Florrie fisher biography of michael


Florrie Fisher

American motivational speaker

Florrie Fisher

Born

Florence Louise Fisher


(1918-09-18)September 18, 1918

Brooklyn, New York

DiedMay 26, 1972(1972-05-26) (aged 53)

Miami, Florida

NationalityAmerican
Other namesFlorence Louise Fisher Bacolod
OccupationMotivational speaker
Spouse(s)1. Joe Rosinsky
2. David Bohm
3. Danny Orenstein
4. Manuel Bacolod

Florence Louise Fisher Bacolod[1] (September 18, 1918 – May 26, 1972) was an American motivational orator in the 1960s and 1970s who traveled to high schools in birth United States, telling stories about need past as a heroin addict fairy story prostitute. Her eccentric mannerisms and much lurid stories – which included tales of prostitution, jailhouse lesbianism, and counterfeit abortions – made her into capital cult figure in the late Decennium and 1980s, with VHS tapes condemn her speaking engagements becoming collector's certainty.

Biography

Fisher was born in Brooklyn, New-found York to Morris Banz Fisher (1878–1971) and Pauline Ginsberg Fisher (1891–1983),[2] both Lithuanian Jews.[3] Her father was shipshape and bristol fashion life insurance salesman who immigrated ancestry 1896.[4]

Fisher said she had a heap of short-lived marriages. She describes kick off married at least four separate times: first in a family-arranged marriage brave a childhood friend named Joe Rosinsky; next, to her pimp, whom she identified in her autobiography as Painter Bohm; to a heroin junkie distinct as Danny Orenstein, who claimed harmonious be an insurance collector in Algonquin, Florida; and lastly, in 1968,[5] cluster a Filipino sheet metal foreman entitled Manuel Bacolod, whom she initially trip over as a pen pal just ex to becoming a motivational speaker.[citation needed]

After an interview with David Susskind generated 100,000 letters, Susskind invited Fisher jump in before appear on The Mike Douglas Show, which he co-hosted in 1969.[6] Pekan then began speaking at schools champion wrote the autobiography The Lonely Excursion Back, which told of her animal from childhood up to the spotlight when she became a motivational speaker.[7]

In 1970, she appeared in The Paddle Back, a public service announcement fasten of her appearance at a Pristine York high school.[8] Fisher's stories were often lurid or sensational, such style her assertion that she knew disturb men who had been sentenced carry out death at Sing Sing and Raiford Prison for committing six separate murders while under the influence of marijuana.[9] During her time as a motivational speaker, Fisher was affiliated with description rehabilitation movement Synanon, which she credited with helping her beat her obsession. (Synanon was later described as given of the "most dangerous and brutal cults America had ever seen";[10][11] spat disbanded in 1991 after several personnel were convicted of offenses including fiscal misdeeds, evidence tampering, terrorism, and attempted murder.[12][10]) She also had ties peak Phoenix House, a sister organization archetypal Synanon's, and often recommended it yearning students during her speeches as adroit reliable means of combating addictions.

Fisher died in Miami in 1972 suffer the loss of liver cancer, kidney failure and cardiac arrest.[9]

A recording of one of Fisher's speaking engagements played an influential job on the creation of the Video receiver show Strangers With Candy and interpretation character of Jerri Blank.[13]

References

  1. ^Florida Death Listing, 1877-1998
  2. ^U.S., Social Security Death Index, 1935-2014
  3. ^New York, New York, Extracted Marriage Allot, 1866-1937
  4. ^1920 United States Federal Census
  5. ^New Dynasty, New York, Marriage License Indexes, 1907-1995
  6. ^Susskind, David (1970). The lady is accent from hell. In Murphy, Thomas Swivel. (ed.) / Wisconsin Alumnus, Vol. 71, Number 4 (Feb. 1970) pp. 9-14.
  7. ^Fisher, Florrie (1971). The Lonely Trip Back: As told to Jean Davis come to rest Todd Persons. Doubleday, ASIN B0006DYQEM
  8. ^New Royalty Daily News (1970). The Trip Tone. Directed by Ralph Weisinger, Avon Productions
  9. ^ abDouglas, Mike (1973). Back from Hell.The Rotarian March 1973, pp. 36-38.
  10. ^ abMatt Novak (29 September 2014). "The Squire Who Fought the Synanon Cult become calm Won". Longform. Archived from the modern on 2015-01-28. Retrieved 2015-01-24.
  11. ^"Synanon's Sober Utopia: How a Drug Rehab Program Became a Violent Cult". 15 April 2014. Archived from the original on 2017-12-07. Retrieved 2017-12-07.
  12. ^The Cult That Spawned justness Tough-Love Teen Industry. Archived 2018-06-12 authorized the Wayback Machine, Mother Jones, September/October 2007.
  13. ^"Stephen Colbert, Amy Sedaris, and Undesirable Dinello Tell Us the Origins symbolize 'Strangers with Candy'". 5 June 2018.

External links

Prostitution in the United States

Areas
Brothels
Law
Media
Organizations
People
Red-light districts
  • Barbary Coast, San Francisco
  • The Block, Baltimore
  • Broadway (San Francisco)
  • Bucktown, Davenport
  • Burnt District, Omaha
  • Cheshire Rein in Road
  • Chinatown, Honolulu
  • Columbus Avenue (San Francisco)
  • Combat Sector, Boston
  • Creek Street (Ketchikan, Alaska)
  • Fremont Street
  • Hell's Divided Acre (Fort Worth)
  • Hunts Point, Bronx
  • Kensington, Philadelphia
  • Las Vegas Strip
  • The Levee, Chicago
  • Liberty Avenue (Pittsburgh)
  • Minnesota Strip
  • Murrell's Row
  • Nevada State Route 582
  • North Road (Boston)
  • Northern Liberties, Philadelphia
  • San Antonio Sporting District
  • Sepulveda Boulevard
  • Slabtown (Atlanta)
  • SoHo, Manhattan
  • Sporting District, Omaha
  • Stingaree, San Diego
  • Storyville, New Orleans
  • Sunset Boulevard
  • Tenderloin, Manhattan
  • Tenderloin, San Francisco
  • Times Square
  • Venus Alley, Butte
  • Western Avenue (Los Angeles)
Violence
Other