, Lord Anglesey's country house on
Anglesey Lord Anglesey, as he now was, swiftly acquired a reputation for a lavish and spendthrift manner of living. He used his money to buy jewellery and furs, and to throw extravagant parties and flamboyant theatrical performances. He renamed the
family's country seat,
Plas Newydd, as "Anglesey Castle" and converted the chapel there into a 150-seat theatre, named the Gaiety Theatre. Here he took the lead role, opulently costumed, in productions ranging from
pantomime and comedy to performances of
Oscar Wilde's
An Ideal Husband and
Shakespeare's Henry V. Early performances from around 1899 were mostly variety performances of song and dance numbers,
sketches and
tableaux vivants in front of an invited audience of notable local people. In 1901, the Gaiety Theatre was refurbished and fitted out with
electric stage lighting and re-opened as a public entertainment venue. For three years, Lord Anglesey took his theatre company on tour around Britain and Europe. His wife disapproved of his lifestyle and obtained a
decree nisi of divorce on 7 November 1900; the marriage was later annulled due to nonconsummation, according to Lady Anglesey's grandson by her second marriage, the historian Christopher Simon Sykes. The breakdown of his marriage effectively gave Lord Anglesey more freedom to enjoy his self-indulgent lifestyle. By this stage, he had already begun to mortgage his estates to raise money.
Theft On 10 September 1901, Anglesey attended the London premiere of
Arthur Conan Doyle's
stage adaptation of Sherlock Holmes at the
Lyceum Theatre in London. At the time, Anglesey was living in the
Walsingham House Hotel in London. Lord Anglesey's French
valet Julian Gault took the opportunity of his employer's absence at the theatre to steal jewellery to the value of £50,000. Distraught at the theft, Anglesey enlisted the help of Conan Doyle to find the stolen jewels. Gault, who was later arrested at
Dover, testified in court that he had been instructed to steal the jewels by a French woman of his acquaintance called Mathilde (who had taken the jewels to France and was never found). Although Gault's testimony was believed to be true, he pleaded guilty at the
Old Bailey on 22 October and was sentenced to five years' imprisonment. ==Sexuality==