Grey, Ellen Actor. Ellen Grey made her professional acting debut on May 29, 1854 when she played Bianca in Fazio (Odell VI: 308). Before this performance, Grey may have worked as an amateur actress with the Brooklyn Dramatic Association. She performed a leading role in a version of Byron’s Sardanopolis at the Bowery in 1854. After a three year absence, she returned to the Bowery in 1857 to appear in Australia, or, the Fate of a Bushranger. Grey was also a member of the cast of Brougham’s "hippodramatic spectacle" on May 11, 1857, which was Brougham’s last show at the Bowery before he left (Odell VI:554). Her return to the theater in the 1864-1865 season is one of the few available biographical details about Grey’s later career (Odell VII: 663). It is possible that Ellen Grey knew Walt Whitman in Brooklyn before she came to New York as an actress. She has often been cited as the likely author of the mysterious "Ellen Eyre" letter Whitman received at Pfaff’s (E. Miller, “Walt Whitman” 67). Other historians have indicated that Grey may have had a love affair with Whitman. Whitman kept a picture of her in his home at Camden until his death (D. Reynolds 375). References & Biographical Resources Miller, Edwin Haviland. "Walt Whitman and Ellen Eyre." American Literature. 1961. 64-68. An actress and a possible writer of the "Ellen Eyre" letter.Grey may have been from Brooklyn and known Whitman before becoming an actress.Miller speculates that she met Whitman at Pfaff's at some point after her marriage and the "Ellen Eyre" letter was a playful invitation to visit her at her home. [pages:67] Odell, George Clinton. Annals of the New York Stage: Volume VI (1850-1857). New York: Columbia University Press, 1931. [pages:274, 308, 323, 340, 366, 552, 554,555] Odell, George Clinton. Annals of the New York Stage: Volume VII (1857-1865). New York: Columbia University Press, 1931. [pages:224,619,663] Reynolds, David S. Walt Whitman's America: A Cultural Biography. New York: Knopf, 1995. 671 p. Actress who may have had a love affair with Whitman; Whitman kept a picture of her until his death (375). [pages:375]