- Hall continued to be a favorite in comic and light operas around the country until 1890.
- One of the most popular turn-of-the-twentieth-century prima donnas in America, Hall left school at the age of 14 and began her career as a dancer in her native Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1875.
- By 1880 she was working for Edward E. Rice, who cast her in several of his musical productions, giving her, among others, the trouser role of the hero Gabriel in a revival that year of Evangeline.
- She played in over two dozen Broadway operettas.
- She had an alluring figure, and she maintained it until her death in 1919 while playing in David Belasco's The Gold Diggers.
- She was an American stage actress and singer.
- Her greatest success came when she played the title role in the first American production of Erminie (1886-1888). She performed Erminie a record-breaking 800 times while on Broadway and touring around the United States, which made her a household name.[.
- She appeared in revivals of Robin Hood and The Geisha in 1912 and 1913 and in Ziegfeld productions near the end of her career.
- Hall toured with her own companies from 1890 to 1896, and later entered vaudeville, reportedly earning as much as $600 a week by 1898.
- Although popular as an actress and singer, Hall was never given good notices by reviewers, who thought she was mediocre.
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