, whom Hurley married in 1906 He met the music hall singer
Marie Lloyd in 1901 and went on a tour of Australia with her and several other music hall acts. They opened at
Harry Rickards Opera House in Melbourne on 18 May with "The Lambeth Walk". By the time they returned to England they were lovers and moved in together in
Southampton Row. Aside from his
coster performances, Hurley also musically supported his wife. Lloyd and Hurley married on 27 October 1906. The marriage, although initially happy, became strained early on when work separated them for long periods. Fresh from his success in Australia, Hurley began feeling sidelined by his wife's popularity in England. Despite getting the date of the marriage wrong, the author Walter MacQueen-Pope suggested that "[Hurley] was a star who had married a planet. Already the seeds of disaster were being sown." Hurley soon became estranged from his wife, who had begun drinking and gambling heavily. During one outing to the races, she met the jockey
Bernard Dillon, whom she moved in with, leaving Alec to tour alone. Furious, Hurley initiated divorce proceedings, the strain of which caused him to drink heavily, which signalled the end of his theatrical career. ==Last years and death==