Agnes Doyle (1905-1992) From Nymagee to New York

Agnes Doyle in November 1930 while performing in Sydney in Op O’ Me Thumb. Australian Performing Arts Collection, Arts Centre Melbourne.

The Five Second version
During her lifetime, Agnes Doyle found her way from a remote regional town in outback New South Wales to the New York stage. She was a popular favourite with audiences in Australia in the 1920s and early 1930s, and almost continuously in work. Like many of her contemporaries, she left Australia to “try her luck.” She enjoyed some success on the US stage, especially in a long tour of Yes My Darling Daughter, but it appears her career never took off, as had been expected. She appeared on US TV in the early days of live-to-air programming in the mid 1950s. Sometime in the late 1950s she took on an important role for JC Williamsons, the Australian theatrical company, acting as their agent in New York. In this role she negotiated contracts and royalty arrangements. She died in New Jersey in 1992.
Agnes in 1930 [1]The Bulletin 26 Nov 1930, P18

In remote Australia

Agnes Doyle was born in Nymagee, a remote copper mining town over 600 kilometres north-west of Sydney, in late December 1905. Her father Michael was a copper smelter, her mother Ada a local woman – Agnes being the third of three children. Unfortunately, deep unhappiness marred her childhood. When Agnes was very young, her parents went through a bitter separation and divorce. Custody of Agnes and her older siblings was granted to Michael, who moved the family to nearby Cobar – a much larger mining town, in 1917.[2]As with so many divorce documents of this time, a great deal was written but much remains unstated. See Divorce papers; Michael Doyle – Ada Doyle, 1912-1913, New South Wales State Archives The children all started performing even while living at Nymagee,[3]Cobar Herald (NSW) 9 December 1913, P13 but it was at Cobar that Agnes and older sister Annie shone as a young singers.[4]Western Age (NSW), 31 Jul 1917, P3 (See Note 1 below regarding her family circumstances)

Nymagee, New South Wales, with school students visible at left. Undated photo taken before 1917. Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales

On stage in Australia

Agnes’s first notable success on stage was as a dancer in Sydney in August 1926. With dance partner Jack Lyons, she went on to win at state and then in Australia-wide amateur dance competitions.[5]The Sun (Syd) 28 Nov 1926, P31. There is evidence that Agnes subsequently taught dancing at Melbourne’s Green Mill Dance Hall in the late 1920s. See Table Talk (Melb) 21 Mar 1929, P64 Unfortunately, where she learned to dance was never explained and what dramatic training she received is also unclear. But she had success on stage from a young age. In 1927 she was appearing in Leon Gordon‘s touring production of The Green Hat with Judith Anderson.[6]The Sun (Syd) 3 Jul 1927, P38 By early 1929, she was touring Australian towns, now in a leading role in The Patsy, with Bert Bailey.

Dancing partnership Jack Lyons and Agnes Doyle in 1926.[7]Sunday Times (Syd) 24 Oct 1926, P26

Interviewed while touring in The Patsy in Western Australia in April 1929, the twenty-four year old Agnes said exactly what might be expected of very young Australian actors of the era – “Of course, I’m dying to get to London, and I’m hoping to go in December… I adore the stage… and have always been anxious to take up that life.” And in language also so typical of the time, the Perth newspaper added: “Though her association with the stage has been comparatively brief, Miss Doyle has already made solid progress towards the top of the stage ladder, and there seems little doubt that her talents, so obvious to those who have already seen the show, [The Patsy] combined with her ambition… will carry her further.”[8]The Daily News (WA) 2 Apr 1929, P1 A Sydney Truth review of her role in the comedy This Thing Called Love in October 1930 was equally effusive. Her performance as the “inconsequential little idiot” Dolly Garrett, was “sheer joy”.[9]Truth (Syd) 12 Oct 1930, P7

Left: Agnes Doyle in Eliza Comes To Stay (1930) Photograph – Walker Studios. Australian Performing Arts Collection, Melbourne.
Right: Agnes Doyle and John Wood in Hayfever (1931) or While Parents Sleep (1932). The Marriner Theatre Archive, Melbourne.

The AusStage database entry for Agnes Doyle, which is not definitive, charts her busy schedule in the early 1930s, a reflection of her great popularity with Australian audiences. Her surviving JC Williamson contract also demonstrates how much “the Firm” valued her.[10]JC Williamson’s was the large theatrical firm that dominated Australasia In late 1933, the agreement was to pay her a working salary of £12 per week and then retain her on £4 per work when not working. It was generous pay for a woman in her late twenties. By comparison, the Australian minimum wage at the time was about £3 and 7 shillings.[11]Agnes Doyle contract with JC Williamsons. Dated 14 Dec 1933. Courtesy Australian Performing Arts Collection, Arts Centre Melbourne

Agnes in Ivor Novello’s Fresh Fields in 1934. She took the same role for its New York run in 1936.[12]Table Talk (Melb), 31 May 1934, P23

Her stage work brought her into contact with an eclectic mix of visiting and Australian performers, but notably there were a large number who would also try their luck overseas in the 1930s – John Wood and Campbell Copelin, Mona Barrie, Lois Green, Mary MacGregor, Dulcie Cherry and Isabel Mahon.

When The Patsy was revived again in 1932, Everyone’s magazine reported: “The play marks another individual success for Agnes Doyle… This girl is going [ahead] with leaps and bounds. She has a whimsicality and method of expression quite unusual, and in the part of Pat Harrington… [a] very quaint and also very appealing little personality…[13]Everyones, Vol.13 No.651, 24 August 1932, P36

Patricia Penman and Agnes in 1933. A Rene Pardon Studio photograph. [14]The Sun (Syd) 6 Sept 1933, P18

By this time, her personal life had already been “remade.” She was now reported to be the daughter of “a well known grazier” and her hometown was the respectable and well established town of Bathurst.[15]The Sydney Morning Herald, 18 Oct 1934, P8 While this was a fiction, she had made some important society connections. Possibly while at Cobar she had befriended Patricia Penman [16]Western Age (Dubbo, NSW) 23 Sep 1931, P2 a budding actress now using the stage name Tisha (or Tuisha) Guille and the daughter of sportsman, mining engineer and colourful Sydney personality Arthur Percival (Percy) Penman. When Patricia married Jack Harris in 1933, Agnes was the single bridesmaid.[17]Patricia lived a long life in New Zealand. Sir Jack Harris ran New Zealand import-export firm Bing Harris for many years

Perhaps her signature role was in Ivor Novello‘s comedy Fresh Fields. The play opened in Sydney in March 1934 after a long run in London. It probably appealed to Britons and Australians for different reasons. It concerned the Pidgeons, an Australian family, who had just sold their large hotel in Brisbane and who suddenly appear in the lives of two impoverished aristocratic London sisters (who cannot afford the upkeep on their Belgravia mansion). Agnes played Una Pidgeon, the “gauche clumsy” Australian daughter, who eventually wins over everyone and makes a success at court.[18]Ivor Novello Fresh Fields synopsis (1935) The theme of brash, wealthy, but unsophisticated Australians (or Americans) versus the reserve and genteel poverty of an English family has been repeated so often it is immediately familiar to us today.

Move to the United States in 1935

Agnes arrived in the US on the SS Monterey in July 1935. Intriguingly, on US immigration documents she gave Arthur Penman as her guardian in Australia, and actor John Wood (who was then under contract to RKO) as her contact in the US. In early 1936 she played the role of Una again with the Margaret Anglin company production of Fresh Fields in New York. Reviews for her performance were positive – although the play itself may have been “too English” for a long run in the US. Variety thought it “overwritten” and a bit “too gabby.”[19]Variety 12 Feb 1936 P62

Stories that she got the role while “on the way to London” may be true, but they also bear close similarity to accounts given for the US discoveries of other young Australians – Mary Maguire, Jocelyn Howarth (Constance Worth) and Mona Barrie – and it seems to have been a favourite Australian newspaper story. Another popular story was that of the movie studio offer. In Agnes’ case, following reports back home of the success of Fresh Fields on Broadway, came stories of studio contracts and movie offers in Hollywood.[20]Daily Telegraph (Syd) 23 April 1936, P14 Whether she ever really entertained working in film is unknown, but The Australian Women’s Weekly claimed that talks with Twentieth Century-Fox had broken down because she was “asking too much.”[21]The Australian Women’s Weekly 18 April 1936, P29

Agnes touring in Yes, My Darling Daughter in 1938.[22]Fort Worth Star-Telegram (Texas) · 24 Feb 1938, P11

Still presenting as a slight but vivacious young woman, she was well suited to playing the rebellious modern daughter in Yes, My Darling Daughter, first in New York in 1937 and then on tour through the US in 1938. It was a popular success.

The celebratory press reports of the 1930s regarding Australian actors overseas regularly included news of Agnes’s doings. Her travel to London in 1936 and again in 1938 when she stayed with Lord and Lady Waleran, news of being seen in the company of interesting people like Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, aviator Charles Kingsford-Smith and Hollywood newcomer Jocelyn Howarth (Constance Worth); all fitted in with the contemporary nationalistic belief that Australians could do anything.[23]The Sun (Syd) 25 Jan 1938, P11 But there was little news about work on stage.

Australian sojourn 1945-6

Newly returned home in March 1945, Agnes models a New York hat.[24]The Sun (Syd) 11 Mar 1945, P6

Unusually, Agnes Doyle returned to Australia in March 1945 – before the end of World War II, a difficult task and only possible at the time if one had guaranteed work at the destination and could get a berth on a ship. Yet Agnes did this and she stepped back into the Australian theatre scene with a role in the new comedy The Voice of the Turtle, with great ease. What had she been doing in New York for the previous six years was vaguely and briefly reported. When pressed, she spoke of her recent role in (a very short run of) That Old Devil.[25]The Daily Telegraph (Syd) 8 Mar 1945, P16 She also mentioned radio plays for the B.B.C. and a play for NBC’s TV channel. She explained that she had worked for the British Ministry of War Transport for 18 months and had also helped raise $200,000 for American War Loan Bonds.[26]The Sydney Morning Herald 8 Mar 1945, P5

Voice of the Turtle demonstrated that, whatever she had been doing, she had lost none of her skills as an actor. This contemporary adult comedy had a healthy two month run at Sydney’s Minerva Theatre and Agnes and Ron Randell, her co-star, were complimented for their performances.[27]The Sydney Morning Herald 10 Apr 1945, P5 This was followed by a short run of Shaw’s Arms and the Man at the Minerva.[28]The Daily Telegraph (Syd)13 Aug 1945
P16

Career in the US after 1946

It took until April 1946 for Agnes to get a passage back to the US, and during the interim she lived with the Penman family in Sydney again. She had time to socialise with friends, support events for the services and comment on Australia’s limited post-war opportunities for actors. [29]She also thought income taxes were too high. Daily Telegraph (Syd) 7 Jan 1946, P9 Like Ron Randell, she declined to take up a role in Flying Foxes, a play with an Australian theme written by US serviceman Warren D Cheney, that was very publicly proposed for a New York launch in early 1946.[30]See Daily Telegraph (Syd) 27 Jan 1946, P6. After US war service, Warren DeWitt Cheney, a maker of medical documentaries, went on to an interesting career as an abstract sculptor and later became a … Continue reading

One might wonder why Agnes Doyle, “Australia’s great little favourite,” returned to the US if her career there had slowed.[31]JC Williamson Whistling in the Dark program, August 1932. Via National Library of Australia PROMPT collection However, as this writer has noted before, the choice for post-war Australian performers was stark. Actors could either stay – meaning they would continue to work for JC Williamsons, or on radio, or perhaps in a rare Australian film – there was, as yet, no television. Alternatively, they could try their luck overseas – where the opportunities seemed boundless.

Unfortunately, it is difficult to trace all of Agnes’s professional activities in the post-war world. She appeared in several live plays for US television in the mid-1950s and occasionally wrote for newspapers. She was living in apartment hotels in the 1940s – the Royalton and Algonquin in New York, both well known for hosting actors seeking work. However, her luck changed at the end of the 1950s, when she took on a new and very high profile role. JC Williamson’s employed her as their New York representative, to negotiate contracts and complex royalty agreements – for example for the hugely successful musical Camelot. Some of these survive in the archives of the Australian Performing Arts Collection in Melbourne.

Agnes’s name on JC Williamsons letterhead, c1960. She continued in this role for at least ten years.[32]Australian Performing Arts Collection

Agnes Doyle became a US citizen in February 1958. By that time she lived at the Martha Washington Hotel, a women’s-only residential hotel in New York.

Agnes died at the Actor’s Fund Home in Englewood, New Jersey in August 1992. She never married, had no dependents and appears to have had no significant long-term partnership. A lonely life, perhaps. In 2024, the township of Nymagee still mines copper and sustains a population of about 100.

Another image of Agnes while performing in Op O’ Me Thumb in 1930. Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales.

Note 1 – Her family

There were great tragedies in Agnes’s life and these almost certainly coloured her willingness to discuss her past and probably influenced many of her decisions. In December 1920, her older sister Annie died in heartbreaking circumstances, apparently as a result of an attempt to induce an abortion.[33]Truth (Syd), 2 Jan 1921, P9 Annie also left behind a very young son, and the grief for the Doyle family was palpable.[34]The Daily Telegraph (Syd) 14 Dec 1920, P4[35]The Sydney Morning Herald 14 Dec 1920, P7 Twenty-two years later, in early 1942, Agnes’s brother Dennis died in fighting during the Japanese invasion of Malaysia and Singapore. He left behind a family. It appears that Agnes was estranged from her mother for much of her life. Not so her father, who as late as 1950 was proudly providing commentary on her life.[36]The Daily Mirror (Syd) 15 Feb 1950, P24 reported Patrick Doyle appearing on 2SM’s radio program “Fifty and Over”


Nick Murphy
March 2024

References

Special thanks

  • Claudia Funder – Australian Performing Arts Collection, Melbourne
  • Elaine Marriner – Marriner Theatre Archive, Melbourne

Collections

  • Australian Performing Arts Collection, Melbourne Australia
  • The Marriner Theatre Archive, Melbourne
  • New South Wales State Archives, Museums of History, New South Wales
  • State Library of New South Wales
  • State Library of Victoria
  • Births, Deaths & Marriages, New South Wales
  • Ancestry.com
  • Newspapers.com
  • National Library of Australia – Trove
  • National Library of New Zealand – Papers Past

Text

  • Warren D Cheney (1978) Don’t you play games with me!: How to identify and deal with games children play against you. Randolph-Harris, California.
  • John McCallum (1979) Life with Googie. Heinemann, London
  • Ivor Novello (1933) Fresh Fields: A comedy in Three Acts. (1936 Edition) Samuel French, New York.

Footnotes

Footnotes
1 The Bulletin 26 Nov 1930, P18
2 As with so many divorce documents of this time, a great deal was written but much remains unstated. See Divorce papers; Michael Doyle – Ada Doyle, 1912-1913, New South Wales State Archives
3 Cobar Herald (NSW) 9 December 1913, P13
4 Western Age (NSW), 31 Jul 1917, P3
5 The Sun (Syd) 28 Nov 1926, P31. There is evidence that Agnes subsequently taught dancing at Melbourne’s Green Mill Dance Hall in the late 1920s. See Table Talk (Melb) 21 Mar 1929, P64
6 The Sun (Syd) 3 Jul 1927, P38
7 Sunday Times (Syd) 24 Oct 1926, P26
8 The Daily News (WA) 2 Apr 1929, P1
9 Truth (Syd) 12 Oct 1930, P7
10 JC Williamson’s was the large theatrical firm that dominated Australasia
11 Agnes Doyle contract with JC Williamsons. Dated 14 Dec 1933. Courtesy Australian Performing Arts Collection, Arts Centre Melbourne
12 Table Talk (Melb), 31 May 1934, P23
13 Everyones, Vol.13 No.651, 24 August 1932, P36
14 The Sun (Syd) 6 Sept 1933, P18
15 The Sydney Morning Herald, 18 Oct 1934, P8
16 Western Age (Dubbo, NSW) 23 Sep 1931, P2
17 Patricia lived a long life in New Zealand. Sir Jack Harris ran New Zealand import-export firm Bing Harris for many years
18 Ivor Novello Fresh Fields synopsis (1935)
19 Variety 12 Feb 1936 P62
20 Daily Telegraph (Syd) 23 April 1936, P14
21 The Australian Women’s Weekly 18 April 1936, P29
22 Fort Worth Star-Telegram (Texas) · 24 Feb 1938, P11
23 The Sun (Syd) 25 Jan 1938, P11
24 The Sun (Syd) 11 Mar 1945, P6
25 The Daily Telegraph (Syd) 8 Mar 1945, P16
26 The Sydney Morning Herald 8 Mar 1945, P5
27 The Sydney Morning Herald 10 Apr 1945, P5
28 The Daily Telegraph (Syd)13 Aug 1945
P16
29 She also thought income taxes were too high. Daily Telegraph (Syd) 7 Jan 1946, P9
30 See Daily Telegraph (Syd) 27 Jan 1946, P6. After US war service, Warren DeWitt Cheney, a maker of medical documentaries, went on to an interesting career as an abstract sculptor and later became a psychologist
31 JC Williamson Whistling in the Dark program, August 1932. Via National Library of Australia PROMPT collection
32 Australian Performing Arts Collection
33 Truth (Syd), 2 Jan 1921, P9
34 The Daily Telegraph (Syd) 14 Dec 1920, P4
35 The Sydney Morning Herald 14 Dec 1920, P7
36 The Daily Mirror (Syd) 15 Feb 1950, P24 reported Patrick Doyle appearing on 2SM’s radio program “Fifty and Over”

Isabel Mahon (1916-1993) – the “Mary Pickford” from Fitzroy

Above: 18 year old Isabel Mahon as she appears in Beaumont Smith’s final film Splendid Fellows, in 1934. This is a screen grab from the NFSA’s website Australian Screen, which contains several short clips from the film. (Click to follow the link).

The Five Second Version
Isabel Mahon (1916-1993) was not the only Australian actress to be dubbed “Australia’s Mary Pickford.” The term was regularly applied to other Australian women, including Josie Melville, Jean Duncan, Mary Maguire and Lucille Lisle. As an adult Isabel stood only about 1.5 metres (5 feet) tall,[1]She appears to have exaggerated her shortness but on stage was a vibrant and attractive performer. Born in inner city Fitzroy, she first appeared on stage at the very young age of about 8 years. By the early 1930s she had her first JC Williamson’s contract, and in 1934 she appeared in Beaumont Smith’s film Splendid Fellows. She married visiting vaudevillian Ward Gray in late 1936 and departed with him for the US to try her luck. She spent five years on the US stage, usually as a dancer. She returned to Australia with her second husband Earl Woodbury in April 1959, and spent three and a half years living there as an ordinary citizen. She died in Florida in 1993.
Isabel Woodbury nee Mahon on her Australian visa for a return visit home in April 1959. [2]Copyright National Archives of Australia – Isabel Irene Woodbury visa 1959

As historian Andrée Wright has noted, between the wars there came to be a popular narrative regarding Australia’s young actresses. These women were usually presented as sporty, good looking, capable, and more than competent on stage and screen – in fact – able to achieve anything – just by nature of being Australian. In the 1930s, newspapers delighted in listing their successes and made pious predictions about future successes overseas. “At the time, [these film success] stories convinced readers that ‘with very few exceptions, every Australian who ha[d] ever gone to America ha[d] succeeded beyond expectations.‘”[3]Andrée Wright (1986) Pps18-19. The inserted quote is from Picture Show, 2 August 1919 One such actress, briefly, was Isabel Mahon.

Isabel at the height of her Australian fame and now daubed “the Mary Pickford of the Australian stage” in 1934.[4]Sunday Times (WA) 22 Apr 1934 P11

Growing up in Fitzroy

Isabel Mahon was born in a small terrace house in Fitzroy, an inner suburb of Melbourne, in December 1916.[5]Victoria Birth Certificate, 29538/1916, Isabel Irene Mahon, born 6 December 1916 Her father Edward was former coal miner, listed in later records as a horse dealer or a labourer, her mother was Ethel nee Dennison, a Fitzroy girl who had experienced a severely disadvantaged upbringing in the suburb. Isabel was the youngest of a large family, and from a early age she showed talent and interest in performing. Like some other children of the working class inner city suburbs – notably those who joined the Pollards Lilliputian Opera company in the early 1900s – a life on stage was an exciting alternative to an apprenticeship or learning a trade.

The earliest public photo of Isabel appears in The Bulletin in 1931, while she was dancing in the panto The House that Jack Built.[6]The Bulletin 14 Jan 1931, P36,

For most of her childhood, Isabel[7]also spelled Isabelle and Isobel lived at Number 48 Little Gore Street, a laneway that appears to have originally serviced stables and provided rear access to the larger homes of Gore Street. At the time of her birth in 1916, Fitzroy, one of the city’s oldest suburbs, was developing a unenviable reputation as a “slum” suburb. Its narrow terrace housing and the proximity of factories made it undesirable to the city’s aspirational families. Accounts of working class suburbs increasingly emphasized the “rough and ready” life the citizens lived – and tended to amplify crime and coarseness. A Truth newspaper account from 1914 reported a case where Ethel Mahon had thrown a brick at a passing deliveryman whose horse and cart had just run over her cat in Little Gore St. The “lurid language” used at the time was alluded to, but the paper left spaces for titillated readers to imagine the words actually used in Fitzroy’s back streets.[8]Truth (Melb) 8 August 1914, P3

Left: 46 and 48 Little Gore Street Fitzroy, looking north towards Webb St. The dark terrace was Isabel’s home and is still a residence. The 1st floor walkways between warehouses are unusual and probably date from the 1920s, when Isabel’s mother had moved to Abbotsford. Right: Little Gore Street, looking south. Old stables and the end of the street are in the distance..

Isabel’s first professional appearances on stage, “as a clever child artist,” seems to have been when she was aged only 8, in February 1924, performing as part of a variety lineup called The Midnight Frolics.[9]Clay Djubal dates her earliest performance as the 1924 panto Cinderella

In early 1924, at age 8, Isabel was on stage in Melbourne.[10]The Prahran Telegraph (Vic) 22 Feb 1924, P3

Little actress lost

Over much of the next two years Isabel performed with O’Donnell and Ray’s Panto company on tour around Australia. We know this because, rather spectacularly, in late 1925, Ethel reported her daughter as missing to Police. After nine months away she had started to worry about Isabel but had been unable to contact the troupe – as they were moving rapidly from town to town and were often remote. Isabel and the company were finally found and in October 1926 she returned to her mother.[11]The Herald (Melb) 12 Oct 1926 P5 She had performed all over Australia, and in Java and Singapore.[12]Even today, tracking the company’s movements and performances is difficult

Report on Isabel in October 1926 [13]The Herald (Melb)12 Oct 1926 P5

Less than twenty years earlier, working class parents in this part of Melbourne had signed their children to perform on extended performance tours through Asia and North America with the Pollard Lilliputian Opera Company. They were away for up to two years. A few – Alf Goulding, Daphne Pollard, Snub Pollard and Ted McNamara, went on to make names for themselves. The parents contracted their children via a type of indenture and were paid through a trust. We must assume a similar scheme was applied to Isabel’s employment, although by the 1920s this arrangement was unusual. This is because the Victorian Education Act of 1872 required her to be at school, while the Australian Emigration Act of 1910 [14]written after the disastrous Pollards tour of India in 1909 prohibited any child being taken out of Australia to perform “theatrical, operatic or other work.”[15]How seriously these laws were applied is not clear. In 1985, performer Irene Goulding recalled her favourite teacher’s severe disapproval of her decision to leave on a performance tour with the … Continue reading

In spite of these laws, Isabel may have returned to touring,[16]the O’Donnell and Ray Panto Company still had a player called “Little Isobel” in 1927 – see for example a review of Babes in the Wood in the Maryborough Chronicle, Wide Bay … Continue reading however in the later 1920s, she also came under the tutelage of Melbourne’s well known dance teacher Jennie Brennan (1877-1964). Brennan had a close association with JC Williamson, the theatrical company so dominant in Australasia it was called “the firm.” It is not surprising that Isabel then appeared in a small role in When London Sleeps, at Melbourne’s King’s Theatre in August 1928.[17]The Herald (Melb) 13 Aug 1928, P19

A beaming Isabel in the pages of the national magazine The Australian Women’s Weekly, in 1934.[18]Australian Women’s Weekly, 4 Aug 1934, P20

Leading roles

Her big break-through came in January 1934, when JC Williamson’s promoted her to a leading role in Gay Divorce, after Dulcie Davenport(1913-2011) departed to pursue a career in England. Isabel was still 18 and her mother signed the JC Williamson’s contract.[19]She was still keen to exaggerate her youth – she told the Melbourne Herald she was 15. See 25 Jan 1934, P35 Immediately after that, she went into a run of The Girlfriend, followed by an Australian tour of Gay Divorce. Her contract still survives in the Australian Performing Arts Collection in Melbourne, and it reveals a continuous run of performances, back to back, in pantos and musicals for JC Williamson.[20]The contract file suggests a degree of tension over her employment and payments made And then came another exciting break-though – during the later part of 1934, pioneer director Beaumont Smith (1885-1950) cast her for his film Splendid Fellows (1934).

With her role in an Australian film confirmed, Isabel Mahon’s story of acting success was celebrated in the manner now so familiar in newspapers:
Seventeen years old… Miss Mahon has won her name on the stage at such an early age. Small parts in J. C. Williamson have grown until she is now playing the lead in “Gay Divorce,” at Sydney Theatre Royal... Isabel Mahon was out to win through early. She appeared in pantomime at eight, and in nine juvenile years she has capped her kicking big boots in “Cinderella” by feminine leads on stage . . . and now on the screen. And so they come forward, confirming the opinion of London papers that there is plenty of acting ability in Australia.[21]Author’s emphasis. Examiner (Tas) 10 Aug 1934, P9

Even more grandly, in one of many articles headlined “Australia’s Mary Pickford,” one Australian paper predicted “Isabel…. is made in Australia. Soon the world will know her.” [22]Author’s emphasis. Groper (WA) 5 May 1934, P1

Frank Leighton, Leo Franklyn and Isabel in Splendid Fellows.[23]Everyone’s 5 Sept 1934, P40.

Pike and Cooper [24]Pike and Cooper(1980) P223 note that Splendid Fellows was made on the very modest budget of £5000. It featured Eric Colman (the non-acting brother of Hollywood’s Ronald Colman) and included a cameo by aviator Charles Kingsford Smith. The theme of an air race made it topical, but ultimately the film was not a success and it was to be Smith’s last. NFSA curator Paul Byrnes has noted that Smith “had a tendency to require his actors to shout as if they were working to the back stalls of a noisy theatre. His staging was similarly minimal…” Clips from the film can be seen here at the NFSA site.

Beyond the excited puff-pieces about newcomer Isabel, at least one contemporary review acknowledged the problem with her voice, so obvious to the modern listener. “Isabelle Mahon, delightful in action, but —Good [heavens] —when she talks!  On the stage her voice may have quite a different timbre; but through recording and reproduction equipment it comes with the harsh metallic ring that characterised the speech of the Hollywood girls when talkies first arrived. The Americans overcame their troubles, and if Miss Mahon can do the same she should be able to pick up some nice money in productions of the near future.[25]Everyone’s 21 Nov 1934, P29 Almost certainly, what we hear in the film was Isabel’s attempt to mitigate her working class accent and an education limited by touring from a young age.[26]Some Australian actors pursed elocution to make their voices acceptable for a stage or screen career

Isabel Mahon as Eileen McBride and Frank Bradley as her father Jim McBride in Splendid Fellows.[27]New Zealand Herald, 1 Dec 1934, P12

Off to the US with Ward Gray

Following what would be her one and only film and perhaps coinciding with disagreements with JC Williamson over pay, Isabel signed up to appear in variety on the Tivoli circuit. In their pantos – like Cinderella and revues such as Let’s Go Gay, Flying High and The Spice of Paris, she usually took featured or leading roles and was noted in reviews for singing sweetly and “dancing divinely.”[28]Table Talk (Melb)14 Nov 1935, P19 With exposure to the Tivoli’s numerous local and visiting artists, perhaps Isabel’s appetite for greener pastures had been whetted.

During her 1936 run at the Sydney Tivoli, Isabel met Canadian born vaudevillian Ward (Worden) Gray, one part of the visiting “comedy acrobatic dancing trio” Ward, Pinkie and Terry. The trio had arrived in July, performing for the Tivoli and then at breakneck speed through Australian venues. Despite a 12 year age difference, Isabel and Ward married in Sydney on November 3, 1936, and a week later they were on the SS Monterey, bound for San Francisco.[29]NSW Births Deaths & Marriages Marriage Certificate 17015/1936

Isabel and Ward in the lineup at the Tivoli in October 1936. [30]Sydney Morning Herald 15 Oct 1936, P2

Ward’s act performed on tour across the US in 1937, with Isabel being introduced to US audiences as an “Australian movie comedienne.” Australians who launched onto the variety circuits of the US found the work hard and the movement continual. Today, their professional footprints are faint and the advance publicity that found its way into the press rarely provided considered reviews and sometimes did not list performers.[31]See Leon Errol’s comments on being a touring player in vaudeville Troupes also continually broke up and regrouped – for example, after about 12 months, Ward and Isabel joined another touring troupe – the Kit Kat Club Revue, Isabel being billed as a “comedy dancer.” By late 1939 Ward and Isabel’s act had ended its run, and apparently, so had their marriage.

Isabel, made up in the best Hollywood style for the Kit Kat Club Revue in Birmingham, Alabama in March 1938.[32]The Birmingham Post 31 March 1938, P6

Touring and marriage to Earl Woodbury

Isabel’s movements from 1940 are even more difficult to verify. However, reports from later in her life state she headlined a Vaudeville road show called The Gems of 1941.[33]Pensacola News Journal (Florida) 7 Jan 1977, P35-6 The troupe included Earl ‘Woody’ Woodbury, one of the “Rhythm Ramblers”, a screwball comedy group of musicians in the style of the Ritz Brothers, whose act was dubbed “screwball swing.”[34]The Sunday Star News, Wilmington (NC) Oct 13, 1940, P15 Isabel married Earl while the troupe was in St Louis, Missouri in July 1941.

An advertisement for Gems of 1941. The author contends the photo shows Yvette Geray, who was likely Isabel. [35]Ledger-Star (Virginia) 9 Oct 1940, P12

Unfortunately, the surviving contemporary accounts of the troupe make no mention of an Isabel Mahon or Gray or Woodbury, suggesting she was probably using a stage name at the time. Yvette Geray, the troupe’s leading dancer noted for her “daring, alluring” performance, bears a similarity to Isabel in the few surviving, grainy photos.[36]Yvette Geray, supposedly from France, does not appear in records of US performances before or after The Gems of 1941, or any other records, which also suggests it was a stage name But equally, Isabel might have been one part of Rover & Mahan, a “diminutive pair of funsters,” who also had an act in the show.[37]Richmond Times-Dispatch (Virginia) 4 Oct 1940, P25

Whatever the exact nature of her performances, it had all come to an end by mid 1941, when war loomed for the US and Earl Woodbury joined the Navy.[38]Pensacola News Journal (Florida) 7 Jan 1977, P35-6

Post-war, the couple settled in Milton, Florida. However, for the three and a half years 1959-1962 they returned to Australia to live in Melbourne – making Isabel unusual amongst expat Australian performers of her era. In Australia, Earl worked for advertising agency Berry Curry.[39]Pensacola News Journal (Florida) 7 Apr 1963, P52

Isabel and Earl Woodbury on their Australian visas in April 1959. [40]Copyright National Archives of Australia – Isabel Irene & Earl Woodbury visa 1959

In late 1962, Isabel returned to Florida with Earl. Earl seems to have turned his hand to numerous jobs – in time he became a realtor and property developer. Isabel, or “Issie,” sometimes performed in local amateur theatre in Florida, but it seems her professional career had come to an end.

It is intriguing that although she saw her family in Australia, Isabel sought no publicity at all during her time in Melbourne, and Australians seemed unaware she was home. She had become a US citizen in the 1950s and lived in Florida until her death in 1993.


Nick Murphy
November 2023


References

Text

  • Andrew Pike & Ross Cooper (1980) Australian Film 1900-1977. Oxford University Press/AFI
  • Andrée Wright (1986) Brilliant Careers, Women in Australian Cinema. Pan Australia
  • Frank Van Straten (2003) Tivoli Thomas C Lothian

Australian Performing Arts Collection, Arts Centre, Melbourne

  • JC Williamson’s Collection – Contracts for Isabel Mahon

National Film and Sound Archive (NFSA)

Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University

Australian Variety Theatre Archive

State Library of Victoria, blog

Primary Sources

  • National Archives of Australia
  • National Library of Australia, Trove
  • National Library of New Zealand, Paperspast
  • State Library of Victoria
  • Ancestry.com
  • Victoria, Births Deaths & Marriages
  • New South Wales, Births Deaths & Marriages
  • Newspapers.com
  • Lantern Digital Media Library@ the Internet Archive
This site has been selected for archiving and preservation in the National Library of Australia’s Pandora archive

Footnotes

Footnotes
1 She appears to have exaggerated her shortness
2 Copyright National Archives of Australia – Isabel Irene Woodbury visa 1959
3 Andrée Wright (1986) Pps18-19. The inserted quote is from Picture Show, 2 August 1919
4 Sunday Times (WA) 22 Apr 1934 P11
5 Victoria Birth Certificate, 29538/1916, Isabel Irene Mahon, born 6 December 1916
6 The Bulletin 14 Jan 1931, P36,
7 also spelled Isabelle and Isobel
8 Truth (Melb) 8 August 1914, P3
9 Clay Djubal dates her earliest performance as the 1924 panto Cinderella
10 The Prahran Telegraph (Vic) 22 Feb 1924, P3
11 The Herald (Melb) 12 Oct 1926 P5
12 Even today, tracking the company’s movements and performances is difficult
13 The Herald (Melb)12 Oct 1926 P5
14 written after the disastrous Pollards tour of India in 1909
15 How seriously these laws were applied is not clear. In 1985, performer Irene Goulding recalled her favourite teacher’s severe disapproval of her decision to leave on a performance tour with the Pollards. Irene did it anyway
16 the O’Donnell and Ray Panto Company still had a player called “Little Isobel” in 1927 – see for example a review of Babes in the Wood in the Maryborough Chronicle, Wide Bay and Burnett Advertiser (Qld) 8 Apr 1927, P4
17 The Herald (Melb) 13 Aug 1928, P19
18 Australian Women’s Weekly, 4 Aug 1934, P20
19 She was still keen to exaggerate her youth – she told the Melbourne Herald she was 15. See 25 Jan 1934, P35
20 The contract file suggests a degree of tension over her employment and payments made
21 Author’s emphasis. Examiner (Tas) 10 Aug 1934, P9
22 Author’s emphasis. Groper (WA) 5 May 1934, P1
23 Everyone’s 5 Sept 1934, P40.
24 Pike and Cooper(1980) P223
25 Everyone’s 21 Nov 1934, P29
26 Some Australian actors pursed elocution to make their voices acceptable for a stage or screen career
27 New Zealand Herald, 1 Dec 1934, P12
28 Table Talk (Melb)14 Nov 1935, P19
29 NSW Births Deaths & Marriages Marriage Certificate 17015/1936
30 Sydney Morning Herald 15 Oct 1936, P2
31 See Leon Errol’s comments on being a touring player in vaudeville
32 The Birmingham Post 31 March 1938, P6
33, 38 Pensacola News Journal (Florida) 7 Jan 1977, P35-6
34 The Sunday Star News, Wilmington (NC) Oct 13, 1940, P15
35 Ledger-Star (Virginia) 9 Oct 1940, P12
36 Yvette Geray, supposedly from France, does not appear in records of US performances before or after The Gems of 1941, or any other records, which also suggests it was a stage name
37 Richmond Times-Dispatch (Virginia) 4 Oct 1940, P25
39 Pensacola News Journal (Florida) 7 Apr 1963, P52
40 Copyright National Archives of Australia – Isabel Irene & Earl Woodbury visa 1959