Lydia "Nellé" Tritton (Russian: Лидия Тереза ("Нелль") Керенская (Триттон), 19 September 1899[1] – 10 April 1946) was an Australian journalist, poet, and self-declared "public elocutionist".[2]
Early life and education
Tritton was born in Brisbane on 19 September 1899.[3] Her parents, Fred Tritton, was a prominent Brisbane furniture warehouseman.[2][4][5] In her mid-20s, she sailed to London and toured Europe, gaining a reputation for knowledge of international affairs, which brought her into contact with the Russian expatriates then living in Paris.[2]
Personal life
In 1928, Tritton married a former officer of Russia's White Army, Nicholas Alexander Nadejine, then 43-years-old, at the marriage registry office in Kensington, England. Nadejine was a professional singer, but was unsuccessful in joining the Covent Garden Opera Company and reportedly had affairs with various wealthy Englishwomen.[2] The couple divorced after eight years of marriage in 1936.
^ abcdArmstrong, Judith. "Tritton, Lydia Ellen (Nell) (1899–1946)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.