Groves family

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Charles Groves in the stage play The Elder Miss Blossom, 1898

The Groves family is a British theatre family which traces its roots to the Regency era.[1] Its descendants include actors of the Victorian stage, the British Music Hall, Broadway theatre and motion pictures.

The family can be traced back to Charles Groves (1807—1866) and Martha Bigg (1822—1915). Bigg began her acting career playing children’s roles[1] in London’s West End in 1830,[1] appearing in Peter Bell the Wagonner at the Royal Cobourg Theatre (today The Old Vic)[1] and in the title role of Tom Thumb at the Theatre Royal, Haymarket.[1] She married Groves in 1841 and together they toured the provinces, acting, producing and devising shows over the next two decades, simultaneously raising a family of ten children while travelling and working in theatres across Britain and Ireland.[1]

Victorian Generation

See also

References

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