Sallie Fisher | |
---|---|
Born | Wyoming Territory, U.S. | August 10, 1880
Died | June 8, 1950 | (aged 69)
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1902-1921 |
Spouse | Arthur Houghton (m. 1913) |
Sallie Fisher (August 10, 1880 – June 8, 1950) was an American stage and vaudeville actress who appeared in the 1916 silent The Little Shepherd of Bargain Row.[1]
Fisher "was born on a ranch in Wyoming" but moved with her family to Salt Lake City "when a very little girl."[2] She was educated by tutors.[3] (In a 1909 interview, Fisher told a reporter that she was born in Salt Lake City.)[4]
Fisher appeared in musical comedy, musical farce, fantasy, operetta, revue and revivals. She debuted in Salt Lake City with the Salt Lake Opera Company.[5] In Chicago, "she rose from the chorus of a comic opera company to the ranks of the truly elect, otherwise known as prima donna."[6] She portrayed Flora in the 1902 Broadway musical The Billionaire.[7]
In 1907, an article in The Washington Post described Fisher as having been "for several seasons a prima donna in the Dillingham forces."[8] She appeared with George M. Cohan in 45 Minutes from Broadway[2] and with John Barrymore in Stubborn Cinderella.[9]
A St. Louis Post-Dispatch review of the production of The Goddess of Liberty in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1910 described Fisher's work as follows: "Sallie Fisher is most of the show and she is worth while [sic]. She sings well, dances divinely and is as good to look at as one could wish."[10]
Fisher was married to Arthur Houghton for 37 years.[11] Houghton was a theatrical manager. After Fisher married him, she "retired at the peak of her career."[12]
Fisher died of a heart attack, aged 69, at her home in Twentynine Palms, California, on June 8, 1950.[13][11]