Suratt began her career as an actress on the Chicago stage. Around 1900, she began appearing in
vaudeville. She soon paired with performer
Billy Gould (whom she later married) and the two created a successful act that included a so-called
Apache dance performed by Suratt. In 1906, she made her Broadway debut in the musical
The Belle of Mayfair, followed by a role in
Hip! Hip! Hooray! the following year. By 1908, Suratt and Gould had parted ways and Suratt began a successful solo act which featured her singing and dancing while wearing glamorous costumes and gowns. Suratt's success in vaudeville continued and she began billing herself as "Vaudeville's Greatest Star" and "The Biggest Drawing Card in New York". In 1910, she appeared in the show
The Girl with the Whooping Cough. New York City mayor
William Jay Gaynor claimed that the show was "salacious" and had it shut down because of its sexually suggestive themes. In December 1910, she teamed up with Fletcher Norton (who became her second husband) in a play titled
Bouffe Variety. She became noted for appearing in playlets where she played a variety of roles in comedies and melodramas. In 1915, Suratt signed with
Fox. Like fellow Fox contract players
Theda Bara and
Virginia Pearson, Suratt was marketed as a
vamp and was cast as seductive and exotic characters. Suratt made her film debut in
The Soul of Broadway in 1915. She reportedly wore more than 150 gowns in the film which cost $25,000 each. The same year, she made
The Immigrant followed by
The Straight Way (1916),
Jealousy (1916),
The Victim (1916),
The New York Peacock (1916), and
She (1917). She performed in a total of 11 silent films during her career, all of which are now considered lost.
Decline By 1920, Suratt's career had begun to wane as vaudeville fell out of a favor with audiences, as did the craze for the vamp image. In 1928, Suratt and scholar
Mirza Ahmad Sohrab sued
Cecil B. DeMille for stealing the scenario for
The King of Kings from them. The case went to trial in February 1930 but eventually was settled without publicity. Suratt, who had left films in 1917, appeared to be unofficially blacklisted after the suit. Suratt never revived her career on the stage or in films. ==Personal life==