Vera Olcott

[2] In 1908 she wore an abbreviated tarletan skirt in her rendition of the Salome dance at Huber's 14th Street (Manhattan) Museum.

Following her selection, Olcott signed a contract which catapulted her from a chorus girl to one of the most well paid stars of the French stage.

[4] In March 1923 she appeared at the Palace Theatre, London with Harry Pilcer in Toutes les Femmes (All The Ladies).

[6] In August 1923 she was aboard the President Harding, passenger ship of the United States Lines, when it docked in Hoboken, New Jersey.

[7] Olcott was a passenger on the RMS Berengaria which departed New York City destined for Cherbourg, France and Southampton, England, in December 1923.

[10] Olcott became the first wife of Count Alexis Constantinovitch Zarnekau, a Russian nobleman[11] and cousin of Czar Nicholas II,[2] whom she secretly wedded.