
A struggling actress at the time, playing Gloria Stivic on ‘All in the Family’ made her a star
All in the Family may have made its debut more than 50 years ago, but the impact of the show was transformative on TV and still being felt today. It brought Archie and Edith Bunker (Carroll O’Connor and Jean Stapleton), along with their daughter Gloria (Sally Struthers) and son-in-law Mike Stivic (Rob Reiner) to life in such a way that they became some of the most real characters ever presented on a television sitcom.
For Sally Struthers, who was born on July 28, 1947 in Portland, Oregon, it was an opportunity for steady work and, just as importantly, for the world to get to know her as a performer. But her journey there was not an easy one, as you’ll discover in the facts about the actress — who won two Emmy Awards for her portrayal — below.“Sally Struthers of Portland, Oregon, didn’t have what you’d call a picture book childhood,” offered The Orlando Sentinel in August 1971. “When she was in the third grade, her parents separated, they didn’t get a divorce until she was 17. That’s when her father, a doctor, married his nurse. She loved her father, but he didn’t come around very often. So she would make believe she was sick, so he would come over as family doctor. She thinks part of her acting skill dates from that period, when she got to be pretty good at feigning illness.”Filling in more of her background was a 1971 edition of The Windsor Star, which wrote, “When Sally Struthers was a youngster, she was determined to follow in her father’s footsteps and become a doctor. As she reached her late teens, she realized that she wasn’t the type for cutting and poking humans, so she began to take every art class available at her Portland, Oregon high school. She decided to become a commercial artist. Sally won an art scholarship for college, but once again she still wasn’t sure about making art her life’s work.”
It was at that point that she decided to apply to the famed Pasadena Playhouse College of Theatre Arts and was accepted, being awarded a scholarship that kept her in attendance for two years. “There,” stated The Oregon Daily Journal in 1971, “she played everything from a 10-year-old child to a 90-year-old woman. ‘The training was very valuable, especially when you read for a part. The course was still tough, but we learned makeup, fencing, dancing, dialects, play read, set design … everything.’”