Anne Sutherland (actress)

Anne Sutherland
Anne Sutherland as a young player, 1880s
Born Anne Bland Sutherland
March 1, 1867
Washington, D. C.
Died June 22, 1942
Brentwood, New York Long Island
Other names Annie Sutherland[1]
Ann Sutherland
Anne B. Sutherland[2]
Occupation actress
Years active 1880s-1932
Spouse(s) Richard Field Carroll[3][4][5](m.1886 div.1891; remarried a second time in 1892)[6]
Charles Harding(m.1907)
Children Anne Carroll(died as a teen)
advertisement for God's Crucible (1921), aka The Foreigner, a film in which Anne Sutherland appeared(3rd from bottom, right column).

Anne Sutherland (March 1, 1867- June 22, 1942) was an American stage and screen actress who began acting in the 1880s. She began as a juvenile playing in a HMS Pinafore production. She appeared on stage in the 1880s-1890s with many greats of the period such as Henry E. Dixey in "Adonis"(1883), Lydia Thompson in "Oxygen"(1886), Nat C. Goodwin in "The Nominee"(1891), Georgia Cayvan in "The City of Pleasure"(1896), Joseph Jefferson in "Rip Van Winkle" and Mrs. Leslie Carter in "Zaza"(1899). One of her outstanding later plays was Craig's Wife (1925) which costarred Chrystal Herne.[7]

She was variously known as Annie Sutherland, Ann B. Sutherland and Anne Sutherland at different points in her career.

Family

She was married to actor/singer Richard Field Carroll(1865-1925), aka Richard F. Carroll[8][9], and had a daughter Anne Carroll who died in her teens. She was later married to Charles Harding.[10]

Selected filmography

References

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