Gower Champion


Dancer
Gower Champion

About

Birth Place
Geneva, Illinois, USA
Born
June 22, 1921
Died
August 25, 1980
Cause of Death
Cancer

Biography

Legendary dancer and choreographer who found performing fame as a team with his then-wife, Marge Champion, and later went on to become one of Broadway's most renowned directors and choreographers, as well as an occasional film director. Gower Champion was raised in Hollywood. He won a dance contest while a junior in high school and with his dance partner, Jeanne Tyler, quit school and we...

Family & Companions

Marge Champion
Wife
Dancer, choreographer. Married October 5, 1947; divorced in 1973; played lead and supporting roles teamed with Champion in a handful of MGM musicals of the early 1950s, but never caught on as a starring duo.
Wanda Richert
Companion
Actor, dancer. Starred in stage version of "42nd Street"; involved at time of his death.

Notes

Gower Champion was portrayed by Bruce Gray in the 1985 film "Odd Birds."

"Light as bubbles, wildly imaginative in choreography, and infinitely meticulous in execution. Above all, they are exuberantly young. The best dance team of its kind in the world." --critic John Crosby

Biography

Legendary dancer and choreographer who found performing fame as a team with his then-wife, Marge Champion, and later went on to become one of Broadway's most renowned directors and choreographers, as well as an occasional film director. Gower Champion was raised in Hollywood. He won a dance contest while a junior in high school and with his dance partner, Jeanne Tyler, quit school and went on the road. Their performance at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel led to featured dancing roles in several Broadway musicals, beginning with "Streets of Paris" in 1939, and also including "Count Me In" (1941). During World War II, Champion was in the Coast Guard, and toured with a show called "Tars and Spars," along with another serviceman, Sid Caesar. When Champion returned to New York after the war, he found that Tyler had married and no longer wanted to dance professionally. He wrote to his former dance teacher, Ernest Belcher, asking for suggestions. Belcher suggested his daughter, then performing under the stage name Marjorie Bell, with whom Gower had attended Bancroft Junior High School in Los Angeles. Although Gower was 6' to Marge's 5'1," Marge was willing, and the duo became "Gower and Bell" in 1945, although their first professional appearance together was in 1947. They married that same year and were then billed as "Marge and Gower Champion." In 1948, Champion staged the numbers for a Broadway revue called "Small Wonder," and a few months later won his first Tony for choreographing the musical "Lend an Ear." The latter included numbers satirizing the musicals of the 1920s. In 1951, Champion, assisted by his wife, choreographed the numbers for "Make A Wish," including a ballet satirizing bargain day at a department store. The "story dance" had blossomed. But Marge and Gower Champion wanted to perform. In 1949, they appeared with Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca in "Admiral Broadway Revue," a TV series airing on both the Dumont and NBC networks. The next year, while Caesar and Coca went on to do "Your Show of Shows," the Champions were brought to Hollywood to appear in "Mr. Music" at Paramount with Bing Crosby. They then signed a long-term contract with MGM. They were Ellie and Frank, the dancing players of "Show Boat" in 1951, and performed four dances in "Lovely to Look At," a remake of "Roberta," as well as starring in "Everything I Have Is Yours," and several others. But, the Champions wished to continue to appear on TV as well, and when MGM balked, their contract was dissolved. Appearing on TV in the 50s, Gower also usually produced and directed the duo's programs. They were usually seen on CBS, in such specials as "Three for Tonight" (1955), "America Pauses for Springtime" (1959), "Marriage: Handle With Love" (1959), and in their own situation comedy, "The Marge and Gower Champion Show" (1957), in which they played dancers trying to start new lives. Beginning in 1961, with the demise of the Hollywood musical and similar TV programs, Champion began performing less and choreographing and directing more, turning to the Broadway stage once again. He had a hit with "Bye, Bye Birdie" in 1961, and made Broadway history with "Hello, Dolly!" in 1964, winning multiple Tony Awards for both. He also worked with musical stars on TV, producing and directing "The Julie Andrews Special" and "An Evening With Julie Andrews and Harry Belafonte," both in 1969. Champion made his own final acting appearance playing an exercise instructor in the 1977 NBC TV movie, "Sharon: Portrait of a Mistress." Champion did not truly crack the film medium as a director, working at the helm of only two films, "My Six Loves" in 1963, and "Bank Shot" in 1980. The former was an overly sweet Debbie Reynolds vehicle in which she is a Broadway star seeking a break away from the footlights. She takes in six adorable moppets who help her find a new domestic meaning to her life. The latter was based on the novel by Donald E. Westlake. Marge and Gower Champion divorced in 1973. In 1980, he choreographed and directed the new version of "42nd Street," but died hours before it opened of a rare blood cancer. Champion was awarded his final Tony posthumously.

Life Events

1935

Formed dancing duo with Jeanne Tyler, quit school to tour

1939

First Broadway show, "Streets of Paris"

1945

Formed "Gower and Bell" dance team with junior high school friend Marjorie Belcher

1946

Performed in the MGM musical feature biopic, "Till the Clouds Roll By"

1948

Debut as stage and television director

1949

With Marge Champion on "Admiral Broadway Revue"

1950

First prominent screen roles for "Marge and Gower Champion" in "Mr. Music"

1951

The Champions co-star in "Show Boat"

1952

Marge and Gower Champion featured in MGM musical vehicle, "Everything I Have Is Yours"

1955

Last MGM musical, "Jupiter's Darling"

1957

Starred in "The Marge & Gower Champion Show"

1963

Film directing debut, "My Six Loves"

1964

Directed the smash Broadway musical hit, "Hello, Dolly!"

1977

Played exercise instructor in NBC TV movie, "Sharon: Portrait of a Mistress"

1980

Directed last Broadway show "42nd Street"; died afternoon of opening

Photo Collections

Lovely to Look At - Scene Stills
Here are some scene stills from MGM's Lovely to Look At (1952), starring Kathryn Grayson, Howard Keel, Ann Miller, and Red Skelton.

Videos

Movie Clip

Trailer

Bank Shot (1974) -- Original Trailer Joanna Cassidy in a tub of money delivers the pitch straight to camera, in the trailer for Bank Shot, 1974, the heist comedy starring George C. Scott, from Landers-Roberts, the team behind the 1971 hit The Hot Rock.
Give a Girl a Break - (Original Trailer) The dancing team Marge and Gower Champion star in Give A Girl A Break (1954) with support from Debbie Reynolds and Bob Fosse.
Everything I Have Is Yours - (Original Trailer) On the eve of her big Broadway break, a dancer discovers she's pregnant in Everything I Have Is Yours (1952).
Lovely to Look At - (Original Trailer) Original trailer for MGM's All-star musical comedy, Lovely To Look At, 1952, with Howard Keel, Kathryn Grayson, Red Skelton and Ann Miller, a remake of the 1936 hit Roberta.
Girl Most Likely, The - (Original Trailer) A girl accepts three wedding proposals at once and dreams of marriage to each man in the musical remake of Tom, Dick and Harry, The Girl Most Likely (1957).
Till the Clouds Roll By - (Original Trailer) Robert Walker stars in the true story of composer Jerome Kern's rise to the top on Broadway and in Hollywood - Till the Clouds Roll By (1946), co-starring Van Heflin and Judy Garland.
Jupiter's Darling - (Original Trailer) Esther Williams' last MGM musical sent her to Ancient Rome as a senator's fiancee who falls for Hannibal and his elephants in Jupiter's Darling (1955).
Show Boat (1951) - (Original Trailer) Riverboat entertainers find love, laughs and hardships as they sail along "Old Man River" in the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical SHOW BOAT (1951) starring Ava Gardner, Howard Keel and Kathryn Grayson.

Family

John W Champion
Father
Advertising executive. Divorced from Gower's mother in 1921.
Beatrice Carlisle
Mother
Gregg Champion
Son
Director. Born in November 1956; mother, Marge Champion.
Blake Champion
Son
Born in February 1962; died in an automobile accident in May 1987 at age 25; mother, Marge Champion.

Companions

Marge Champion
Wife
Dancer, choreographer. Married October 5, 1947; divorced in 1973; played lead and supporting roles teamed with Champion in a handful of MGM musicals of the early 1950s, but never caught on as a starring duo.
Wanda Richert
Companion
Actor, dancer. Starred in stage version of "42nd Street"; involved at time of his death.

Bibliography

Notes

Gower Champion was portrayed by Bruce Gray in the 1985 film "Odd Birds."

"Light as bubbles, wildly imaginative in choreography, and infinitely meticulous in execution. Above all, they are exuberantly young. The best dance team of its kind in the world." --critic John Crosby