Name Fritzi Scheff Movies Pretty Mrs. Smith | Spouse John Fox, Jr. (m. 1908) Role Actress | |
Occupation Stage, film, television actress Parents Dr. Gottfried Scheff, Anna Yeager People also search for John Fox, Jr., George Anderson, Hobart Bosworth |
Fritzi scheff kiss me again 1936
Fritzi Scheff (August 30, 1879 – April 8, 1954) was an American actress and vocalist.
Contents
- Fritzi scheff kiss me again 1936
- Fritzi Scheff She introduced Victor Herberts Kiss me Again
- Biography
- Movies and television
- Marriages
- Filmography
- References
Fritzi Scheff. She introduced Victor Herbert's "Kiss me Again"
Biography
Born Friederike Scheff in Vienna to Dr. Gottfried Scheff and Anna Yeager, she studied at the Hoch Conservatory in Frankfurt and made her début in Munich in the title röle of Martha (1898).
In 1901 she first appeared at the Metropolitan Opera House, New York, singing rôles in La Bohème, Die Meistersinger, Die Walküre, and Don Giovanni. She sang in the Victor Herbert operetta Babette at Washington, D.C. and New York (1903).
Toward the end of the following year's season Scheff became ill and was replaced by her understudy Ida Hawley to close out the remaining performances of Babette. Scheff had immense success as Fifi in Mlle. Modiste (1905–1908, 1913) and appeared also in The Prima Donna (1908), The Mikado (1910), The Duchess (1911), and The Love Wager (1912). From 1913-18, she appeared principally in vaudeville, returning in the latter year to the musical opera stage in Glorianna.
Movies and television
In 1915 Scheff appeared in her first film, Pretty Mrs. Smith, based on a Broadway play she starred in. It was produced and directed by Hobart Bosworth. She made no other silent pictures. In the late 40s and early 50s Scheff ventured into sound movies and television. She appeared in night clubs and on talk shows such as Ralph Edwards' This is Your Life shortly before her death.
Marriages
She married, first, Baron Fritz von Bardeleben a Prussian nobleman, then in 1908 John Fox, Jr. author of The Trail of the Lonesome Pine, and, in 1913, George Anderson, an actor. The unions were all childless.