profile

    Gail Fisher

    1935-08-18 (88 years old) in Orange, New Jersey, USA

    Gail Fisher (August 18, 1935 – December 2, 2000) was an American actress who was one of the first African American women to play substantive roles in American television. She was best known for playing the role of secretary "Peggy Fair" on the television detective series Mannix from 1968 through 1975, a role for which she won two Golden Globe Awards and an Emmy Award. The youngest of five children, Fisher was born in Orange, New Jersey. Her father died when she was two years old and she was raised by her mother, Ona Fisher, living in poverty in the Potter's Crossing neighborhood of Edison, New Jersey. She graduated from Metuchen High School in Metuchen, New Jersey. During her teenage years she was a cheerleader and entered several beauty contests, winning the titles of Miss Transit, Miss Black New Jersey, and Miss Press Photographer. In a contest sponsored by Coca-Cola, Fisher won the opportunity to spend two years studying acting at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts. As a student of acting in New York City, she worked with Lee Strasberg and became a member of the Repertory Theater at Lincoln Center, where she worked with Elia Kazan and Herbert Blau. As a young woman, she also worked as a model. Fisher made her first television appearance in 1960 at age 25, appearing in the syndicated program Play of the Week. Also during the early 1960s, she appeared in a television commercial for All laundry detergent, which she said made her "the first black female -- no, make that black, period -- to make a national TV commercial, on camera, with lines." In 1965 Herbert Blau cast her in a theatrical production of Danton's Death. She first appeared in Mannix during the second season, when Mannix left the detective firm Intertect and set up shop as a private investigator. In 1968, she made guest appearances on the TV series My Three Sons, Love, American Style, and Room 222. In 1970, her work on Mannix was honored when she received the Emmy Award for outstanding performance by an actress in a dramatic supporting role. In winning the Emmy, she beat out Susan Saint James in The Name of the Game and Barbara Anderson in Ironside becoming the first African-American to win an Emmy Award. After Mannix was canceled in 1975 she rarely appeared on television. She guest-starred in a 1980 episode of The White Shadow. Description above from the Wikipedia article Gail Fisher, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

    Movies

    poster
    Donor
    53.33 %|Dec 9, 1990
    Thriller, TV Movie
    poster
    Mankillers
    46 %|Nov 3, 1987
    Action
    poster
    Every Man Needs One
    10 %|Dec 13, 1972
    Comedy, Romance, TV Movie
    actor
    The New Girl
    0 %|Jan 1, 1960

    Series

    poster
    Knight Rider
    75.34 %|Sep 26, 1982
    Action & Adventure, Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy, Crime
    poster
    Hotel
    66 %|Aug 21, 1982
    Drama
    poster
    Love, American Style
    58 %|Sep 29, 1969
    Comedy
    poster
    Medical Center
    61 %|Sep 24, 1969
    Drama
    poster
    Room 222
    55.940000000000005 %|Sep 11, 1969
    Comedy, Drama
    poster
    Mannix
    65.83 %|Sep 16, 1967
    Action & Adventure, Crime, Mystery, Drama
    poster
    He & She
    47 %|Sep 6, 1967
    Comedy
    poster
    My Three Sons
    63.71000000000001 %|Sep 29, 1960
    Comedy, Family
    poster
    Play of the Week
    0 %|Oct 12, 1959
    Comedy, Drama, Sci-Fi & Fantasy