Laura Joyce Bell

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Born
Laura Joyce Maskell

(1854-05-06)6 May 1854
London, England
Died30 May 1904(1904-05-30) (aged 50)
Burial placeWoodlawn Cemetery
OccupationsActress, singer
Laura Joyce Bell
Born
Laura Joyce Maskell

(1854-05-06)6 May 1854
London, England
Died30 May 1904(1904-05-30) (aged 50)
Burial placeWoodlawn Cemetery
OccupationsActress, singer
Spouses
James Valentine Taylor
(m. 1874; div. 1878)
(m. 1883)
Children3

Laura Joyce Bell (née Maskell;[1] 6 May 1854 – 30 May 1904[2]) was an English-American actress and contralto singer mostly associated with Edwardian musical comedy and light opera.

After beginning her career as Laura Joyce in concerts and theatre in Britain, she moved to the United States in 1872 where she earned good notices in the spectacular shows at Niblo's Garden. With a success in the title role of Evangeline (1875), a season in East coast cities with John T. Ford, and seasons at Daly's Broadway Theatre and the Bijou Opera House, among others, her career was established. She married the American comedian Digby Bell, with whom she frequently appeared with over the last two decades of her career. The two appeared extensively with the McCaull Comic Opera Company in Gilbert and Sullivan, Offenbach and many other comic operas. Throughout her career, she also appeared in comic plays and dramas.

Bell was born in London, the daughter of Maria Dalton Dauncey, a dramatic elocutionist and voice teacher (died 1917), and James Henry Maskell (1824–1897), a sometime theatrical agent and merchant.[2] She was coached in acting by her mother and attended the London Academy of Music, studying music with Francesco Schira.[1] In 1870, as an amateur, she appeared at the Royal Strand Theatre as Gertrude in a production of James Planché's Loan of a Lover. From this early period until 1883, Bell appeared as Laura Joyce in London in a comic opera titled Mina and played the Count of Flanders in Cupid 'Mid the Roses and The Ring and the Keeper by John Pratt Wooler. She soon participated in a British tour of a sketch presentation called Happy Hours of Fanciful Fun by Frank Green and Alfred Lee, which was followed by a season at the Theatre Royal, Manchester and an engagement with Dion Boucicault as a soubrette singer at Covent Garden.[3] At Christmas 1871, she played Oberon in the prologue to The Children in the Wood at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, and the following year she toured with Howard Paul.[1]

American career

Personal life and death

References

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