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PAST EXHIBITION ARCHIVE
Lillah McCarthy (Lady Keeble)
1875-1960
28 January - 30 July
2006
Room 28 - Victorian Galleries
Admission free

Lillah McCarthy as Jennifer
Dubedat in 'The Doctor's Dilemna'
by Foulsham and Banfield, 1906
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Born in Cheltenham, Lila Emma
McCarthy was educated at home by her father and learnt elocution
and voice production in London when her family moved there in
1893. Adopting the stage name Lillah she played Lady Macbeth
for the Shakespeare Society in 1895. Taking George Bernard Shaw's
advice that she should spend some time gaining professional experience,
McCarthy toured with Ben Greet's theatre company and then played
in Wilson Barrett's The Sign of the Cross. McCarthy returned
to London in 1905 and appeared at the Court Theatre in Shaw's
Man and Superman (1905) opposite Granville-Barker.
Following her marriage to Granville-Barker
in 1906, McCarthy was actively associated with him when he was
director at the Court Theatre and interpreted many of Shaw's
female leads in plays such as You never Can Tell and The
Doctor's Dilemma (both 1906). In 1911 McCarthy took on the
management of the Little Theatre offering Granville-Barker the
opportunity to continue directing. Here she played in Schnitzler's
Anatol, Ibsen's The Master Builder and Shaw's Fanny's
First Play.
Active in finding financial support,
McCarthy enabled and appeared in Granville-Barker's groundbreaking
productions of Shakespeare at the Savoy Theatre in 1912 and 1914.
Following the outbreak of the First World War they took their
repertory seasons of Shaw, Shakespeare and Greek tragedies to
New York. McCarthy was deeply saddened when Granville-Barker
separated from her in 1915 and they eventually divorced in 1917.
McCarthy married botanist Sir
Frederick Keeble in 1920 and lived with him in Oxford. Although
her professional work ceased in 1922 she continued to give poetry
recitals in the 1930s. McCarthy, whose autobiography Myself
and my Friends was published in 1933, remained close to colleagues
including Shaw and Masefield. She died in London in 1960.
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