She was born in
Small Heath,
Birmingham, the daughter of a tailor, John H. Warriss and his wife, born Frances Millicent Lindon. She was a cousin of the
Rudge Sisters. Although some sources suggest her year of birth was 1878, official records show that she was born in 1869. She began working in music halls under the name Millie Lindon (a version of her mother's maiden name), and in 1895 married another music hall performer, the "eccentric comedian and contortionist"
T. E. Dunville (Thomas Edward Wallen), who then managed her career. At the time of their marriage, she used the name
Florence Elizabeth Millicent Warriss, and understated her age by several years. Her most popular song was "For Old Times' Sake", a sentimental song written by
Charles Osborne, in 1898, but her professional career was relatively short and unremarkable. She and Dunville divorced in 1902; he later killed himself. In 1906 and 1909, she had two children with newspaper owner,
Edward Hulton, the founder of the
Daily Sketch, who was himself married at the time. Hulton and Minnie Lindon, who at that point used the name Miss Warris-Lindon, married in 1916, but he died in 1925. She claimed to their son, the publisher
Edward George Warris Hulton, that she was descended from an aristocratic Spanish family, de Warris. In his autobiography, he gave a vivid account of her lifestyle – "In the morning, she spent an hour or two making up her face, ate an enormous breakfast, wrote letters and pottered about among her rococo furniture before driving to lunch. She was well known at all the fashionable restaurants of the day, such as
Quaglino's." He also referred to a succession of her "gentleman friends", including a former president of Peru, a Uruguayan colonel, and a military man who she claimed was the original "
Galloping Major" of the popular song. in 1938. She died in
Taormina,
Sicily, in 1940. Her remains were returned to England, and she was buried at
Putney Vale Cemetery. ==References==