Bonnie Maginn
Bonnie Maginn, also known as Bonnie Magin, was an American stage actress, model, singer and dancer, and vaudeville performer.
Early life
Bonnie Magin was born in Chicago, the daughter of John R. Magin and Margaret Anna Sullivan Magin.Career
Maginn was an artists' model, "said to be the most pictured young woman of her age in America" in 1901, and a vaudeville performer, usually in soubrette roles, in the Weber & Fields shows in New York. In 1901 she shared the bill with David Warfield, Fay Templeton, DeWolf Hopper and Lillian Russell in Fiddle-Dee-Dee at the Chicago Opera House. She was a featured dancer in Klaw and Erlanger's ill-fated production of Mr. Blue Beard, when it opened at Chicago's Iroquois Theatre in 1903. She and the rest of the cast survived the massive and fatal theatre fire during the show's run.In 1904, she appeared in Frank Daniels' The Office Boy; "she sings after the manner of pretty soubrettes," reported one reviewer, "whose cuteness covers a multitude of deficiencies." In the 1904-1905 season, she was cast in Joe Weber's Higgledy-Piggledy and The College Widower. and in 1906, she toured with Weber's company, performing with Marie Dressler and Flora Zabelle, among others. She retired from the stage before 1910.
Maginn also owned a large cattle ranch in Montana, and was believed to be a multi-millionaire in 1905. In 1906, she was living in New York City, but was identified as the owner of an automobile seen speeding over the legal Sunday limit of 10 miles per hour in Tonawanda, New York.