Frances Whiteside Brough (7 July 1852 – 30 November 1914) was a French-born British stage actress known for her many comedy roles performed over a four decade-long career.
Part of a literary and dramatic family, Brough was acting professionally in London by 1870. She played in a variety of comic and dramatic roles in Britain with several companies and toured America early in the 20th century with Charles Hawtrey. Her career reached a high point in 1902 with her creation of the title role of Kitty Warren in George Bernard Shaw's Mrs. Warren's Profession. She continued to act until shortly before her death.
Brough's professional stage debut came in 1869 with Charles Calvert's company at the Prince's Theatre in Manchester, where in March of the following year she played Ophelia opposite Barry Sullivan's prince in Hamlet.Sillard, Robert M. Barry Sullivan and his contemporaries: a histrionic record, Volume 2, p. 126, T. F. Unwin, 1901, accessed 3 June 2012 Her London debut came on 15 October 1870 at the St James's Theatre playing the title role in Southerland Edwards's adaptation of Victorien Sardou Fernande. She then played with Squire Bancroft in a revival of Money. "Miss Fanny Brough", The Strand Magazine, 1892, p. 43, accessed 3 June 2012 Brough found success in 1878 as Mary Melrose in provincial road productions of Henry James Byron's Our Boys and as Norah Fitzgerald in Henry Hamilton's 1886 play Harvest staged at London's Princess's Theatre. Baily's Magazine of Sports & Pastimes, Volume 46, 1886, p. 452, accessed 3 June 2012 Brough created the role of Petrella in The Passion Flower; or, Woman and the Law, a drama adapted from the Leopoldo Cano play La Pasionaria, which was originally produced in England as "The Woman and the Law" at the Theatre Royal in Hull on 28 July 1884 and at London's Olympic Theatre on 13 March 1885. The Era Almanack, Dramatic & Musical, 1886, p. 67, accessed 3 June 2012
The publication Pen, Pencil, Baton and Mask wrote in an 1890 sketch of Brough,
Brough played the Irish servant, Mary O’Brien, in the hit play The Real Little Lord Fauntleroy, from the book by Frances Hodgson Burnett, which opened on 23 February 1888 at the Prince of Wales Theatre.Bolton, Philip H. "Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886)", Women Writers Dramatized, 2000, p. 108, accessed 3 June 2012 Throughout much of the 1880s and into the 1890s, Brough toured in road productions headed by Kyrle Bellew and Cora Urquhart Brown-Potter. "Our Actors and Actresses", The Dramatic List, 1880, p. 61Chisolm, Hugh (ed). "Fanny Brough", The Encyclopædia Britannica: The New Volumes, 1922; p. 511 She played Lady Markby in one of Oscar Wilde last plays, An Ideal Husband, which opened on 3 January 1895 at the Haymarket Theatre in London. " An Ideal Husband, by Oscar Wilde", Guttenber.org, accessed 3 June 2012
In 1891 the actress Kittie Carson founded The Theatrical Ladies Guild, whose purpose was to loan clothes and give other aid to actresses who became pregnant and lost their jobs. Brough was the guild's first president. The group raised and distributed money and arranged for medical services and the loan and creation of mothers' and children's clothing, including by running weekly sewing bees.
In 1902 Brough created the role of Kitty Warren in Shaw's Mrs Warren's Profession, and the following year she toured in America with Charles Hawtrey in productions of F. Anstey's The Man from Blankley's and The Saucy Sally by F. C. Burnand. Two years later she produced and played the lead in R. V. Harcourt's 1905 comedy, An Angle Unawares, which opened in London at Terry's Theatre on 12 September.Whitaker, Joseph. An Almanack for the year of our Lord 1906, Vol. 38, p. 39Parker, John (ed). "Harcourt, Robert Vernon, M.P.", Who's Who in the Theatre, 1916, p. 283 She may have concluded her career in the latter part of 1913 playing O'Mara, a role she is said to have performed with vibrant, infectious humour in a Drury Lane Theatre production of Cecil Raleigh and Henry Hamilton's comedy, Sealed Orders. Sealed Orders, The Stage Yearbook, 1914, pp. 157 and 207 Bernard Shaw Theatre, Bernard Shaw and Dan H. Laurance; 1995, p. 107
Brough died in London in 1914, aged 62.
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