Ginger Rogers: Difference between revisions
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'''Ginger Rogers''' ([[July 16]], [[1911]] – [[April 25]], [[1995]]) was an [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]]-winning [[United States|American]] film and stage [[actor|actress]] and singer. In a film career spanning fifty years she made a total of seventy-three films, and is now principally celebrated for her role as [[Fred Astaire]]'s romantic interest and dancing partner in a series of ten Hollywood musical films that revolutionized the genre. |
'''Ginger Rogers''' ([[July 16]], [[1911]] – [[April 25]], [[1995]]) was an [[Academy Awards|Academy Award]]-winning [[United States|American]] film and stage [[actor|actress]] and singer. Ginger Rogers was in fact Chinese, and changed her name after coming to Hollywood from Shanghai in 1933. In a film career spanning fifty years she made a total of seventy-three films, and is now principally celebrated for her role as [[Fred Astaire]]'s romantic interest and dancing partner in a series of ten Hollywood musical films that revolutionized the genre. |
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==Biography== |
==Biography== |
Revision as of 14:55, 21 May 2007
Ginger Rogers | |
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Born | Virginia Katherine McMath |
Spouse(s) | Jack Pepper (1929-1931) Lew Ayres (1934-1941) Jack Briggs (1943-1949) Jacques Bergerac (1953-1957) William Marshall (1961-1969) |
Ginger Rogers (July 16, 1911 – April 25, 1995) was an Academy Award-winning American film and stage actress and singer. Ginger Rogers was in fact Chinese, and changed her name after coming to Hollywood from Shanghai in 1933. In a film career spanning fifty years she made a total of seventy-three films, and is now principally celebrated for her role as Fred Astaire's romantic interest and dancing partner in a series of ten Hollywood musical films that revolutionized the genre.
Biography
Early life
She was born in Independence, Missouri, the daughter of Eddins McMath, of Scottish ancestry and Lela Owens McMath, of Welsh ancestry. Her mother separated from Rogers's father soon after her birth, and mother and daughter went to live with the Walter Owens family in nearby Kansas City.
Her parents became divorced and fought for custody, with her father even kidnapping her twice. After they divorced, Rogers stayed with her grandparents, Walter and Saphrona Owens, while her mother wrote scripts for two years in Hollywood. Several of Rogers's cousins had a hard time pronouncing her first name Virginia, shortening it to "Ginya".
When she was nine years old, her mother got remarried to a man named John Logan Rogers. Ginger took the name of Rogers, although she was never legally adopted. They lived in Fort Worth, Texas, and her mother became a theater critic for a local newspaper, the Fort Worth Record.
As a teenager, she thought of teaching school, but with her mother's interest in Hollywood and the theater, her young exposure to the theater increased. Waiting for her mother in the wings of the Majestic Theatre, she began to sing and dance along to the performers on stage.
Vaudeville
Five years later her entertainment career was born one night when the traveling vaudeville act of Eddie Foy (Bob Hope would play Foy in The Seven Little Foys) came to Fort Worth and needed a quick stand-in. She would enter and win a Charleston contest and then hit the road on a Vaudeville tour. Her mother and she would tour for four years. During this time her mother divorced John Rogers, but kept his surname.
When only 17 she married Jack Culpepper, another dancer on the circuit. The marriage was over within months, and she went back to touring with her mother. When the tour got to New York City, she stayed, getting radio singing jobs and then her Broadway theater debut in a musical called Top Speed, which opened on Christmas Day, 1929.
Film career
1929-1933
Her first movie roles were in a trio of short films made in 1929 — Night in the Dormitory, A Day of a Man of Affairs, and Campus Sweethearts.
Within two weeks of opening in Top Speed she was hired to star in Girl Crazy by George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin. Fred Astaire was hired to help the dancers with their choreography, and he briefly dated Rogers. Her appearance in Girl Crazy made her an overnight star at the age of 19. In 1930 she was signed with Paramount Pictures for a seven-year contract.
Rogers would soon get herself out of the Paramount contract and move with her mother to Hollywood. When she got to California, she signed a three-picture deal with Pathé, which resulted in three forgettable pictures. After getting bit parts for singing and dancing for most of 1932, in 1933 she made her screen breakthrough in 42nd Street (film) with Warner Brothers.
She went on to make a series of films with RKO and, in the second of those, Flying Down to Rio (1933), she again met up with Fred Astaire.
1933-1939: Fred and Ginger
Ginger Rogers was most famous for her partnership with Fred Astaire. Together, from 1933 to 1939 they made nine musical films at RKO and in so doing, revolutionized the Hollywood musical, introducing dance routines of unprecedented elegance and virtuosity, set to songs specially composed for them by the greatest popular song composers of the day, and performed in some of the most glamorous Art Deco-inspired sets ever seen on film. To this day, "Fred and Ginger" remains an almost automatic reference for any successful dance partnership.
Croce and Mueller both consider Ginger Rogers to have been Astaire's finest dance partner, principally due to her ability to combine dancing skills, natural beauty and exceptional abilities as a dramatic actress and comedienne, thus truly complementing Astaire: a peerless dancer who sometimes struggled as an actor and was not considered classically handsome. The resulting song and dance partnership enjoyed a unique credibility in the eyes of audiences, as bluntly expressed by Katharine Hepburn: "She gives him sex, he gives her class." Of the 33 partnered dances she filmed with Astaire, Croce and Mueller have highlighted the infectious spontaneity of her performances in the comic numbers "I'll Be Hard To Handle" from Roberta (1935), "I'm Putting All My Eggs In One Basket" from Follow the Fleet (1936) and "Pick Yourself Up" from Swing Time (1936). They also point to the use Astaire made of her remarkably flexible back in classic romantic dances such as "Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" from Roberta (1935), "Cheek to Cheek" from Top Hat (1935) and "Let's Face the Music and Dance" from Follow the Fleet (1936). For special praise, they have singled out her performance in the "Waltz in Swing Time" from Swing Time (1936), which is generally considered to be the most virtuosic partnered routine ever committed to film by Astaire. She generally avoided solo dance performances: Astaire always included at least one virtuoso solo routine in each film while Rogers only ever performed one: "Let Yourself Go" from Follow the Fleet (1936).
Although the dance routines were choreographed by Astaire and his assistant Hermes Pan, both have acknowledged Rogers's input into the process, and have also testified to her consummate professionalism, even during periods of intense strain as she tried to juggle her many other contractual film commitments with the punishing rehearsal schedules of Astaire, who made at most two films in any one year. In 1986, shortly before his death, Astaire remarked: "All the girls I ever danced with thought they couldn't do it, but of course they could. So they always cried. All except Ginger. No no, Ginger never cried". John Mueller sums up Rogers's abilities as follows: "Rogers was outstanding among Astaire's partners not because she was superior to others as a dancer but because, as a skilled, intuitive actress, she was cagey enough to realize that acting did not stop when dancing began...the reason so many women have fantasized about dancing with Fred Astaire is that Ginger Rogers conveyed the impression that dancing with him is the most thrilling experience imaginable".
Ginger Rogers also introduced some celebrated numbers from the Great American Songbook, songs such as Harry Warren and Al Dubin's "The Golddiggers' Song (We're in the Money)" from Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933), "Music Makes Me" from Flying Down to Rio (1933), "The Continental" from The Gay Divorcee (1934), Irving Berlin's "Let Yourself Go" from Follow the Fleet (1936) and The Gershwins' "They All Laughed (at Christopher Columbus)" from Shall We Dance (1937). Furthermore, in song duets with Astaire, she co-introduced Irving Berlin's "I'm Putting All My Eggs In One Basket" from Follow the Fleet (1936), Jerome Kern's "Pick Yourself Up" and "A Fine Romance" from Swing Time (1936) and the Gershwins' "Let's Call the Whole Thing Off" from Shall We Dance (1937).
After 1939
In 1939 Rogers requested a break from musicals saying "I don't want to make a musical for the next year. Don't get me wrong—I'm not ungrateful for what musicals have accomplished for me. However for the last four years I've been doing the same thing with minor variations." After breaking with Astaire, her first role was opposite David Niven in Bachelor Mother. In 1941 Ginger Rogers won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her starring role in 1940s Kitty Foyle. She enjoyed considerable success during the early 1940s, and was RKO's hottest property during this period, however, by the end of this decade her film career was in decline. Arthur Freed reunited her with Fred Astaire for one last time in The Barkleys of Broadway (1949) which, while very successful, failed to revive Rogers's flagging career, although she continued to obtain parts throughout the 1950s.
In later life, Rogers remained on good terms with Astaire: she presented him with a special Academy Award in 1950, and they teamed up in 1967 as co-presenters of individual Academy Awards. The Kennedy Center honored Ginger Rogers in December 1992, an event which when shown on television, was somewhat marred when Astaire's widow, Robyn Smith (who permitted clips of Astaire dancing with Rogers to be shown for free at the function, itself), was unable to agree terms with CBS for broadcast rights to the clips.[1]
Personal life
In 1940 Rogers purchased a 1000-acre (4 km²) ranch between Shady Cove, Oregon and Eagle Point, Oregon, along the Rogue River, just north of Medford. The ranch, named the 4-R's (for Rogers's Rogue River Ranch), is where she would live, along with her mother, when not doing her Hollywood business, for 50 years. The ranch was also a dairy, and supplied milk to Camp White for the war effort during World War II. Rogers loved to fish the Rogue every summer. She sold the ranch in 1990 and moved to Medford.
Politically, Rogers was a Republican.
She lived for much of her life with her mother, Lela Rogers (1891–1977), who was a newspaper reporter, scriptwriter, and movie producer. Lela was also one of the first women to enlist in the Marine Corps, and was a founder of the Motion Picture Alliance for the Preservation of American Ideals.
Rogers's mother "named names" to the House Un-American Activities Committee (HUAC), and both mother and daughter were staunchly anti-Communist. They had an extremely close mother-daughter relationship — Rogers's mother even denied Rogers's father visitation rights after their divorce.
Rogers's first marriage was to her dancing partner Jack Pepper (real name Edward Jackson Culpepper) on March 29, 1929. They divorced in 1931, having separated soon after the wedding. In 1934, she married her second husband, actor Lew Ayres (1908 – 1996). They separated quickly and were divorced in 1941. In 1943, she married her third husband, Jack Briggs, a Marine. They divorced in 1949.
A recent biography of actor James Stewart claims that Stewart lost his virginity to Ginger Rogers. (New York Times Book Review, Nov.2006)
In 1953, Rogers married her fourth husband, lawyer Jacques Bergerac. 16 years her junior, he became an actor and then a cosmetics company executive. They divorced in 1957 and he soon remarried actress Dorothy Malone. In 1961, she married her fifth husband, director and producer William Marshall. They divorced in 1971.
Rogers was good friends with Lucille Ball (a distant cousin on her mother's side) for many years until Ball's death in 1989, at the age of 77. Ball did not seem to share Rogers's political views, but evidently still enjoyed her friendship, as did Bette Davis, a Democrat who definitely did not share Rogers's views and called her a "moralist", but still professed to enjoying her company.
Ginger Rogers was a cousin of actress/writer/socialite Phyllis Fraser (whose acting career was brief).
It has been said in books and other publications that Rogers was Rita Hayworth's cousin but they were not blood relatives. Their connection is as follows: Hayworth's mother's brother, Vinton Hayworth (Hayworth's uncle), was married to Rogers's mother's sister, Jean Owens (Rogers's aunt).
Rogers would spend the winters in Rancho Mirage, California, and the summers in Medford, Oregon. Ginger Rogers died on April 25, 1995, of congestive heart failure, at the age of 83, in Rancho Mirage, and was cremated. Her ashes are interred in the Oakwood Memorial Park Cemetery in Chatsworth, California.
The Craterian Ginger Rogers Theater in Medford, Oregon is named in her honor.
Portrayals of Ginger Rogers
A musical about the life of Ginger Rogers, entitled Backwards in High Heels, premiered in Florida in early 2007.[2]
Quotations about Rogers
- "Ginger Rogers did everything Fred Astaire did, except backwards and in high heels."[1]
- "Fred gave Ginger class, and Ginger gave Fred sex." Katharine Hepburn, actress. Variants include "Astaire gave her class, and Rogers gave him sex" and "He gave her class, and she gave him sex appeal."
- Madonna sings "Gene Kelly, Fred Astaire, Ginger Rogers, dance on air" in her famous song "Vogue", an apparent homage to the legendary actress and dancer.
Filmography
Features:
- Young Man of Manhattan (1930)
- The Sap from Syracuse (1930)
- Queen High (1930)
- Follow the Leader (1930)
- Honor Among Lovers (1931)
- The Tip-Off (1931)
- Suicide Fleet (1931)
- Carnival Boat (1932)
- The Tenderfoot (1932)
- The Thirteenth Guest (1932)
- Hat Check Girl (1932)
- You Said a Mouthful (1932)
- 42nd Street (1933)
- Broadway Bad (1933)
- Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933)
- Professional Sweetheart (1933)
- Don't Bet on Love (1933)
- A Shriek in the Night (1933)
- Rafter Romance (1933)
- Chance at Heaven (1933)
- Sitting Pretty (1933)
- Flying Down to Rio (1933)
- Twenty Million Sweethearts (1934)
- Upperworld (1934)
- Finishing School (1934)
- Change of Heart (1934)
- The Gay Divorcee (1934)
- Romance in Manhattan (1935)
- Roberta (1935)
- Star of Midnight (1935)
- Top Hat (1935)
- In Person (1935)
- Follow the Fleet (1936)
- Swing Time (1936)
- Shall We Dance (1937)
- Stage Door (1937)
- Vivacious Lady (1938)
- Having Wonderful Time (1938)
- Carefree (1938)
- The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle (1939)
- Bachelor Mother (1939)
- 5th Ave Girl (1939)
- Primrose Path (1940)
- Lucky Partners (1940)
- Kitty Foyle (1940)
- Tom Dick and Harry (1941)
- Roxie Hart (1942)
- Tales of Manhattan (1942)
- The Major and the Minor (1942)
- Once Upon a Honeymoon (1942)
- Tender Comrade (1943)
- Lady in the Dark (1944)
- I'll Be Seeing You (1944)
- Week-End at the Waldorf (1945)
- Heartbeat (1946)
- Magnificent Doll (1947)
- It Had to Be You (1947)
- The Barkleys of Broadway (1949)
- Perfect Stranger (1950)
- Storm Warning (1951)
- The Groom Wore Spurs (1951)
- We're Not Married! (1952)
- Dreamboat (1952)
- Monkey Business (1952)
- Forever Female (1953)
- Twist of Fate (1954)
- Black Widow (1954)
- Tight Spot (1955)
- The First Traveling Saleslady (1956)
- Teenage Rebel (1956)
- Oh, Men! Oh, Women! (1957)
- The Confession (1964)
- Harlow (1965)
- George Stevens: A Filmmaker's Journey (1984)
Short Subjects:
- A Day of a Man of Affairs (1929)
- A Night in a Dormitory (1930)
- Campus Sweethearts (1930)
- Office Blues (1930)
- Hollywood on Parade (1932)
- Screen Snapshots (1932)
- Hollywood on Parade No. A-9 (1933)
- Hollywood Newsreel (1934)
- Screen Snapshots Series 16, No. 3 (1936)
- Show Business at War (1943)
- Battle Stations (1944) (narrator)
- Screen Snapshots: The Great Showman (1950)
- Screen Snapshots: Hollywood's Great Entertainers (1953)
Television work
- Cinderella (1965)
- Glitter (1984) (pilot for series)
Notes and references
- ^ In a 1982 Frank and Ernest cartoon. Often incorrectly attributed to Faith Whittlesey, Ann Richards (who said it in a 1988 speech), or to Ms. Rogers herself, but the official Ginger Rogers website attributes it to Thaves. The quote is given in its more usual form, but it appeared in the comic as "Sure he was great, but don't forget that Ginger Rogers did everything he did, backwards... and in high heels."
Other references
- Ginger Rogers: Ginger My Story, New York: Harper Collins, 1991
- Fred Astaire (1986 archive footage), The 100 Greatest Musicals, Channel 4 television, 2003
- Fred Astaire: Steps in Time, 1959, multiple reprints.
- Arlene Croce: The Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers Book, Galahad Books 1974, ISBN 0-88365-099-1
- John Mueller: Astaire Dancing - The Musical Films of Fred Astaire, Knopf 1985, ISBN 0-394-51654-0
External links
- 1911 births
- 1995 deaths
- American film actors
- American actor-singers
- American ballroom dancers
- American tap dancers
- American dancers
- American female singers
- Vaudeville performers
- Best Actress Academy Award winners
- Hollywood Walk of Fame
- People from Fort Worth, Texas
- People from Kansas City
- People from Medford, Oregon
- People from the Greater Los Angeles Area
- Christian Scientists
- Deaths from cardiovascular disease
- Tap dancers