Nell St. John Montague (27 June 1875 – 23 August 1944) was the pen name of a British actress, writer, socialite and " clairvoyante", born Eleanor Lucie-Smith in India.
Eleanor Lilian Helene Lucie-Smith was born in Jabalpur, India, to an English father and a Scottish mother. Her father, Major-General Charles Bean Lucie-Smith, was stationed there with the British Army. [1]
Montague wrote The Irish Lead (1916), a play she also directed and acted in, to raise funds for Irish prisoners-of-war. [2] She also starred in An Interrupted Divorce in London, and her own short play, The Barrier. In 1922 she wrote and appeared in a one-act farce, Room 7, on the London stage. [3] She appeared in two silent films, The Glorious Adventure (1922) [4] and A Gipsy Cavalier (1923). [5] She wrote the anti-vivisection short story "The Hallmark of Cain", which was adapted into the short film All Living Things (1939). [6] The film was remade in 1955. [7]
Montague called herself a "clairvoyante", and her fortune telling was popular in society circles. [8] [9] [10] She appeared on very early British television, in 1932, reading palms, and "her performance evoked a volume of mail at Portland Place that would have been gratifying to the producer of a popular revue", according to one report. [11] She was invited to the wedding of Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark in 1934, and brought a crystal ball as a gift. [12] She also tried to use her visions to solve crimes. [13] She kept a pet monkey, and posed with the monkey for portraits, saying it brought good luck. [8] She wrote about her abilities and her predictions in her memoir, Revelations of a Society Clairvoyante (1926), [1] and in The Red Fortune Book (1924). She also wrote a novel, The Poison Trail (1930). [14]
Montague married Irish landowner and judge Henry Standish-Barry (1873-1945) in 1899. [15] They had three children, Charles (1900-1918), Marcella (Mercy), and Margaret. Her son died in World War I. She died in 1944, in London, aged 69 years, in a bombing during World War II. It was widely publicized that she predicted the violent circumstances of her death, when she said "I saw a fiery streak. Then a red mist spread over everything." [13] Her gravesite is in Bishopstone, East Sussex. Her name appears on a memorial plaque commemorating the war dead in Bishopstone. [2]