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  1. Ellen Ternan. In 1857 Dickens met the woman who was to be his companion until his death, Ellen Ternan. Ellen, her mother and her sister were hired to act in a benefit presentation of The Frozen Deep. The event was sponsored by Dickens who also co-starred in the event.

  2. Contents 1Birth and family life 2Theatre 3Association with Charles Dickens 4Later life and marriage 5Speculation and research 6Portrayal in theatre and television 7Portrayal in film 8References British actress (1839–1914)Ellen TernanTernan at age 19 in 1858BornEllen Lawless Ternan(1839-03-03)3 March 1839Rochester, Kent,...

  3. 17. Dez. 2012 · As it happens, yes, because the exact nature of his secret relationship with a young actress, Ellen Ternan, remains almost entirely opaque, despite being the object of literary and biographical ...

  4. This volume is a biography of Ellen "Nelly" Ternan, who was for the last thirteen years of Charles Dickens's life, was his secret obsession and intimate companion. She was an actress but within a few years of meeting Dickens she left the stage and disappeared from public view. Her disappearance was considered essential for the protection of Dickens's good name with a public that idolized him ...

  5. Ellen Ternan was born on the 3rd of March, 1839. She was popular for being a Stage Actress. English actress most famous for being the mistress of renowned author Charles Dickens. She is thought by scholars to have been the inspiration behind many of Dickens’ most memorable female characters, including Estella in Great Expectations and Lucie ...

  6. A portrait of Ellen Ternan as a young woman. Charles Dickens Museum Collection. This little note, brimming with affection and care, gave me a greater appreciation for Dickens’ relationship with Ellen, as something more substantial than the OK! scandal I had initially expected. In fact, the relationship appears to have been much more than a ...

  7. RM FW5M86 – the grave in Highland Rd. Cemetery, Southsea, Portsmouth, of Ellen (Nelly) Ternan, the love of novelist Charles Dickens from 1857 onwards. After his death in 1870 she married George Wharton Robinson, and they moved to Portsmouth after their school had failed in Margate. They share this grave.