Hetta Bartlett (1 May 1877 – May 1947) was an English stage and film actress whose career spanned both the West End and Broadway. She is known for Sonia (1921), The Lady of the Lake (1928) and Honour in Pawn (1916).

Hetta Bartlett in 1900

Early life edit

She was born in Tottenham in London as Henrietta Elizabeth Bartlett, the daughter of Sarah Henrietta née Field (1851–1918) and Onesimus Smart Bartlett (1848–1921),[1] a solicitor of Bartlett & Roberts who was Town Clerk and Clerk to the Urban Sanitary Authority in Dartmouth in Devon; by 1891 he was Clerk to the Magistrates' Court in Paignton.[2] In 1903 he would be jailed for embezzlement.[3][4]

Acting career edit

 
(L to R) Charles Hawtrey, Hetta Bartlett, Mona Harrison and Wallace Widdecombe in A Message from Mars (1905)

By 1899 aged 22 Hetta Bartlett was acting in the Company of Charles Hawtrey including his tour of America in the 1900s.[5] In 1900 she played the lead female role in the UK tour of Lord and Lady Algy.[6] Her stage appearances with Charles Hawtrey include: Miss Bramshott in Miss Bramshott's Engagement at the Prince of Wales Theatre (1902);[7] Mrs Ditchwater in The Man from Blankley's at the Prince of Wales Theatre (1903);[8] in the revival of A Message from Mars at the Criterion Theatre on Broadway (1903)[9] and again at the Princes Theatre (1904) and at the Avenue Theatre;[10] (1905). Other roles include: What the Butler Saw at the Garrick Theatre on Broadway in New York (1906);[11][12] Mrs Patterson in A Pot of Caviare at the Adelphi Theatre (1910);[13] as Miss Ricketts in Jerome K. Jerome's The Master of Mrs Chilvers at the Royalty Theatre (1911);[14] Countess of Skene and Skye in Jelf's at Wyndham's Theatre (1912), and Broomhall in Billy's Fortune at the Criterion Theatre (1913).[13] Bartlett's later stage roles include: Marchioness of Queenstown in In Nelson's Days at the Shaftesbury Theatre (1922).[15]

Personal life edit

 
Hetta Bartlett at the time of her marriage in 1899

In 1899 she married the dramatic author Metcalfe Henry Wood (1864–1944)[5][16] at Totnes in Devon. The marriage was dissolved by 1911 when Bartlett was living alone at 14a Albert Embankment in London.[17] In 1939 she was living in Marylebone in London and described herself as an actress and 'Widowed' on the official register.[18]

Hetta Bartlett died aged 70 in May 1947 in Dartford in Kent.

Filmography edit

References edit

  1. ^ 1881 England Census for Henrietta E. Bartlett: Middlesex, Tottenham - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
  2. ^ 1891 England Census for Henrietta E Bartlett: Devon, Paignton - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
  3. ^ The Building of the Dartmouth Embankment - By The Dart: Anything and Everything About Dartmouth
  4. ^ Hackney Express And Shoreditch Observer - Newspaper Archives: May 23, 1903 Page 4
  5. ^ a b Hetta Bartlett - The Sketch - 20 September 1899 pg 374
  6. ^ Miss Hetta Bartlett - The Sketch 8 August 1900 pg. 101
  7. ^ J. P. Wearing, The London Stage 1900-1909: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel, Rowman & Littlefield (2014) - Google Books pg. 97
  8. ^ Wearing, pgs. 53-54
  9. ^ Cast of |A Message from Mars = Broadway World website
  10. ^ Wearing, pg 247
  11. ^ Hetta Bartlett - Internet Broadway Database
  12. ^ Hetta Bartlett on Playbill
  13. ^ a b J. P. Wearing, The London Stage 1910-1919: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel, Rowman & Littlefield (2014) - Google Books
  14. ^ Jerome K. Jerome, The Master of Mrs. Chilvers: An Improbable Comedy, Read Books Ltd (2013) - Google Books
  15. ^ J. P. Wearing, The London Stage 1920-1929: A Calendar of Productions, Performers, and Personnel, Rowman & Littlefield (2014) - Google Books pg 153
  16. ^ 1901 England Census for Henrietta E Wood: Sussex, Hove - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
  17. ^ 1911 England Census for Henrietta Elizabeth Bartlett: London, Lambeth, Kennington - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
  18. ^ 1939 England and Wales Register for Hetta Bartlett - London, St Marylebone Met B - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
  19. ^ Rachael Low, History of British Film (Volume 4): The History of the British Film 1918 - 1929, Routledge (2011) - Google Books pg. 410
  20. ^ Hetta Bartlett - British Film Institute database

External links edit