Amy Busby
American actress
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Amy Busby (January 19, 1872 – July 13, 1957) was an American actress.
January 19, 1872
Amy Busby | |
|---|---|
| Born | Amy Busby January 19, 1872 Rochester, New York, U.S. |
| Died | July 13, 1957 (aged 85)[1] |
| Occupation | Actress |
| Spouses | Eugene Howard Lewis
(m. 1897; died 1907)Theodore Olynthna Douglas
(m. 1908; died 1920)John James Roy
(m. 1923; sep. 1938) |
| Children | 5 |
Early life
Amy Busby was born in Rochester, New York, the daughter of Thomas Mark Busby and Eliza Ann Bennett Busby.
Career
Amy Busby went to New York City as a teenager, hoping for a career on the stage. Described as "a vastly pretty woman",[2] she was a protegee of actress Helen Barry for a time, and later was engaged by Stuart Robson and William H. Crane for their companies.[3] She appeared in London Assurance, Victor Durand, The Pembertons, The Henrietta, She Stoops to Conquer, Is Marriage a Failure? The American Minister, On Probation, Brother John, For Money, The Senator, and Arms and the Man.[4] Busby's Broadway credits included The Fatal Card (1894), Madame (1896), The Law of the Land (1896), and Secret Service (1896).[5]
Theatrical producer William Berkeley Enos took the professional name "Busby Berkeley" from Amy Busby, who was his parents' friend.[6] Sam Insull met his wife, actress Gladys Wallis, at an 1897 dinner party hosted by Amy Busby and Eugene H. Lewis.[7]
In the late 1880s, Between The Acts cigarettes ran an advertising campaign featuring actors and actresses on coloured lithograph collectors cards. Amy Busby was featured on one in a series issued from 1880 - 1892.[8]
Personal life
Amy Busby was rumoured to be engaged to actor William Gillette, but they did not wed.[9] She married several times. In 1892[10] she married English actor Aubrey Boucicault;[11] they divorced in 1893.[12] Her next marriage was to lawyer Eugene Howard Lewis, in 1897;[13] they had three daughters (Amy, Rosamund, and Eugenia) before his death in 1907.[14] She married again in 1908, to mining engineer Theodore Olynthna Douglas;[15] they had two daughters (Theodora and Ruth) before he died in 1920.[16] She was married a final time in 1923, to a man named John James Roy; they separated by 1938. Late in life, she enjoyed baseball as a fan of the Brooklyn Dodgers.[1] Amy Busby died in 1957, aged 85 years, in East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania.[17][18]