Effie Germon
Mary Euphemia "Effie" Germon was an American stage actress of the late 19th century from Augusta, Georgia, a descendant of the Germons of Baltimore who were an old theatrical family. She excelled as a soubrette.
Early life
One of six siblings born to actors Greenberry Carr "Greene" Germon and Jane Germon, her father was the first to perform the role of Uncle Tom at the Troy Museum in the George Aiken adaptation of Uncle Tom's Cabin produced by George C. Howard. Effie Germon had two brothers. Her mother, Jane, a cousin of actor Joe Jefferson, began her career at age 8 and continued for 50 years.Effie Germon's theatrical debut was made at the Holliday Street Theatre in Baltimore, Maryland, during the 1857–58 season. She played "Sally Scraggs" in Sketches in India. Germon acted with both the Baltimore and Philadelphia stock companies.
Marriage, return to the stage
She left the theater to marry, at a very early age, violinist Carlo Patti, whom she married at Providence, Rhode Island. Germon returned to prominence at the Chestnut Street Theatre during the theatrical season of 1863–64. She made her first appearance on the New York City stage which opened in 1869 under the management of John Brougham. She appeared with John Gibbs Gilbert at Wallack's Theatre in a production of Brother Sam in December 1872.At the same venue she acted with Richard Mansfield in Prince Karl, the original production of Little Lord Fauntleroy. She paired with Francis Wilson in Erminie. During the 1906–07 season, she performed on the road in Sunday. After divorcing Patti, she remarried to comedian Nelse Seymour.