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Ann Miller

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Ann Miller
Image:Ann Miller in Small Town Girl trailer.jpg
in Small Town Girl (1953)
Born Johnnie Lucille Ann Collier
April 12 1923(1923-04-12)
Chireno, Texas, United States
Died January 22 2004 (aged 80)
Los Angeles, California, United States
Spouse(s) Reese Milner
(1946-?)
Bill Moss
(1958–1961)
Arthur Cameron
(1961-1962)

Ann Miller (April 12, 1923[1]January 22, 2004) was an American dancer, singer and actress.

Contents

Biography

Early life

Miller was born Johnnie Lucille Ann Collier in Chireno in Nacogdoches County in eastern Texas, the daughter of Clara Emma (née Birdwell) and John Alfred Collier, a criminal lawyer who represented Bonnie Parker, Clyde Barrow, and Baby Face Nelson, among others.[2][3] Miller's maternal grandmother was Cherokee.[2] Miller's father insisted on the name Johnnie because he had wanted a boy, but she was often called Annie.[2] She took up dancing to exercise her legs to help her rickets. She was considered a child dance prodigy. In an interview featured in a "behind the scenes" documentary on the making of the compilation That's Entertainment III, she said that Eleanor Powell was an early inspiration.

Career

Image:Miller.JPG
The handprints of Ann Miller in front of The Great Movie Ride at Walt Disney World's Disney's Hollywood Studios theme park.

Miller was given a contract with RKO at the age of thirteen (she had told them she was eighteen), and remained there until 1940. The following year, Miller was offered a contract at Columbia Pictures, where she bumped friend Lucille Ball from the throne as "Queen of the B-Movies". She finally hit her mark (starting in the late 1940s) in her roles in MGM musicals such as Kiss Me, Kate, Easter Parade, and On the Town.

Miller was famed for her speed in tap dancing; she claimed to be able to tap 500 times per minute. She was known as well, especially later in her career, for her distinctive appearance, which reflected a studio-era ideal of glamor: massive black bouffant hair, heavy makeup with a slash of crimson lipstick, and fashions that emphasized her lithe figure and long dancer's legs. Her film career effectively ended in 1956 as the studio system lost steam to television, but she remained active in the theatre and on television. In 1979 she astounded audiences in the Broadway show Sugar Babies with fellow MGM veteran Mickey Rooney, which toured the United States extensively after its Broadway run. In 1983 she won the Sarah Siddons Award for her work in Chicago theatre.

She appeared in a special 1982 episode of The Love Boat, joined by fellow showbiz legends Ethel Merman, Carol Channing, Della Reese, Van Johnson, and Cab Calloway in a storyline that cast them as older relatives of the show's regular characters. In 2001 she took her last role, playing Coco in auteur director David Lynch's critically acclaimed Mulholland Drive. Her last stage performance was a 1998 production of Stephen Sondheim's Follies, in which she played the hardboiled survivor Carlotta Campion and received rave reviews for her rendition of the anthemic "I'm Still Here".

Miller also performed a guest appearance on Home Improvement as a dance instructor to Tim and Jill. For her contribution to the motion picture industry, Ann Miller has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6914 Hollywood Blvd.

She died at the age of 80 from cancer which had metastasized to her lungs, and was interred in the Holy Cross Cemetery in Culver City, California.

Filmography

Features

Short Subjects

  • Meet the Stars #8: Stars Past and Present (1941)
  • Screen Snapshots Series 21, No. 1 (1941)
  • Some of the Best (1949)
  • Mighty Manhattan, New York's Wonder City (1949)

References

  1. ^ U.S. Census, April 1, 1930. State of Texas, County of Harris, enumeration district 71, page 2A, family 86.
  2. ^ a b c Ann Miller, Tap-Dancer Starring in Musicals, Dies - New York Times
  3. ^ Ann Miller Biography (1919-)


External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

fr:Ann Miller nl:Ann Miller sv:Ann Miller

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