Kathryn Ann Fleming (October 6, 1965 – December 14, 2006)[1] was an American actress, artist, singer, and audiobook narrator and producer. She was the owner and executive producer at Cedar House Audio, an audio production company specializing in spoken word, that is located in Seattle, Washington, United States.
After a stint as a professional actor, she branched into audiobooks in the mid-1990s. Fleming recorded well over 200 titles, many under the stage nameAnna Fields.[3]
After Fleming's death, the City of Seattle commissioned a report to determine the cause of flash flooding in Fleming's neighborhood.[13] As of 2013, the house where Fleming died had been replaced by a garden, and the city has completed a stormwater project in the neighborhood. The project features a reservoir capable of holding excess storm runoff when the rest of the system is over capacity. A memorial at the site is inscribed with words that Fleming would say before going on stage as an actress: "Be a light. Be a flame. Be a beacon."[14][15][16]
Filmography
Film
Year
Title
Role
Notes
1993
Hard Candy
Teacher
Film short
2001
Navy SEALs: BUDS Class 234
Narrator
Educational
2006
In the Shadow of the Himalayas: How People Live in Nepal
^Strong, Charlene. "Charlene Strong home page". Archived from the original on June 20, 2013. Retrieved June 4, 2013. [Strong] became an advocate for equality following the loss of her wife, Kate Fleming (a renowned audio book narrator), in a flash flood in Seattle in 2006. At the hospital Charlene was initially denied access to be with Kate in the moments before she died. This discrimination led Charlene to help champion legislation that later became Washington State's Domestic Partnership Law. Charlene's advocacy for equality has led her to The White House where she was invited to have a private meeting with President Obama and other dignitaries to discuss marriage equality. Charlene has taken her personal tragedy and created a life mission to advocate for equality and social justice issues.
^Toce, Sarah (2011). "Catching Up with Charlene Strong". Curve. Archived from the original on July 1, 2012. Retrieved June 4, 2013. In 2006 Fleming was trapped by a flash flood in their home's basement—despite the efforts of both Strong and the emergency firemen called to the scene. But it was what followed at the hospital, when Strong was denied access to her dying wife until she was given permission by an out of state relative, that turned Strong, then a dental office manager, into an activist powerhouse.