Sarah Gorby (Gorbach) was born in 1900 in Kishinev in Bessarabia Governorate, Russian Empire (today Chișinău, Moldova). Her parents, Zeylik Khaimovich Gorbach (originally from Stara Ushytsia) and his wife Beyla Kipelman, registered their marriage in Kishinev in 1898. During her childhood, the Gorby house was largely Yiddish-speaking.[1] Gorby left Kishinev at age 17 to study music in Iași, Romania, where she married Joseph Goldstein, a publisher who spoke both Romanian and Yiddish.[2]
Due to this cosmopolitan background, in her life she spoke many languages fluently. Her main languages were Yiddish and Russian, and she also spoke French, Romanian, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, and English well.[2] She moved to Rome and then to Paris in the 1920s, but returned to Iași every summer until the outbreak of World War II to visit her husband.[1] She also toured South America regularly during the 1930s.[2] For a time in the 1930s she performed with her husband's last name (Sarah Goldstein) before switching to the stage name Sarah Gorby.[3]
She died in 1980 in Paris.