1935 - 2000
By: Teri Graham | Date Added:
Gail Fisher was an American actress and one of the first black women to play substantive roles in American television. She was best known for playing the role of Peggy Fair on the tv series Mannix from 1968 through 1975, a role for which she won two Golden Globe Awards and an Emmy Award. She was the first African American woman to win those prestigious awards. She also won an NAACP Image Award in 1969. In addition to her acting career, Fisher was a successful jazz lyricist. The youngest of five children, Fisher was born on August 18, 1935, in Orange, New Jersey. Her father, a carpenter, died when Fisher was two years old. Fisher’s mother, Ona Fisher, supported her children by operating a hair styling business out of their house in Edison Township, New Jersey. Fisher was a cheerleader at Metuchen High School, where she got a leading role in the school’s senior play. As a teenager Fisher started entering and winning beauty contests, including Miss Black New Jersey. Fisher was crowned Miss Essex County Fair and subsequently became the first black semifinalist in the New Jersey State Fair beauty contest. With the encouragement of Moss Kendrix, an African American public relations pioneer and press agent for Coca Cola, Fisher entered and won a Coca Cola contest that gave her a two-year scholarship to the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York. Fisher’s first television role was in 1959, on the program Play of the Week. In 1962 Fisher became the first African American accepted to New York’s Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts Repertory Theater. Fisher studied with the famed acting coach Lee Strasberg and worked with directors Elia Kazan and Herbert Blau. In 1965 Blau cast Fisher in Danton’s Death. She made guest appearances on other television series such as The Defenders and The Nurses, and on the daytime drama, The Doctors. Fisher also appeared in Lorraine Hansberry’s classic play, Raisin in the Sun, and was an understudy to Ruby Dee in the play Purlie Victorious. In 1970, for her work in Mannix, Fisher became the first African American woman to win an Emmy Award for an Outstanding Performance by an Actress in a Supporting Role in Drama. In 1971 Fisher became the first African American woman to win a Golden Globe, and in 1973 Fisher won her second Golden Globe. Fisher rarely appeared on television after Mannix ended in 1975. Her health started to deteriorate, and she was addicted to drugs. Fisher died of renal failure in a hospital in Los Angeles, California on December 2, 2000. She was 65.
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