Vera-Ellen (born Vera-Ellen Rohe; February 16, 1921 and Alma C. Westmeier. Both were descended from German immigrants. Her mother dreamed she would have a girl named Vera-Ellen, including the hyphen.
She began dancing at age 10 and quickly became proficient. One of her fellow dance students at Hessler Studio of Dancing was Doris Day. At age 13, she was a winner on the Major Bowes Amateur Hour and embarked upon a professional career.
Career
thumb|upright|Left to right: [[June Haver, Vera-Ellen, and Vivian Blaine in Three Little Girls in Blue (1946)]]
Stage
In 1939, she made her Broadway debut in the Jerome Kern/Oscar Hammerstein musical Very Warm for May. She became one of the youngest Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall. This led to roles on Broadway in Panama Hattie, By Jupiter, and A Connecticut Yankee, where she was spotted by Samuel Goldwyn, who cast her opposite Danny Kaye and Virginia Mayo in the 1945 film Wonder Man.
Dubbing
Starting in 1945 with Wonder Man, her first film, her singing was dubbed. However, the Decca Broadway Original Cast Album of 1943's revival of A Connecticut Yankee has two vocals by Vera-Ellen, "I Feel at Home with You" and "You Always Love the Same Girl," both duets with Chester Stratton. Her style is of a comic soubrette. and a February 14, 1959, broadcast of The Dinah Shore Show. Following that, Vera-Ellen retired from performing. A friend, Bill Dennington, who knew her during the last 20 years of her life, dismissed the story about her neck and added that he hated "that people think of her as 'the dancer with anorexia' and not just the fabulous dancer who has been so overlooked." Her second husband was oilman Victor Bennett Rothschild.<!-- not Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild --> They were married from 1954 to 1966 when they divorced. While married to Rothschild, she gave birth to a daughter, Victoria Ellen, who died in 1963 at three months from SIDS. Following the death of her only child, she withdrew from public life.
Death
Vera-Ellen died at the Los Angeles County General Hospital on August 30, 1981, of ovarian cancer. She was 60 years old.
Filmography
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Year
! Title
! Role
! Notes
|-
| 1945 || Wonder Man || Midge Mallon || Singing voice dubbed by June Hutton
|-
| rowspan=2 | 1946 || The Kid from Brooklyn || Susie Sullivan || Singing voice dubbed by Suzanne Ellers
|-
| Three Little Girls in Blue || Myra Charters || Singing voice dubbed by Carol Stewart
|-
| 1947 || Carnival in Costa Rica || Luisa Molina || Singing voice dubbed by Pat Friday
|-
| 1948 || Words and Music || Herself ||
|-
| rowspan=2 | 1949 || Love Happy || Maggie Phillips ||
|-
| On the Town || Ivy Smith ||
|-
| 1950 || Three Little Words || Jessie Brown || Singing voice dubbed by Anita Ellis
|-
| 1951 || Happy Go Lovely || Janet Jones || Singing voice dubbed by Eve Boswell
|-
| 1952 || The Belle of New York || Angela Bonfils || Singing voice dubbed by Anita Ellis
|-
| rowspan=2 | 1953 || Call Me Madam || Princess Maria || Singing voice dubbed by Carol Richards
|-
| Big Leaguer || Christy ||
|-
| 1954 || White Christmas || Judy Haynes || Singing voice dubbed by Trudy Stevens
|-
| 1957 || Let's Be Happy || Jeannie MacLean || Singing voice dubbed by Joan Small<br />(final film role)
|}
Notes
References
Further reading
- Oderman, Stuart, Talking to the Piano Player 2: Stars, Writers, and Bandleaders Remember. BearManor Media, 2009. .
- Soren, David, Vera-Ellen: The Magic and the Mystery. Luminary Press, Baltimore, 2003. .
External links
- Vera-Ellen at Virtual History
- Vera-Ellen Tribute
