In 1886 and 1887, Saraiva was a member of various acting groups that rented small theatres to give shows, performed in private theatres and went on tours around the country. She then worked at the
Teatro do Príncipe Real, with considerable success. In 1900, she moved to the
Teatro D. Amélia to work with the Rosas & Brazão company, where she stayed until 1904. In that year she registered at the
Ginásio, where she stayed for a successful five years. In 1909 she returned to the
D. Amélia, where she stayed until 1916. From 1918, she performed in several theatres in the capital, namely the
D. Maria II National Theatre,
Teatro Politeama and
Teatro Avenida. In Porto, she performed at the
Teatro Sá da Bandeira and at the ''
Teatro Águia d'Ouro. She also toured the Portuguese Azores archipelago and Brazil, performing in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro. In total she performed in 71 different shows. Saraiva made one film, Lisboa, Crónica Anedótica'' (Lisbon, Anecdotal Chronicle-1930), directed by
José Leitão de Barros. In addition to Rosas & Brazão, she worked with various other theatre companies, including the Aura Abranches-Chaby Pinheiro company, the Cremilda-Chaby Pinheiro company, and the Chaby Pinheiro company. She married the actor and impresario Chaby Pinheiro on 17 March 1918, when she was 52 and they combined to form a new theatre company and to work together. He died on 6 December 1933. After being widowed for the second time she retired from public life, publishing in 1938 her husband's memoirs "Memories of Chaby", which he had been unable to complete during his lifetime. Saraiva died on 13 October 1947. She was buried in the family grave in the
Alto de São João Cemetery, in Lisbon. Her name lives on in a street in the
Sintra municipality, close to where she and Chaby Pinheiro had a house. == Gallery ==