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Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess | A Wisdom Archive on Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess |  | Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess A selection of articles related to Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess |  |
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Fred Astaire, Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess, Fred Astaire - Early life and career, Fred Astaire - Filmography, Fred Astaire - Later career, Fred Astaire - Other teamings, Fred Astaire - Personal life, Fred Astaire - Rogers and Astaire, Fred Astaire - Television Work, Fred Astaire - Trivia
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess |  |  |  | Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowessSee also: Fred Astaire's Solo and Partnered Dances
He was a virtuoso dancer, able to convey lighthearted adventuresomeness or deep emotion when called for. His technical control and sense of rhythm were astonishing; according to one anecdote, he was able, when called back to the studio to redo a dance number he had filmed several weeks earlier for a special effects number, to reproduce the routine with pinpoint accuracy, down to the last gesture. He drew from a variety of influences, including tap and other African-American styles, cl ...
See also:Fred Astaire, Fred Astaire - Early life and career, Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess, Fred Astaire - Rogers and Astaire, Fred Astaire - Other teamings, Fred Astaire - Later career, Fred Astaire - Personal life, Fred Astaire - Trivia, Fred Astaire - Filmography, Fred Astaire - Television Work Read more here: » Fred Astaire: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess |
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 |  |  | Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Early life and careerHis father was an Austrian immigrant and a Catholic, though the family originally has Jewish roots; his mother was born in the U.S. to Lutheran German parents; Astaire became an Episcopalian during his youth. "Astaire" was a name taken by him and his sister Adele for their vaudeville act when they were about 5 years old. It is said to have come from an uncle surnamed "L'Astaire". Many sources state that the Astaires appeared in a 1915 film entitled Fanchon, the Cricket starring Mary Pickford, but this is a myth (although it is ...
See also:Fred Astaire, Fred Astaire - Early life and career, Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess, Fred Astaire - Rogers and Astaire, Fred Astaire - Other teamings, Fred Astaire - Later career, Fred Astaire - Personal life, Fred Astaire - Trivia, Fred Astaire - Filmography, Fred Astaire - Television Work Read more here: » Fred Astaire: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Early life and career |
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 |  |  | Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Personal lifeAstaire married for the first time in 1933, to Phyllis Potter (née Phyllis Livingston Baker, 1908-1954), a Boston-born New York socialite and former wife of Eliphalet Nott Potter III (1906-1981). In addition to Phyllis's son, Eliphalet IV, known as Peter, the Astaires had two children, Fred Jr. (born 1936, he appeared with his father in the movie Midas Run but became a charter pilot and rancher instead of an actor ...
See also:Fred Astaire, Fred Astaire - Early life and career, Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess, Fred Astaire - Rogers and Astaire, Fred Astaire - Other teamings, Fred Astaire - Later career, Fred Astaire - Personal life, Fred Astaire - Trivia, Fred Astaire - Filmography, Fred Astaire - Television Work Read more here: » Fred Astaire: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Personal life |
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 |  |  | Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Rogers and AstaireHis second film, Flying Down to Rio, paired him with Ginger Rogers for the first time. That partnership, and the choreography of Astaire and Hermes Pan, helped make dancing an important element of the Hollywood film musical. His films with Rogers included The Gay Divorcee (1934), Top Hat (1935) and Carefree (1938). Their partnership elevated them both to stardom: as Katharine Hepburn reportedly said, ...
See also:Fred Astaire, Fred Astaire - Early life and career, Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess, Fred Astaire - Rogers and Astaire, Fred Astaire - Other teamings, Fred Astaire - Later career, Fred Astaire - Personal life, Fred Astaire - Trivia, Fred Astaire - Filmography, Fred Astaire - Television Work Read more here: » Fred Astaire: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Rogers and Astaire |
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 |  |  | Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Later careerAfter announcing his retirement in 1946, he soon returned to the screen to replace the injured Gene Kelly in Easter Parade (1948) opposite Judy Garland and for The Band Wagon (1953) with Cyd Charisse. Astaire went on to make several more musicals in the 1950s, including Funny Face (1957) with Audrey Hepburn and Silk Stockings (1958) with Charisse. He made two musicals with Vera-Ellen : Three Little Words (1950) and The Belle of New York (1952). His legacy at this point was thirty musicals in a t ...
See also:Fred Astaire, Fred Astaire - Early life and career, Fred Astaire - Dancing and singing prowess, Fred Astaire - Rogers and Astaire, Fred Astaire - Other teamings, Fred Astaire - Later career, Fred Astaire - Personal life, Fred Astaire - Trivia, Fred Astaire - Filmography, Fred Astaire - Television Work Read more here: » Fred Astaire: Encyclopedia II - Fred Astaire - Later career |
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