"}},"i":0}}]}"> [lower-alpha 1] [7] [8] She continued to act in the 1930s, appearing in productions such as the Ziegfeld Follies . [6] She is credited by the Broadway Internet Database as translating Hedda Gabler in 1942, [9] and writing Anne of England in 1941. Ancestry census records for 1940 show her living with the 46 year old Mary Cass Canfield (author of the one act play Lackeys of the Moon) in Nassau, New York, and they were both hired by Broadway producer Gilbert Miller, so the 2 women probably collaborated on Anne of England and other works for Miller.
In 1918 Ethel married stockbroker Henry Potter Russell (1893–1943) in the American Cathedral in Paris on the Avenue de l'Alma. [10] The "quiet wartime ceremony" was only attended by a few "intimate friends, among them Ambassador and Mrs. Sharp, Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Vanderbilt, and General Lewis. Mrs. Vincent Astor of New York served as matron of honor and Lieutenant Minot was best man." Henry was a son of Charles H. Russell of New York. [11] Before their divorce in 1925, they were the parents of: [1] [2]
Later in her life, Borden was in a long-term relationship with the British novelist Pamela Frankau. [14] [15]
She died of leukemia on July 4, 1953, aged 55, in New York City. [16] [3]
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Media related to Ethel Borden at Wikimedia Commons