Ethel Maude Millett (8 November 1867 – 16 February 1920) was a British actress of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, known for her roles in drawing room comedies. She created roles in plays by Arthur Wing Pinero, Oscar Wilde and J. M. Barrie among others.
Her services were always in great demand for comedy of this drawing-room kind, and at one time in her career there was no actress who was more frequently photographed—in fact, it is said that no undergraduate's room was complete without her picture.[2]
In February 1897 Millett married Henry Lancelot Tennant, an officer in the Royal Artillery, and temporarily retired from the stage.[1][2] They had one child, a son, who followed his father into the army.[2] She returned to the stage in 1899 for a revival of Sweet Lavender at Terry's Theatre,[7] and appeared in West End productions from time to time in the early years of the 20th century.[8] One of her last appearances on the stage was in Gerald du Maurier's production of Sir James Barrie's fantasy Dear Brutus at Wyndham's Theatre, in 1917.[2]
Millett died in a nursing home in Teignmouth, Devon, aged 52, on 16 February 1920.[2] Her husband outlived her.[1]