Busby Berkeley
Busby Berkeley was born on Nov 29, 1895 in USA. Busby Berkeley's big-screen debut came with Whoopee! directed by Thornton Freeland in 1930. Busby Berkeley is known for The Blue Veil directed by Curtis Bernhardt, Jane Wyman stars as Louise Mason and Charles Laughton as Fred K. Begley. Busby Berkeley has got 2 awards and 4 nominations so far. The most recent award Busby Berkeley achieved is Online Film & Television Association. The upcoming new movie Busby Berkeley plays is Billy Rose's Jumbo which will be released on Dec 19, 1962.
Busby Berkeley was one of the greatest choreographers of the US movie musical. He started his career in the US Army in 1918, as a lieutenant in the artillery conducting and directing parades. After the World War I cease-fire he was ordered to stage camp shows for the soldiers. Back in the US he became a stage actor and assistant director in smaller acting troupes. After being forced to take over the direction of the musical "Holka-Polka" he discovered his talent for staging extravagant dance routines, and he quickly became one of Broadway's top dance directors. Producer Florenz Ziegfeld Jr. called him to direct the dance routines for his production of "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court". Eddie Cantor, who starred in the long-running Ziegfeld production "Whoopee!", suggested Berkley create the dance routines in the film version )Whoopee! (1930) and Ziegfeld agreed.At first in Hollywood Berkeley wasn't satisfied with the possibilities of his job--at the time, dance directors trained the dancers and staged the dances. The director chose camera positions and the editor chose which of the takes were shown to the audience. Berkeley wanted to direct the dances himself and convinced producer Samuel Goldwyn to let him try. One of the first chances he took was that he used only one camera in his films. He also showed close-ups of the chorus girls. Asked about this, he explained, "Well, we've got all the beautiful girls in the picture, why not let the public see them?" With the decline of musicals in 1931 and 1932, he was thinking of returning to Broadway when Darryl F. Zanuck, chief producer at Warner Brothers, called him in to direct the musical numbers of Warners' newest project, the backstage drama 42ème rue (1933). Berkeley accepted and directed great numbers like "Shuffle Off To Buffalo", "Young and Healthy" and the grandiose story of urban life, the finale "42nd Street". The film was a smash hit, and Warner Brothers knew who made it such an extraordinary success--Berkeley, as well as composer Harry Warren and lyricist Al Dubin, got seven-year contracts. Berkeley created musical numbers for almost every great musical that Warner Brothers produced from 1933 to 1937. His overhead shots forced him to drill holes in the studio roofs, and he used more dancers with each succeeding picture. However, by the late 1930s the musical was in decline once again, and Berkeley had nothing to do as a choreographer. He directed two non-musical pictures for Warner Brothers then went to MGM, where he choreographed the final number from Emporte mon coeur (1939) with Jeanette MacDonald. As a director and choreographer he worked on four pictures with teenage stars Judy Garland and Mickey Rooney. He also choreographed the "Fascinatin' Rhythm" finale for MGM's reigning tapping star, Eleanor Powell in Divorce en musique (1941). He directed Gene Kelly in his first picture, Pour moi et ma mie (1942). Kelly, who choreographed his own numbers, learned a lot from Berkeley.Berkeley worked for 20th Century-Fox in Banana split (1943) with its surrealistic number "The Lady in the Tutti-Frutti Hat". In 1949 he directed his last picture, Match d'amour (1949), but this time the choreography was by Gene Kelly. Berkeley did a few numbers in the early 1950s but, by the end of the decade, he was all but forgotten. A revival of his films in the late 1960s brought him some popularity and he was asked to return to Broadway and supervise the dance direction in the revival of a Vincent Youmans musical comedy from 1925. One of the actresses in this production was Ruby Keeler, one of his leading ladies in Warner musicals. When the production went on tour in 1972, one of the road cast was Eleanor Powell. The production was a smash hit. When he walked on stage after one opening night, the house exploded with applause.A strange fact is that Busby Berkeley never had a dancing lesson and, in his early days, was very afraid of people finding out. He often drove his producers crazy when he gave orders to build a set and then sat in front of it for a few days, thinking up the numbers.
Birthday
Nov 29, 1895Place of Birth
Los Angeles, California, USA
Known For
Awards
2 wins & 4 nominations
Movies & TV Shows
- 1962
additional crew
6.1 - 1954
music department
5.8 - 1953
additional crew
6.2 - 1953
additional crew
6.3 - 1952
additional crew
6.5 - 1951
director, additional crew
7.2 - 1951
additional crew
5.5 - 1951
additional crew
5.7 - 1950
director, additional crew
6.9 - 1950
additional crew
6.8 - 1949
director
6.7 - 1948
additional crew, music department, director
7.0 - 1946
director
5.2 - 1943
director, additional crew
6.6 - 1943
director
6.8 - 1943
director
7.1 - 1942
director
7.0 - 1942
music department
5.8 - 1942
additional crew, music department
6.6 - 1941
director
6.6 - 1941
director, music department
6.4 - 1941
director
6.7 - 1941
director
5.7 - 1940
director
6.8 - 1940
director
6.5 - 1939
director
6.1 - 1939
director
6.3 - 1939
director
6.8 - 1939
additional crew
8.1 - 1939
additional crew
5.7 - 1938
director
5.6 - 1938
director
5.8 - 1938
director
5.3 - 1938
additional crew
5.8 - 1937
director, additional crew
6.4 - 1937
additional crew
6.1 - 1937
additional crew
5.8 - 1936
director
5.6 - 1936
director
6.3 - 1936
additional crew, music department
6.4 - 1936
additional crew
5.8 - 1935
director, additional crew
4.7 - 1935
director
6.2 - 1935
additional crew, director
6.9 - 1935
additional crew
5.9 - 1934
director, additional crew
7.0 - 1934
music department
6.6 - 1934
additional crew
6.6 - 1933
director
5.9 - 1933
additional crew
6.7 - 1933
additional crew
5.7 - 19337.5
- 19337.7
- 1933
additional crew
7.3 - 1932
additional crew
6.5 - 1932
additional crew
6.0 - 1932
additional crew
7.0 - 1932
additional crew
5.8 - 1932
additional crew
5.1 - 19317.0
- 1931
additional crew
5.4 - 1930
additional crew
6.4