Minnie Tittell Brune’s five-year sojourn in Australia ended in 1909. She decided to try her luck in London but met with limited success. She received only mediocre reviews in her first piece,
The Eternal Question at the
Garrick Theatre. Her work in 1910 included
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde at the
Queen's Theatre opposite
H.B. Irving, Sir Henry Irving's surviving son, and as the chorus in
Henry V. Minnie had few London appearances in 1911, her major role being in a play called
The Woman on the Case at the Coronet theatre. The New York Times reported in August, in addition to a report that ostrich feathers were making a comeback, that she had returned on the
Oceanic after an absence of nine years to appear in New York, billed as Minnie Tittell-Brune at the
Manhattan Opera House in
An Aztec Romance. By 1913 she was back in London where, during her stay, she made three movies under the name Fanny Tittell-Brune:
Esther Redeemed (1915),
Iron Justice (1916), and ''Temptation's Hour'' (1916). In 1916, Minnie was also credited as being in six other films directed by Hal Roach, starring Harold Lloyd. In 1917 she was singing at London's Coliseum, before she returned to her home country. Nothing further is known of her career. She became widowed when her husband Clarence died in 1935, and was living in obscurity as a member of the
Order of St Francis when she died in her 100th year in Los Angeles in September 1974. She was interred with a Catholic service. Little noticed in her own country, and lacking even a press obituary, she was nevertheless a major figure in the history of the Australian stage where, for a period, she had been a household name in both Australia and in New Zealand. ==Notes==