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Original Content at https://www.opednews.com/articles/Dancing-with-Dixie-Vaudev-by-Meryl-Ann-Butler-090404-769.html (Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher). |
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April 4, 2009
Dancing with Dixie: Vaudeville Star Still Shines
By Meryl Ann Butler
Glamorous vaudeville dancer is 90 years young - a product of a lifetime rich with joy and creativity!
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Broadway and vaudeville performer, specialty tap dancer, musical comedienne, and self described “health nut,” Dixie Roberts, danced her way to vibrant wellness through most of the 20th Century.
Born on April 5, 1919, her first professional dancing job was with the Tommy Dorsey Band in 1935, when she was 16. Billed as the dancer who “taps with a Southern accent,” she was featured in ads for 7-Up and Clairol. Today, Dixie enjoys her retirement in Florida, as a wife, mother, grandmother, and great-grandmother.
Dixie danced her way across the U.S. in a host of clubs and houses of entertainment from New York City’s Copacabana to Chicago’s Chez Paree to San Francisco’s Orpheum. She often made a memorable entrance, sliding onto the stage in an athletic burst of panache to appreciative applause! She opened shows for, and shared the stage with some of the biggest stars of the day, including Danny Thomas, Henny Youngman, Pearl Bailey, Jimmy Durante, and Benny Goodman.
After a performance at the La Martinique dinner theatre in 1946, a fan made his way backstage to tell her what an exceptional dancer she was. They dined at New York’s Armondo’s afterwards, and he tried to convince her to go to Hollywood. But she stayed on the East Coast, turning down both Hollywood—and Gene Kelly!
During one USO hospital tour, Dixie tap-danced with Peg Leg Bates, the renowned, black, one-legged tap dancer. She recalls that he was a very cheerful fellow, and “danced far better with one leg than almost anyone else with two!”
Dixie was also a specialty performer in the Broadway show, “Dream with Music” (1943), in which she was the featured dancer in several numbers, and also danced with legendary choreographer, George Balanchine’s wife, Vera Zorina.
The picture of health, Dixie was also a prizewinning athlete: A.A.U. Swimming Champ, expert riflewoman, and New York State Cue Champion. As a teen she was invited to train for the U.S. Olympic swim team. When her father refused to let her participate in such scandalous activity, she "showed" him—she went into “show biz”, instead!
The Sunday Mirror reported, in language that sounds a bit archaic to modern ears, that 22-year-old Dixie, “once had a run of 93 in three cushion billiards, bowls a neat 200 and finished last season batting .405 … and has the trophies to prove it … She has won 11 plaques for excellence in sports since she’s been in show business, and her accomplishments range from swimming and track to stud poker. There’s a popular belief that men don’t like athletic girls, but Dixie belies it. She’s probably the most popular dame in the show, in a cast of 50 expensive stunners.”
“Show biz” could be very demanding. In those days it was not unusual to perform in five or six shows per day, beginning in the morning and ending late in the evening.
One 1943 entertainment reporter noted, “Miss Roberts … can be seen daily at the Vitamaster, New York’s famous Health Food Center, where she enjoys her favorite salad and fresh vegetable juices.”
A fitness-conscious athlete and vegetarian, Dixie stuck to her healthy regime while other performers ate fast foods and partied all night. She believed in having a positive attitude, frequently revealing a deep and wildly infectious laugh, which continues to this day. In addition to performances, Dixie exercised daily and kept a diet regimen that was filled with juices, salads and fresh vegetables.
Meryl Ann Butler is an artist, author, educator and OpedNews Managing Editor who has been actively engaged in utilizing the arts as stepping-stones toward joy-filled wellbeing since she was a hippie. She began writing for OpEdNews in Feb, 2004. She became a Senior Editor in August 2012 and Managing Editor in January, 2013. In June, 2015, the combined views on her articles, diaries and quick link contributions topped one million. She was particularly happy that her article about Bree Newsome removing the Confederate flag was the one that put her past the million mark.
Her art in a wide variety of media can be seen on her YouTube video, "Visionary Artist Meryl Ann Butler on Creativity and Joy" at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UcGs2r_66QE
A NYC native, her response to 9-11 was to pen an invitation to healing through creativity, entitled, "90-Minute Quilts: 15+ Projects You Can Stitch in an Afternoon" (Krause 2006), which is a bestseller in the craft field. The sequel, MORE 90-Minute Quilts: 20+ Quick and Easy Projects With Triangles and Squares was released in April, 2011. Her popular video, How to Stitch a Quilt in 90 Minutes with Meryl Ann Butler can be seen at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PrShGOQaJQ8
She has been active in a number of international, arts-related projects as a citizen diplomat, and was arts advisor to Baltimore's CIUSSR (Center for Improving US-Soviet Relations), 1987-89. She made two trips to the former USSR in 1987 and 1988 to speak to artists, craftpeople and fashion designers on the topic of utilizing the arts as a tool for global wellbeing. She created the historical "First US-Soviet Children's Peace Quilt Exchange Project" in 1987-88, which was the first time a reciprocal quilt was given to the US from the former USSR.
Her artwork is in collections across the globe.
Meryl Ann is a founding member of The Labyrinth Society and has been building labyrinths since 1992. She publishes an annual article about the topic on OpEdNews on World Labyrinth Day, the first Saturday in May.
OpEdNews Senior Editor Joan Brunwasser interviewed Meryl Ann in "Beyond Surviving: How to Thrive in Challenging Times" at https://www.opednews.com/articles/Beyond-Surviving--How-to-by-Joan-Brunwasser-Anxiety_Appreciation_Coronavirus_Creativity-200318-988.html
Find out more about Meryl Ann's artistic life in "OEN Managing Ed, Meryl Ann Butler, Featured on the Other Side of the Byline" at https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/OEN-Managing-Ed-Meryl-Ann-in-Life_Arts-Artistic_Artists_Quilt-170917-615.html
On Feb 11, 2017, Senior Editor Joan Brunwasser interviewed Meryl Ann in Pink Power: Sister March, Norfolk, VA at http://www.opednews.com/articles/Pink-Power-Sister-March--by-Joan-Brunwasser-Pussy-Hats-170212-681.html
"Creativity and Healing: The Work of Meryl Ann Butler" by Burl Hall is at
http://www.opednews.com/articles/Creativity-and-Healing--T-by-Burl-Hall-130414-18.html
Burl and Merry Hall interviewed Meryl Ann on their BlogTalk radio show, "Envision This," at http://www.blogtalkradio.com/envision-this/2013/04/11/meryl-ann-butler-art-as-a-medicine-for-the-soul
Archived articles www.opednews.com/author/author1820.html
Older archived articles, from before May 2005 are here.