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Donald David Dixon Ronald O’Connor
(1925-2003)
2004 Inductee
Donald David Dixon Ronald O’Connor,
the comedic song-and-dance man who inherited and perpetuated
a classic tradition of vaudeville tap dancing, was born
in Chicago, Illinois into an Irish theatrical family.
His father, John Edward “Chuck” O’Connor,
was an acrobat with Ringling-Barnum and Bailey Circus;
and his mother, Effie, was a circus bareback rider and
dancer. When they graduated from circus into vaudeville,
all their children (seven were born, three died in infancy)
were initiated into “The O’Connor Family,”
billed as “The Royal Family of Vaudeville.”
O’Connor made his first stage
appearance at three days old, lying onstage across a
piano bench beside his mother who, not yet ready to
return to heavy dancing, played the piano. At thirteen
months old, he began making $25 a week dancing the Black
Bottom and faking acrobatic tricks. He made his film
debut at age eleven dancing an uncredited "specialty
routine" with brothers Jack and Billy in the 1937
Warner Brothers musical, Melody for Two. Like
most child performers who grew up in show business,
he learned to dance by watching the hundreds of musical
acts on stage and screen, making tap comedy dance and
acrobatic tricks his specialty.
He received no formal training in tap
dance until he went to work for Universal Pictures and
took tap dance classes with the studio’s choreographer
Louis DaPron who, after a few weeks of classes exasperatedly
pronounced him “un-teachable.” Unabashed,
O’Connor developed his own style of tap dancing
drawn from experience in vaudeville. He also developed
as an actor, played a number of juvenile and super-
polite boy roles such as Bing Crosby’s kid brother
in Sing, You Sinners (1938), Huckleberry Finn
in Tom Sawyer, Detective (1938), and Beau (Gary
Cooper) at age twelve in the dashing Foreign Legion
action adventure film, Beau Geste (1939). O’Connor
is also seen briefly dancing a vaudeville-styled tap
routine as one of the three Dancing Dolans in the 1939
Warner Brother’s musical On Your Toes,
choreographed by George Balanchine.
After leaving the screen to return to
what was left of vaudeville, he returned to Hollywood
to star in a number of Universal Pictures’ budget-minded
youth musicals that included What’s Cookin’
(1942), Get Hep to Love (1942), and Strictly
in the Groove (1943), When Johnny Comes Marching
Home (1942), It Comes Up Love (1943),
Mr. Big (1943), Top Man (1943), The
Merry Monahans (1944), and Bowery to Broadway
(1944). He was often cast as a brash and energetic
young man during World War II, and paired with the equally
energetic actress and tap dancer, Peggy Ryan. O’Connor’s
postwar musicals include Are You With It? (1948),
Feudin’, Fussin’ and A-Fightin’
(1948), and Yes, Sir, That’s My Baby
(1949); and these led to Francis (1949), a
potboiler about an Army private who finds he is the
only person who can carry on a conversation with an
otherwise taciturn mule; the film proved to be a big
hit with the kids and led to five sequels.
In the 1950s, O’Connor reestablished
himself as a comedic actor and tap dancer. As Cosmo
Brown, the sidekick chum of Gene Kelly in the classic
musical (which spoofed the dawn of talking pictures),
Singin’ in the Rain (1952), O’Connor’s
gravity-defying, largely improvised rendition of “Make
‘Em Laugh” is considered one of the funniest
in the history of the movies. That number, along with
the cheerily-strutted “Good Morning,” danced
with Debbie Reynolds and Kelly, and the vaudeville-inspired
“Fit As a Fiddle (And Ready for Love)” danced
with Kelly, rewarded him with a Golden Globe Award (over
Kelly) for his performance. After the success of Singin’
in the Rain, MGM fashioned a starring vehicle for
O’Connor in I Love Melvin (1953), in
which he danced on roller skates. In the Twentieth Century-Fox
film, Call Me Madam (1953), O’Connor
dances a lyrical duet (one of his all time favorites)
with Vera Ellen; and in There’s No Business
Like Show Business (1954), there is the infamous
scene in which he kisses co-star Marilyn Monroe. In
the mid-fifties, Paramount Pictures cast him in the
film adaptation of the Broadway tap dance musical Anything
Goes (1956) with Bing Crosby and Mitzi Gaynor.
With the decline of the studio system
by the end of the decade, O’Connor launched himself
into the television industry. He became one of the rotating
hosts of The Colgate Comedy Hour and starred
in three different incarnations of The Donald O’Connor
Show for NBC in 1951 and 1954-55, for which he
was nominated for an Emmy (1952) and received the Emmy
Award for Outstanding Personality (1953). One of O’Connor’s
most memorable moments tap dancing on television is
The Bell Telephone Hour’s “Song
and Dance Man.” Broadcast on NBC-TV (January 16,
1966), this mini-musical history of tap dance in America
opened with O’Connor as host dancing an Irish
jig, Scottish reel, Spanish zapateada, and German spatlasse,
followed by a softshoe dance and some sand dancing.
And culminated with a challenge dance with O’Connor
and the Nicholas Brothers (Fayard and Harold) trading
and one-upping on tap steps. In some of the best dance
television camera work to date, O’Connor joined
the brothers in “Cute,” a medium tempo swing
tune by Neal Hefti in which he tapped out feather-light
shuffles and heel-clicks. The vaudeville-inspired routine
finished with the three dancers sitting on pedestals
to fake Russian-styled kazotsky kicks, twirling through
sets of barrel turns, and performing in-the-trenches,
and double and triple turns; in the typical decelerated
ending, they strode upstage, turned around, and sat
back down on their pedestals with folded arms.
In 1971, after suffering a heart attack,
O’Connor devoted considerably energy to composing
music for the concert hall. He also performed a number
of cameo roles on film, among them as the vaudevillian
and dance instructor in the film Ragtime (1981
and the dreamy-eyed toy manufacturer in Robin Williams’
film, Toys (1992). In 1993, O’Connor
released his own exercise-oriented video, Let’s
Tap. In 1998, O’Connor signed on for The Fabulous
Palm Springs Follies, headlining a revue featuring
54-year-old-plus performers, and signing and dancing
his way through eight performances a week. Through the
end of his career, he lived, true to his word: “I
was born and raised to entertain other people. I’ve
heard laughter and applause and known a lot of sorrow.
Everything about me is based on show business. I think
is will bring me happiness. I hope so.”
O’Connor will be remembered as
“The Last Song and Dance Man.” The title,
once proposed for an autobiographical stage play he
was preparing, is apropos for a man who so knew how
to create magic and delight as an entertainer. “I’m
an illusionist—a trickster who quick chances before
your eyes,” he admitted in 1992. “I capture
your attention without giving you time to think about
it. I move fast, I keep changing my hats. And the more
pleased an audience is, the more energy I give back
to the audience.” He died in Calabasas, California
on September 27, 2003.
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