Mrs Patrick Campbell in scenes from One More River 1934
The famous British stage actress for whom G. B. Shaw wrote the role of Eliza Doolittle in Pygmalion in 1914 made her name in Arthur Wing Pinero's The Second Mrs Tanqueray in 1893 at the St. James's Theatre, London. She made a few film appearances - and I have compiled a selections of her scenes from the 1934 Universal picture, Although she was sixty nine when she made the film, it's interesting to have some record of this actress.
From Wikipedia:
Mrs Patrick Campbell (February 9, 1865 April 9, 1940) was a British stage actress.
Campbell was born Beatrice Stella Tanner in Kensington, London, to John Tanner and Maria Luigia Giovanna, daughter of Count Angelo Romanini. She studied for a short time at the Guildhall School of Music.
Her first marriage, from which she took the name by which she is generally known, produced two children, Beo and Stella, and ended with the death of her first husband in the Boer War in 1900.
Fourteen years later, Campbell became the second wife of George Cornwallis-West, a dashing writer and soldier previously married to Jennie Jerome, the mother of Winston Churchill.
She was well-known as an amateur before she made her stage debut in 1888 at the Alexandra Theatre, Liverpool, four years after her marriage to Patrick Campbell. In March, 1890, she appeared in London at the Adelphi, where she afterward played again in 189193. She became successful as a result of starring in Sir Arthur Wing Pinero's play, The Second Mrs Tanqueray, in 1893, at St. James's Theatre where she also appeared in 1894 in The Masqueraders. As Kate Cloud in John-a-Dreams, produced by Beerbohm Tree at the Haymarket in 1894, she made another success, and again as Agnes in The Notorious Mrs. Ebbsmith at the Garrick (1895). Among her other performances were those in Fédora (1895), Little Eyolf (1896), and her notable performances with Forbes-Robertson at the Lyceum in the rôles of Juliet in Romeo and Juliet, Ophelia in Hamlet, and Lady Macbeth (189598) in the Scottish play.
In 1900, Campbell made her debut performance on Broadway in New York City in Magda, a marked success. Subsequent Broadway roles included The Joy of Living (1902), as Melisande to the Pelleas of Sarah Bernhardt in Pelléas et Mélisande (1904), The Whirlwind and The Bondman (1906), Hedda Gabler (1907), The Thunderbolt (1908), Lady Patricia (1911), Bella Donna (1911), and Shaw's Pygmalion (1914). She would return to perform there on a number of occasions until 1930. Despite her second marriage, to George Cornwallis-West, she continued to use the stage name "Mrs Patrick Campbell".
In 1914, she played Eliza Doolittle in the original production of Shaw's Pygmalion; though much too old for the part at 49, she was the obvious choice, being by far the biggest name on the London stage, and Shaw would have seen it no other way since he wrote the play for her in particular.
In her later years, Campbell made notable appearances in motion pictures, including One More River (1934), Riptide (1934) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdGhjD__Cdk&NR=1, and Crime and Punishment (1935).
She died on April 9, 1940 in Pau, France, at age 75.