Background
Newton was from a theatrical family, her father having been a comedian in a number of English theaters.
Newton was from a theatrical family, her father having been a comedian in a number of English theaters.
She was personally attractive, intelligent, and vivacious. Her grandfather was a theater manager. She began to act as a child and played juvenile parts in prominent theaters in London, Manchester, Liverpool, and Edinburgh.
Newton married a young actor, Frederick Loyd, before she was twenty years old.
The couple traveled and performed popular musical and variety shows. Soon after she came to America under the management of J.H. Selwyn.
She made her New York City debut at the Olympic Theater on 31 October 1864, as Helen in Marguerite’s Colors. She played there with some success before returning to England for about a year.
Newton was with the company of John Brougham when the Fifth Avenue Theater opened in 1869.
She became a favorite of the New York public. She left the Fifth Avenue Theater and said goodbye to America at New York’s French Theater. A decline in her health kept Newton from leaving America and she stayed even though her career was less successful.
She traveled throughout the country, appearing in variety theaters for about five or six years.
Eliza Newton died at Bellevue Hospital in New York in February 1882. She came to Bellevue the previous January from her residence at 131 East Twenty-Seventh Street.
Her death was due to cirrhosis of the liver. Newton was around forty-five years old.
She was survived by two sons, Arthur and Charles.
The former resided in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and the latter lived with her in New New York Minnie Cummings, manager of the New Haven, Connecticut opera house, offered proceeds from a benefit entertainment at her theater to be used to cover expenses for Newton’s burial.