Sugimachi, a
lyric soprano, sang on radio programs in Seattle and Los Angeles in the 1920s, and with the Seattle Civic Opera Company. "Sugimachi has a brilliant voice of marvelous range and the operatic airs bring out the purity and quality of her voice in a remarkable manner, more so perhaps over radio than in any other way," reported a
Los Angeles Times writer in 1928. including a starring role in
Madama Butterfly in Milan. She gave a concert in Vancouver in 1930, sang at a Los Angeles reception for
Prince and
Princess Takematsu in 1931, and starred again as Madame Butterfly in a 1932 Los Angeles and San Francisco productions of the Puccini opera. In 1933 she starred in
Sakura, an "opera-pageant" written by her husband, Yaemitsu Sugimachi, and composer Claude Lapham, in its premiere at the
Hollywood Bowl. In 1934, she sang at a concert to benefit a Japanese church youth program in Pasadena. She also sang in a production of
Sakura in
Portland, Oregon, in 1936. Also in 1936, she was in talks to appear in a film about her own career. She made recordings in Japan in the 1930s. In 1937, she was signed to sing the role of Madame Butterfly at New York's
Hippodrome Theatre. ==Personal life==