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Matilda Beatrice deMille

Matilda Beatrice deMille
Beatrice DeMille CCP FIG123 WFP-DEM011.jpg
Born Matilda Beatrice Samuel
30 January0, 1853
Liverpool
Died 8 October, 1923
Hollywood
Nationality United States of America
Occupation playwright, entrepreneur
Spouse(s) Henry deMille
Children William C. deMille
Cecil B. deMille

Matilda Beatrice deMille (January 30, 1853 - October 8, 1923) (born Matilda Beatrice Samuel; also known as Beatrice C. deMille, Agnes Graham, Tillie Samuel, Mrs. Henry deMille) was an English-American play broker, screenwriter, playwright, theater actress and entrepreneur. She had a part in founding Paramount Pictures.

deMille was born in Liverpool, England to German Jewish parents. She emigrated to New York with her family in 1871. She was married to Henry deMille, an aspiring actor in Brooklyn, New York, in 1876. He was a Christian so she had to marry without her family's approval.

Together, Beatrice deMille and Henry deMille worked primariliy as teachers in a preparatory school. She taught elocution whilst her husband taught the children how to compose. However in the vacation they were able to work as traveling actors in numerous theatrical productions. Henry became successful as a playwright and actor and the family thrived.

In 1893 Henry died and deMille had to create an income. She converted her house in Pompton, New Jersey into the Henry C. deMille Preparatory School for Girls. She was able to trade a free class at that school with the President of a boy's school to get Cecil educated and William was sent to a school in Germany. At the same time she negotiated with her late husband's co-author to be the agent for their plays. This worked out and her success led to her representing the work of other writers.

In 1900, Beatrice deMille collaborated with Harriet Ford to write her first published play "The Greatest Thing in The World" - direction by Liebler & Company - and performed on Broadway and in Washington DC. In 1907 the Henry C. deMille Preparatory School for Girls lost its students after it was identified as one of the school's that the scandalous Evelyn Nesbit had attended and the school as "guilty by association". Beatrice recovered rapidly by taking on even more writers including her son's. Cecil B de Mille credits his mother with teaching him to write and direct.


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