Felicity Constance Tree, Lady Cory-Wright, (7 December 1894 – 15 September 1978) was an English baronetess and high society figure. A daughter of the actors Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree and Helen Maud Holt, she appeared regularly in news of the time starting from infancy.[1]
She was presented at the court by Margot Asquith in 1913, and she wore a white satin gown with a rose pink train made of tulle and lace.[9] From as far away as California, the press commented on her attendance, with her sister Iris, at a fancy dress costume ball in 1913.[10] The same year, she went in ancient Greek-style dress to the Picture Ball at Royal Albert Hall.[11] In 1914 she sang a role in the cantataLa Damoiselle élue at the French embassy in London.[12] The same year, she attended the Picture Ball at Albert Hall and was profiled in the Kingston Gleaner, which wrote that "she has inherited a great sense of humour from her famous father."[13] Later in 1914 she trained as a nurse at St Bartholomew's Hospital,[14] having been a life saver from 1908, when she passed the tests provided by the Royal Life Saving Society in 1908.[15]
Marriage and later years
Tree married Sir Geoffrey Cory-Wright, 3rd BaronetCory-Wright, son of Sir Arthur Cory-Wright, 2nd Bt, and Elizabeth Olive Clothier, on 10 November 1915.[16] Because of the celebrity of her father, the World War I wedding was filmed, showing the bride leaving with Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree from the parental home and arriving at the church, and the bride and groom leaving the church.[17] The couple had five sons: Anthony (1916–1944); Michael Cory-Wright (1920–1997); David (1925–2009); Jonathan (1925–1945) and Mark (1930–2004).[3] Two of them, Captain Anthony John Julian Cory-Wright and Lieutenant Jonathan Francis Cory-Wright, were killed in action during World War II.[18] Anthony's son, Richard, inherited the Baronetcy.[3]
Tree was a member of the Ladies Stage Golfing Society, founded in 1921, and won the inaugural contest.[19] Through golf she met the future Labour Party leader Hugh Gaitskell, whose first love she became.[20]
She died at her home in Brancaster, Norfolk, at the age of eighty-three.[21]
A volume of correspondence by or to Tree's mother Maud, including by family members, was edited and published by Susana Cory-Wright (nee Prats), the wife of Tree's grandson, Anthony Jonathan Cory-Wright, titled Lady Tree: A Theatrical Life in Letters (2012).[22]