Hawkins "Amy Louise Roselle Hawkins", Ancestry.com (pay to view), accessed 4 July 2017 was an English actress who performed in Britain, the US and Australia. She specialised in roles but also played parts in contemporary dramas. She married Arthur Dacre, and the two toured together with their own theatre company, eventually traveling to Australia. In a murder-suicide pact, her husband shot her dead in 1895.


Biography
Roselle was the eleventh of the thirteen children of William Hawkins (1807–1878). Her mother's maiden name was Rowsell, from which she took her stage name. Although she later claimed that her father was the headmaster of the Grammar School, according to the census returns he was an insurance agent (1851) and later an unemployed commercial traveller (1861). Ancestry.com, 1851 census and 1861 census Her brother Percy was a and played children's parts into adulthood in pantomimes at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane as "Master Percy Roselle".Sims, George R. My Life: Sixty Years' Recollections of Bohemian London, pp. 190–93, Eveleigh Nash Company (1917)

Her first role, as a juvenile, was Constance in a version of King Arthur. After this, her father leased the and theatres for two years. At these theatres, Roselle played in Shakespeare and other productions. She debuted in London at the Haymarket Theatre. There, at age 16, she played Lady Teazle and then, opposite , numerous leading parts. She replaced in Diplomacy and played Esther Eccles in Caste, by T. W. Robertson. She appeared opposite Mary Anderson as Cynisca in Pygmalion and Galatea by W. S. Gilbert and created the other Gilbert roles, including Darine in The Wicked World (1873) and Eve in Charity (1874). She also performed at the and other London theatres. Biography of Roselle at History of Australian Theatre website, accessed 19 May 2009 In 1875, she created the role of Mary Melrose in the sensation , which was the longest-running play in history up to that time.Booth, Michael R. Review of plays by H. J. Byron including Our Boys in The Modern Language Review, Vol. 82, No. 3, pp. 716–17 (July 1987; Modern Humanities Research Association)

Roselle toured the United States with E. A. Sothern, appearing in New York at Niblo's Garden. She then returned to England and starred as Lady Macbeth opposite at the Lyceum Theatre, London, during the illness of . She also played Queen Katherine of Aragon in Henry VIII at the Lyceum. Roselle appeared in the title role of Esther Sandraz at the Prince of Wales's Theatre and created the role of Lillian in Old Love for New. In 1881, she originated the role of Mrs. Blythe in F. C. Burnand's long-running comedy, The Colonel.

During a long engagement at the Royal Court Theatre, she met doctor-turned-actor Arthur Culver James (1851–1895, stage name Arthur Dacre), and the two eventually married in 1884. Roselle was in more demand than her husband, but the two insisted on being engaged jointly. In January 1885 the couple appeared in The Silver Shield at the Royal Strand Theatre, and for several years toured together in the British provinces, but eventually they had trouble getting a joint engagement and, out of work, ran up debts. A benefit performance was held for Roselle at the Lyceum Theatre on 16 June 1887, at which Trial by Jury was performed.Gänzl, p. 96 Eventually Roselle and Dacre travelled to Australia where they played in , , (at Her Majesty's Theatre) and elsewhere. They did not succeed in paying off their debts, however, and became despondent. In Australia in 1895, as part of a murder-suicide pact, Dacre shot Roselle dead before cutting his own throat.Richards, Leann. "Amy and Arthur Dacre 1895", History of Australian Theatre, accessed 19 May 2009; and Sydney Morning Herald, 18–20 November 1895"Murder and Suicide", New South Wales Police Gazette, No. 48, 27 November 1895


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