Jolivet was a passenger on the on 7 May 1915, when it was torpedoed by a
German U-boat and sank in the
Atlantic Ocean off the coast of
Ireland, off the
Old Head of Kinsale. Jolivet was standing on the
bridge with
Charles Frohman, a theatrical producer who was grooming her for stardom, when the liner went down. Frohman's final words to her, quoting his favourite play,
Peter Pan: "Why fear death? It is the most beautiful adventure in life." Jolivet climbed onto a chair and obtained a
life preserver that was in her stateroom. She was saved with others when boats arrived from Ireland, one of them was the S.S.
Westborough, disguised as a Greek steamer named
Katrina. She had been a rising star, both in Frohman's theatrical productions and in silent films, however after Frohman's death her theatrical career essentially came to a halt. Jolivet testified in the
Federal District Court during a hearing regarding a petition of the
Cunard Steamship Company, which owned the
Lusitania. The company was seeking a limitation of liabilities for the deaths and damage which occurred from the tragedy. Jolivet's brother-in-law, George L. Vernon, was drowned on the
Lusitania. He was going to join his wife, Jolivet's sister, Inez Vernon, who was residing in Europe. Inez became depressed following her husband's death and committed suicide by shooting herself at Sumner Apartments, 31 West 11th Street,
New York City on 28 July 1915. In November 1919, Jolivet's younger brother, Alfred, married 29-year-old American Beatrice Witherbee, who was also a
Lusitania survivor. Her mother, Mary Cummins Brown, and her three-year-old son, Alfred Scott Witherbee Jr, died in the sinking, and she never publicly discussed it afterwards. ==Marriages==