Armida started performing at a young age, when her family moved from Mexico to the United States, her father opened the first movie theater in
Douglas, Arizona. She and her sisters would sing and dance during intermission and her father would perform an illusionist act. Armida was discovered in the old Hidalgo theater in the Plaza in
Los Angeles. Armida was appearing in a small, home-manufactured
vaudeville skit, along with her sister Delores. A talent scout for a coastal vaudeville circuit was in the audience and offered her a chance to perform on a "four-a-day" vaudeville bill (meaning four shows a day). Armida graduated to various
Broadway productions after being discovered by
Gus Edwards, stage and screen actor, songwriter, and dance instructor. She participated in as many as twenty-four vaudeville numbers a day while in New York. Edwards brought her back to Hollywood with him and featured her in an
MGM two-color
Technicolor movie short, ''Gus Edwards' International Colortone Revue'' (1929). Gus once said of Armida, that she possessed "the emotional temperament of an actress capable of surmounting the most difficult of histrionic roles". ==Film career==