Elizabeth Tyree (November 9, 1864 – August 8, 1952) was an actress in Broadway theatrical productions beginning in the mid-1890s. Her married name was Elizabeth Tyree Metcalfe. Professionally she was billed as Bess Tyree.
Tyree was born in Augusta County, Virginia and came to New York City to study at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.
She appeared in over 20 productions as a member of Daniel Frohman's Lyceum Stock Company, as "Bessie Tyree" until the end of 1895 and as "Elizabeth Tyree" thereafter. Her debut came as understudy to the ailing Effie Shannon in The Charity Ball by David Belasco and Henry Churchill de Mille in February 1890. The Lyceum Company staged The Home Secretary in November 1895. A play in four acts written by R.C. Carton, the themes were love, politics, and society. The time frame of the action is a single evening. Tyree acted the part of Jane Craigengelt in The Courtship of Leonie in November 1896. Written by Henry V. Esmond, the production began the Lyceum's tenth season under Frohman's management.
She depicted Cicely in The Mayflower, a play written by Louis N. Parker, presented at the Lyceum in March 1897. It was based loosely on the Pilgrim emigration to the United States, with settings in Holland, Plymouth, England, and the shore of Massachusetts Bay. Tyree participated in an Actors' Fund benefit at the Broadway Theatre, 1445 Broadway (West 41st Street), the same month. Minnie Maddern Fiske was part of a special selection at the same event. In 1898 Tyree played Avonia Bunn in the first American production of Arthur Wing Pinero's stagedoor comedy Trelawny of the 'Wells'.