Adele (1896-1981) and Frederick Austerlitz (1899–1987) were born in Nebraska, children of Johanna and Fritz Austerlitz. Johanna was born in the U.S to Lutheran German immigrants from East Prussia and Alsace. Dad was born in Linz Austria to Jewish parents, and later the whole family converted to Catholicism - he arrived in New York in 1893, then found brewery work in Omaha.
Adele became a dancer-singer, and although Fred refused dance lessons, he easily copied his sister's dancing and learned 3 musical instruments. So mum started a brother-sister act, common in vaudeville then, for her children.
When Fritz suddenly lost his job, the family moved to New York in 1905 to launch the children’s show business careers. Adele and Fred began training at the Alviene Master School of the Theatre and Academy of Cultural Arts. Their mother suggested they change their name to Astaire, as Austerlitz sounded too German. Did Fred mind that he was a] Germanic on both parents’ sides and b] Jewish on one side? Did he know that Fritz’s brothers Otto and Ernst remained in Austria and were soldiers during WWI? Apparently there was a tacit family agreement to mention neither.
Fred and Adele Astaire in 1921
Adele and Fred were taught dance, speaking and singing, preparing to develop an act. Their first act was Juvenile Artists Presenting an Electric Musical Toe-Dancing Novelty. In Nov 1905 their act debuted in Keyport New Jersey.
Their father's salesmanship rapidly landed Fred and Adele a major contract, playing the Orpheum Circuit of vaudeville and cinemas in cities across the U.S. Even though Adele was older and taller, Fred wore a top hat (to appear taller) and the team was billed with Fred’s name first (to make him seem older). But eventually they decided to take a break from show business.
The career of the Astaire teens restarted with more polish, as they began to incorporate tap dancing into their routines. And they learned the tango, waltz and other popular ballroom dances from vaudeville dancers. Then they appeared in Mary Pickford’s 1915 film, Fanchon, the Cricket.
Young Fred was directing their music in 1916, just at the time he met George Gershwin who was working for the music publisher Jerome Remick. Fred had been hunting for new music and dance ideas, so their meeting was a blessing to both their careers.
The Astaires had their first Broadway success with Over the Top (1917), a revue created for U.S and Allied troops. They did more shows eg The Passing Show of 1918 where fans loved Adele, owing in part to Fred's good choreography. But by this time, Fred's dancing was beginning to sparkle as well.
In the 1920s, they appeared on both Broadway and the London stage. And whilst in London, Fred was keen to study piano at Guildhall School of Music. As Astaire's tap dancing was recognised by then as among the best in the world, he was certainly multi-talented.
Eventually Fred and Adele enjoyed stage successes. In fact, London gave them a bigger welcome than New York, but it was in London in 1924 that they heard of their father’s illness. Their mother returned to America and soon, during the London run of Stop Flirting, their father died.
They won popular acclaim in theatres on both sides of the Atlantic for Jerome Kern's The Bunch and Judy (1922), George & Ira Gershwin's Lady, Be Good (1924) and Funny Face (1927) and later in The Band Wagon (1931). Fred went on to star in 10+ Broadway and West End musicals, making 31 musical films and recordings.
The siblings split in 1932 when Adele married Lord Charles Cavendish, 9th Duke of Devonshire’s son. Fred achieved success on Broadway and in London with The Gay Divorcee, while considering a Hollywood future. But the end of the long family partnership was difficult for Fred.
His greatest dancing partnership was with Virginia Ginger Rogers (1911-95), with whom he co-starred in ten Hollywood musicals! Among their most notable films, where Astaire took the genre of tap dancing to a new level, were Top Hat (1935) and Shall we dance? (1937). Their final film together was The Barkleys of Broadway, released by MGM in 1949.
Astaire was reluctant to become part of another team! However RKO noted the public appeal of Fred’s choreography and of Astaire-Rogers dancing, which helped make dancing a key element of the film musical. Rogers maintained a busy theatre schedule, performing the title role in Hello Dolly! from 1965 on and took Mame to London audiences in 1969.
Now working with Claire Luce, Fred created a dance duo for Cole Porter's Night and Day. Luce stated that she had to help him to take a more romantic approach. The success of the stage play, and the film version, The Gay Divorcee, ushered in a new era in dance. Recently found footage of Astaire performing in Gay Divorce in 1933 survives!
RKO lent him to MGM in 1933 for his Hollywood debut in the successful musical film Dancing Lady, dancing with Joan Crawford. On his return to RKO, he was with Ginger Rogers in Dolores del Río’s Flying Down to Rio (1933). Ginger and Fred were so thrilling together, they made 9 films at RKO, including The Gay Divorcee (1934), Roberta (1935), Top Hat (1935), Follow the Fleet (1936), Swing Time (1936), Shall We Dance (1937) and Carefree (1938). Most Astaire–Rogers musicals became substantial money-makers for RKO.
Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire in Top Hat (1935)
Fred in Top Hat, 1935
Instead of using dance as a mere spectacle as others had done, Astaire was determined that all song and dance routines in a film be integral to the plotline. Astaire films usually included a solo performance by Astaire; a comedy dance routine for two; and a romantic dance duo.
In 1933 Fred married Phyllis Livingston Potter, after Phyllis’ divorce; they went to Hollywood together, had 2 children and lived happily until Phyllis’ death from lung cancer. Ginger Rogers married 5 times, but never had any children.
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10 comments:
I love watching Fred Astaire and enjoyed all his films with Ginger Rogers. I didn't his background. So interesting to think about families split by the war, as indeed Queen Victoria's family was.
Hello Hels, Astaire and Rogers movies were a staple on the evening cable line-up (and I presume still are), and I enjoyed many of them that way. In fact, that was partly why I stopped cable service. I am not a natural television watcher, and the few old Ginger Rogers (and the like) movies I was watching on the weekends did not justify the c.US$35 monthly cable charge, especially as I had seen all of them before. I spent my new-found wealth on other hobbies!
--Jim
jabblog
Blame his parents for the cover ups and family splits. Fred Astaire did what he thought was the right thing, performing endlessly for U.S. and Allied soldiers to support the troops, even to Europe's most dangerous areas.
Parnassus
I loved, and still do love energetic and athletic dancing; as a child I even thought I might be a dancer myself. But jazz ballet was athletic; Astaire and Rogers were romantic and graceful. So like you, I spend my old (pre-retirement) money on other passions :)
I love watching movies with music and tap dancing. I wish I had learned and had the chance at age 8, but wanted at that age to learn ballet so when I disovered Dad had signed me for tap dancing I gave up and went to the beach instead. Now I am sorry I chose that path.
I liked his movies, he was an amazing dancer, maybe not always an amazing person from some things I have seen or read
River
children's dreams for their own future careers may be unrealistic, but those dreams can be very powerful and long lasting. The trouble is that parents knew more about how much money they had for their kids' classes, or how competitive the ballet world would be, or how talented their children really were or were not.
Despite Fred's mother throwing herself into starting a brother-sister act for her two children, Fred really hadn't been as interested as Adele wanted. In the end, Mum was correct!
Jo-Anne
and not just an amazing dancer! He was an excellent pianist, a very pleasant singer, and a quality clarinet player and drummer.
I didn't realise that Fred Astaire was awarded an honorary Academy Award for his films in 1950, and he received a Life Achievement Award from the American Film Institute in 1981.
Fred Astaire was always the dapper guy dancing across the screen; but, he wasn't always Mr. White Tie and Tails. Peter Levinson looks at the creation of America's greatest dancer and how he grew from a Nebraska boy, with family roots in late 19th century Austria, into the personification of panache on the dance floor. He partnered a bevy of beautiful women eg his sister Adele, Ginger Rogers, Cyd Charisse, Judy Garland and Rita Hayworth. His friendship with the Gershwin's, Porter and Berlin created classic American songbook interpretations.
Levinson looks at all of Astaire's career - his genius as a dancer, his limitations as a singer, his feelings about his partners and the history-making television specials to create a surprising new look at a Hollywood icon.
Peter Levinson, Puttin' on the Ritz: Fred Astaire and the Fine Art of Panache, 2009
Amazon
I will try to buy a copy of the Levinson book and give it to my local library. I am very grateful to hear you add other important partners who I hadn't thought about - Cyd Charisse, Judy Garland and Rita Hayworth. Many thanks.
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