Sheri and I went to Aunt Carol’s memorial Saturday. There was a lot about Aunt Carol I didn’t know. She taught at San Jose State in the theater department for 27 years. There is a scholarship and a theatrical award there in her name. She choreographed the very first Temple pageant, and four altogether. She was apparently very good at comedic dance. She was a modern dance instructor. Her specialty was comedic dance. I guess she had a great influence on lots of people. Uncle Von talked about how he met Carol. It was at church. He was attending with a former missionary companion. He saw her from behind, and noticed her neck. Aunt Carol had two boys from a previous marriage. Von went right up and sat by her, and after the meeting told her he would like to see her again. Of course Aunt Carol was busy with raising two boys and work and was hesitant, but Von made her dinner. He made stuffed pork chops. He had been to France on his mission and could cook French food. He was already working as an architect.
Aunt Carol was also very involved in genealogy work. She found the original Fischer who immigrated to America. After retirement she took up rug making winning a presitigious competition for a hook-rug she made called "Sun Moon and Stars."
This is her obituary: http://www.myers-mortuary.com/obituary/Carol-Anne-Fisher-Smith-Haws/Farr-West-UT/1332733
Carol
Anne Fisher Smith Haws, dancer, director, and choreographer, died in a
nursing facility in Farr West, Utah on January 14, 2014, at the age of
80. She was born in Maricopa, California on January 2, 1934, to Frank
Truman Fisher and Nellie Rex Smith Fisher, the third of five children.
She moved with her family from Maricopa to Santa Maria, then briefly to
Alhambra, then to Altadena, where she lived until her first marriage.
She was educated at Pasadena City College, Brigham Young University, the
University of Utah, and UCLA, where she earned her master's degree in
dance. She married Virgil Bushman Smith in 1953; they had two sons and
were later divorced. She married Ervin Lavon (Von) Haws in 1961; they
had five more children. They were later divorced but subsequently
remarried and remained together until her death.
Carol's life, passion and profession was dance from the time she was ten years old until her premature retirement at 55, forced on her by spine surgery. She studied with William Christensen at the University of Utah and with Evelyn LeMone at the LeMone Studio in Pasadena, California. She taught for 27 years in the dance department at San Jose State University, where the Carol Anne Haws Award for excellence in performance is still given annually, along with the Carol Anne Haws Scholarship in the department of theater arts. She directed and choreographed a great many shows at the university, including "West Side Story" and "Carousel." She was active in community theater as well, directing "1776," "The Boyfriend," and "Pirates of Penzance" among other musicals and operettas, and directed performances of the Prune Hollow Choral Society, a company of kids ages 14 to 18 who sang and danced their way throughout the Bay Area and toured Romania, Mexico, Hawaii and other places. She choreographed the children of the Tabard Theatre Company in their performance of "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory." She also directed and choreographed hundreds of dance recitals before, during, and after her career at San Jose State. She directed/choreographed the LDS Church's Oakland Temple Pageant four times, beginning with the very first one that marked the opening of the temple.
Carol also channeled her energies into genealogy, finding herself fascinated by the implied stories contained in parish records, birth and death dates, marriages, the way certain names vanish from one village and turn up in another. "Everybody has one story to tell," she liked to say, and she followed the stories she found in the documents and microfilms with eagerness and sympathy. She was especially pleased to locate our immigrant Fisher (then spelled Fischer) ancestor in a small town in Germany and to learn from the local parish clerk that the ancestor was, according to the record, "Much given to stealing."
She found an outlet for her visual artistry in rug-making, winning first prize in a rug-hooking competition in Carmel, California for a rug called "Sun, Moon, and Stars."
She was a dedicated member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She is survived by her husband Von, and her children, Matthew (Debora), Jeffery (Jan), Gretchen Myers (Douglas), Aaron, Rachel Helwig (Keith), Forrest (Cheryl), Nellie Gratton (Jeff), numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; a sister, Sylvia Bevan (James), and a brother, Franklin (Rosemary Beless). She was preceded in death by her parents, a sister, Mary Lou, and a brother, Truman. - See more at: http://www.myers-mortuary.com/obituary/Carol-Anne-Fisher-Smith-Haws/Farr-West-UT/1332733#sthash.xaROC7Um.dpuf
Carol's life, passion and profession was dance from the time she was ten years old until her premature retirement at 55, forced on her by spine surgery. She studied with William Christensen at the University of Utah and with Evelyn LeMone at the LeMone Studio in Pasadena, California. She taught for 27 years in the dance department at San Jose State University, where the Carol Anne Haws Award for excellence in performance is still given annually, along with the Carol Anne Haws Scholarship in the department of theater arts. She directed and choreographed a great many shows at the university, including "West Side Story" and "Carousel." She was active in community theater as well, directing "1776," "The Boyfriend," and "Pirates of Penzance" among other musicals and operettas, and directed performances of the Prune Hollow Choral Society, a company of kids ages 14 to 18 who sang and danced their way throughout the Bay Area and toured Romania, Mexico, Hawaii and other places. She choreographed the children of the Tabard Theatre Company in their performance of "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory." She also directed and choreographed hundreds of dance recitals before, during, and after her career at San Jose State. She directed/choreographed the LDS Church's Oakland Temple Pageant four times, beginning with the very first one that marked the opening of the temple.
Carol also channeled her energies into genealogy, finding herself fascinated by the implied stories contained in parish records, birth and death dates, marriages, the way certain names vanish from one village and turn up in another. "Everybody has one story to tell," she liked to say, and she followed the stories she found in the documents and microfilms with eagerness and sympathy. She was especially pleased to locate our immigrant Fisher (then spelled Fischer) ancestor in a small town in Germany and to learn from the local parish clerk that the ancestor was, according to the record, "Much given to stealing."
She found an outlet for her visual artistry in rug-making, winning first prize in a rug-hooking competition in Carmel, California for a rug called "Sun, Moon, and Stars."
She was a dedicated member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She is survived by her husband Von, and her children, Matthew (Debora), Jeffery (Jan), Gretchen Myers (Douglas), Aaron, Rachel Helwig (Keith), Forrest (Cheryl), Nellie Gratton (Jeff), numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; a sister, Sylvia Bevan (James), and a brother, Franklin (Rosemary Beless). She was preceded in death by her parents, a sister, Mary Lou, and a brother, Truman. - See more at: http://www.myers-mortuary.com/obituary/Carol-Anne-Fisher-Smith-Haws/Farr-West-UT/1332733#sthash.xaROC7Um.dpuf
Carol
Anne Fisher Smith Haws, dancer, director, and choreographer, died in a
nursing facility in Farr West, Utah on January 14, 2014, at the age of
80. She was born in Maricopa, California on January 2, 1934, to Frank
Truman Fisher and Nellie Rex Smith Fisher, the third of five children.
She moved with her family from Maricopa to Santa Maria, then briefly to
Alhambra, then to Altadena, where she lived until her first marriage.
She was educated at Pasadena City College, Brigham Young University, the
University of Utah, and UCLA, where she earned her master's degree in
dance. She married Virgil Bushman Smith in 1953; they had two sons and
were later divorced. She married Ervin Lavon (Von) Haws in 1961; they
had five more children. They were later divorced but subsequently
remarried and remained together until her death.
Carol's life, passion and profession was dance from the time she was ten years old until her premature retirement at 55, forced on her by spine surgery. She studied with William Christensen at the University of Utah and with Evelyn LeMone at the LeMone Studio in Pasadena, California. She taught for 27 years in the dance department at San Jose State University, where the Carol Anne Haws Award for excellence in performance is still given annually, along with the Carol Anne Haws Scholarship in the department of theater arts. She directed and choreographed a great many shows at the university, including "West Side Story" and "Carousel." She was active in community theater as well, directing "1776," "The Boyfriend," and "Pirates of Penzance" among other musicals and operettas, and directed performances of the Prune Hollow Choral Society, a company of kids ages 14 to 18 who sang and danced their way throughout the Bay Area and toured Romania, Mexico, Hawaii and other places. She choreographed the children of the Tabard Theatre Company in their performance of "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory." She also directed and choreographed hundreds of dance recitals before, during, and after her career at San Jose State. She directed/choreographed the LDS Church's Oakland Temple Pageant four times, beginning with the very first one that marked the opening of the temple.
Carol also channeled her energies into genealogy, finding herself fascinated by the implied stories contained in parish records, birth and death dates, marriages, the way certain names vanish from one village and turn up in another. "Everybody has one story to tell," she liked to say, and she followed the stories she found in the documents and microfilms with eagerness and sympathy. She was especially pleased to locate our immigrant Fisher (then spelled Fischer) ancestor in a small town in Germany and to learn from the local parish clerk that the ancestor was, according to the record, "Much given to stealing."
She found an outlet for her visual artistry in rug-making, winning first prize in a rug-hooking competition in Carmel, California for a rug called "Sun, Moon, and Stars."
She was a dedicated member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She is survived by her husband Von, and her children, Matthew (Debora), Jeffery (Jan), Gretchen Myers (Douglas), Aaron, Rachel Helwig (Keith), Forrest (Cheryl), Nellie Gratton (Jeff), numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; a sister, Sylvia Bevan (James), and a brother, Franklin (Rosemary Beless). She was preceded in death by her parents, a sister, Mary Lou, and a brother, Truman.
The family wishes to express their thanks to Pamela Hawkes and the staff at Memory Lane Care Home for the excellent and dedicated care they provided to their mother in the final years of her life. - See more at: http://www.myers-mortuary.com/obituary/Carol-Anne-Fisher-Smith-Haws/Farr-West-UT/1332733#sthash.xaROC7Um.dpuf
Carol's life, passion and profession was dance from the time she was ten years old until her premature retirement at 55, forced on her by spine surgery. She studied with William Christensen at the University of Utah and with Evelyn LeMone at the LeMone Studio in Pasadena, California. She taught for 27 years in the dance department at San Jose State University, where the Carol Anne Haws Award for excellence in performance is still given annually, along with the Carol Anne Haws Scholarship in the department of theater arts. She directed and choreographed a great many shows at the university, including "West Side Story" and "Carousel." She was active in community theater as well, directing "1776," "The Boyfriend," and "Pirates of Penzance" among other musicals and operettas, and directed performances of the Prune Hollow Choral Society, a company of kids ages 14 to 18 who sang and danced their way throughout the Bay Area and toured Romania, Mexico, Hawaii and other places. She choreographed the children of the Tabard Theatre Company in their performance of "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory." She also directed and choreographed hundreds of dance recitals before, during, and after her career at San Jose State. She directed/choreographed the LDS Church's Oakland Temple Pageant four times, beginning with the very first one that marked the opening of the temple.
Carol also channeled her energies into genealogy, finding herself fascinated by the implied stories contained in parish records, birth and death dates, marriages, the way certain names vanish from one village and turn up in another. "Everybody has one story to tell," she liked to say, and she followed the stories she found in the documents and microfilms with eagerness and sympathy. She was especially pleased to locate our immigrant Fisher (then spelled Fischer) ancestor in a small town in Germany and to learn from the local parish clerk that the ancestor was, according to the record, "Much given to stealing."
She found an outlet for her visual artistry in rug-making, winning first prize in a rug-hooking competition in Carmel, California for a rug called "Sun, Moon, and Stars."
She was a dedicated member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She is survived by her husband Von, and her children, Matthew (Debora), Jeffery (Jan), Gretchen Myers (Douglas), Aaron, Rachel Helwig (Keith), Forrest (Cheryl), Nellie Gratton (Jeff), numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; a sister, Sylvia Bevan (James), and a brother, Franklin (Rosemary Beless). She was preceded in death by her parents, a sister, Mary Lou, and a brother, Truman.
The family wishes to express their thanks to Pamela Hawkes and the staff at Memory Lane Care Home for the excellent and dedicated care they provided to their mother in the final years of her life. - See more at: http://www.myers-mortuary.com/obituary/Carol-Anne-Fisher-Smith-Haws/Farr-West-UT/1332733#sthash.xaROC7Um.dpuf
Carol
Anne Fisher Smith Haws, dancer, director, and choreographer, died in a
nursing facility in Farr West, Utah on January 14, 2014, at the age of
80. She was born in Maricopa, California on January 2, 1934, to Frank
Truman Fisher and Nellie Rex Smith Fisher, the third of five children.
She moved with her family from Maricopa to Santa Maria, then briefly to
Alhambra, then to Altadena, where she lived until her first marriage.
She was educated at Pasadena City College, Brigham Young University, the
University of Utah, and UCLA, where she earned her master's degree in
dance. She married Virgil Bushman Smith in 1953; they had two sons and
were later divorced. She married Ervin Lavon (Von) Haws in 1961; they
had five more children. They were later divorced but subsequently
remarried and remained together until her death.
Carol's life, passion and profession was dance from the time she was ten years old until her premature retirement at 55, forced on her by spine surgery. She studied with William Christensen at the University of Utah and with Evelyn LeMone at the LeMone Studio in Pasadena, California. She taught for 27 years in the dance department at San Jose State University, where the Carol Anne Haws Award for excellence in performance is still given annually, along with the Carol Anne Haws Scholarship in the department of theater arts. She directed and choreographed a great many shows at the university, including "West Side Story" and "Carousel." She was active in community theater as well, directing "1776," "The Boyfriend," and "Pirates of Penzance" among other musicals and operettas, and directed performances of the Prune Hollow Choral Society, a company of kids ages 14 to 18 who sang and danced their way throughout the Bay Area and toured Romania, Mexico, Hawaii and other places. She choreographed the children of the Tabard Theatre Company in their performance of "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory." She also directed and choreographed hundreds of dance recitals before, during, and after her career at San Jose State. She directed/choreographed the LDS Church's Oakland Temple Pageant four times, beginning with the very first one that marked the opening of the temple.
Carol also channeled her energies into genealogy, finding herself fascinated by the implied stories contained in parish records, birth and death dates, marriages, the way certain names vanish from one village and turn up in another. "Everybody has one story to tell," she liked to say, and she followed the stories she found in the documents and microfilms with eagerness and sympathy. She was especially pleased to locate our immigrant Fisher (then spelled Fischer) ancestor in a small town in Germany and to learn from the local parish clerk that the ancestor was, according to the record, "Much given to stealing."
She found an outlet for her visual artistry in rug-making, winning first prize in a rug-hooking competition in Carmel, California for a rug called "Sun, Moon, and Stars."
She was a dedicated member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She is survived by her husband Von, and her children, Matthew (Debora), Jeffery (Jan), Gretchen Myers (Douglas), Aaron, Rachel Helwig (Keith), Forrest (Cheryl), Nellie Gratton (Jeff), numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; a sister, Sylvia Bevan (James), and a brother, Franklin (Rosemary Beless). She was preceded in death by her parents, a sister, Mary Lou, and a brother, Truman. - See more at: http://www.myers-mortuary.com/obituary/Carol-Anne-Fisher-Smith-Haws/Farr-West-UT/1332733#sthash.xaROC7Um.dpuf
Carol's life, passion and profession was dance from the time she was ten years old until her premature retirement at 55, forced on her by spine surgery. She studied with William Christensen at the University of Utah and with Evelyn LeMone at the LeMone Studio in Pasadena, California. She taught for 27 years in the dance department at San Jose State University, where the Carol Anne Haws Award for excellence in performance is still given annually, along with the Carol Anne Haws Scholarship in the department of theater arts. She directed and choreographed a great many shows at the university, including "West Side Story" and "Carousel." She was active in community theater as well, directing "1776," "The Boyfriend," and "Pirates of Penzance" among other musicals and operettas, and directed performances of the Prune Hollow Choral Society, a company of kids ages 14 to 18 who sang and danced their way throughout the Bay Area and toured Romania, Mexico, Hawaii and other places. She choreographed the children of the Tabard Theatre Company in their performance of "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory." She also directed and choreographed hundreds of dance recitals before, during, and after her career at San Jose State. She directed/choreographed the LDS Church's Oakland Temple Pageant four times, beginning with the very first one that marked the opening of the temple.
Carol also channeled her energies into genealogy, finding herself fascinated by the implied stories contained in parish records, birth and death dates, marriages, the way certain names vanish from one village and turn up in another. "Everybody has one story to tell," she liked to say, and she followed the stories she found in the documents and microfilms with eagerness and sympathy. She was especially pleased to locate our immigrant Fisher (then spelled Fischer) ancestor in a small town in Germany and to learn from the local parish clerk that the ancestor was, according to the record, "Much given to stealing."
She found an outlet for her visual artistry in rug-making, winning first prize in a rug-hooking competition in Carmel, California for a rug called "Sun, Moon, and Stars."
She was a dedicated member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She is survived by her husband Von, and her children, Matthew (Debora), Jeffery (Jan), Gretchen Myers (Douglas), Aaron, Rachel Helwig (Keith), Forrest (Cheryl), Nellie Gratton (Jeff), numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren; a sister, Sylvia Bevan (James), and a brother, Franklin (Rosemary Beless). She was preceded in death by her parents, a sister, Mary Lou, and a brother, Truman. - See more at: http://www.myers-mortuary.com/obituary/Carol-Anne-Fisher-Smith-Haws/Farr-West-UT/1332733#sthash.xaROC7Um.dpuf
Shirley Pohlsander: Thank you for sharing this. Because they lived in California we didn't see them often, but each visit was so memorable. Even the snake. She was a beautiful, wonderful and so talented woman.
ReplyDeleteLori Scoresby: We attended her funeral here and learned many things about her. She was a remarkable woman. I wish I had known her better. By the time they moved here she had started to decline and wasn't really herself. Thanks for sharing.
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