Katherine Witchie Riggs (March 4, 1884 – April 19, 1967)[1] was an American dancer, singer, actress, writer, and vaudeville performer.
Early life and education
Witchie was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota,[2] the daughter of William Ferdinand Witchie and Mary Agnes Conroy Witchie.[3][4]
Career
Witchie was a dancer in a duet act with her husband, Ralph Riggs;[5] she also sang and acted on the stage.[4][6] One of her earliest roles was as a Floradora girl in a company in Iowa.[7] Her Broadway credits included appearances in The Enchantress (1911–1912),[8]All Aboard (1913), The Princess Pat (1915–1916, an operetta by Victor Herbert),[9]The Passing Show of 1919 (1919–1920), Cinders (1923),[10]The Grab Bag (1924–1925),[11][12]Nic Nax of 1926 (1926),[13]Oh, Ernest! (1927), Louisiana Purchase (1941), and Oklahoma! (1943).[14] She and her husband also performed as Riggs and Witchie on vaudeville bills[15][16] and on the London stage.[17][18] "This act should be a good closer in the family houses," noted a Billboard report in 1928.[19]
Witchie wrote two one-act musical plays, The Garden[20] and The Gipsy, and a screenplay, The Royal Waltz.[21] In 1917 she danced on the radiator cap of a Hupmobile, as a publicity stunt.[22]
Personal life
Witchie married actor and dancer Ralph Riggs in 1910.[23] Her husband died in 1951,[24] and she died in 1967, at the age of 83, at a nursing home in Babylon, New York.[14]
References
^Her 1884 date of birth appears in her father's naturalization application, via Ancestry. Like many performers, she often gave a younger age, and was described as 80, not 83, in her 1967 New York Times obituary.
^"The Lounger in the Lobby". The Minneapolis Journal. 1916-11-30. p. 8. Retrieved 2024-08-17 – via Newspapers.com.
^"Mrs. William Witchie". The Minneapolis Star. 1934-10-12. p. 22. Retrieved 2024-08-17 – via Newspapers.com.