Marge Champion


Dancer
Marge Champion

About

Also Known As
Marge Champion Sagal, Marjorie Bell, Marge Sagal, Marjorie Celeste Belcher, Marge Belcher
Birth Place
Hollywood, California, USA
Born
September 02, 1919

Biography

A celebrated dancer, actress, and choreographer of stage, screen and TV, Marge Champion, together with her then-husband and partner Gower Champion, excelled at the "story dance," a combination of dance and pantomime, which they performed to great renown on Broadway, in several films, and on such TV programs as "The Broadway Admiral Revue" (NBC, 1949). Champion was the daughter of Ernest ...

Photos & Videos

The Long Gray Line - Behind-the-Scenes Photos
Lovely to Look At - Scene Stills

Family & Companions

Art Babbitt
Husband
Commercial artist. First marriage; divorced after two years of marriage.
Gower Champion
Husband
Choreographer. Married on October 5, 1947; divorced in 1973; died in August 1980.
Boris Sagal
Husband
Director. Married from January 1, 1977 until his death on May 22, 1981.

Bibliography

"Catch the New Wind"
Marge Champion with Marilee Zdenek
"God Is a Verb"
Marge Champion with Marilee Zdenek

Notes

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

Since 1995, Champion has been on the nominating committee for the Tony Awards.

Biography

A celebrated dancer, actress, and choreographer of stage, screen and TV, Marge Champion, together with her then-husband and partner Gower Champion, excelled at the "story dance," a combination of dance and pantomime, which they performed to great renown on Broadway, in several films, and on such TV programs as "The Broadway Admiral Revue" (NBC, 1949). Champion was the daughter of Ernest Belcher, a ballet coach for Hollywood stars. In 1936, she performed with the Los Angeles Civic Opera in several productions, often before as many as 23,000 people. Soon thereafter, she was a human figure model for the heroine of Disney's animated "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" (1937), and later modeled for the blue fairy in "Pinocchio" (1940). Then known as Marjorie Bell, she also made her film debut in "The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle" (1939), although it was Ginger Rogers who danced with Fred Astaire.

Champion was keeping busy, but her career did not pick up steam until she moved to New York in 1945. She became reacquainted with Gower Champion, with whom she had attended Bancroft Junior High School in Hollywood. The duo appeared in the 1945 show, "Dark of the Moon" and also worked up a nightclub act. In 1947, they married and their "Gower & Bell" team became known as Marge and Gower Champion. They performed with Sid Caesar and Imogene Coca on TV's "The Admiral Broadway Revue," but when the comics went on to do "Your Show of Shows," the Champions returned to Hollywood. There they performed in several musicals at MGM, principally a lavish color remake of "Show Boat" (1951), in which they played second bananas Ellie and Frank. The Champions played leads in the agreeable "Everything I Have is Yours" (1952) and "Give a Girl a Break" (1953) and supporting roles in films including "Jupiter's Darling" (1955), but they were never top stars and MGM released them from their contract.

Among the reasons the Champions left Hollywood was because they had insisted on the right to do TV. And so the duo appeared in "Three for Tonight," a 1955 CBS special, and tried their own CBS sitcom in 1957, "The Marge & Gower Champion Show," in which they were dancers trying to establish a new life. As their style was considered "sophisticated," it easily lent itself to several somewhat highbrow specials such as "Accent of Love" and "Marriage--Handle With Care" (both 1959). Marge also began acting solo in straight dramatic roles, sometimes on the light side, such as the Peter Sellers comedy "The Party" (1968) or Frank Perry's thoughtful study of middle age, "The Swimmer" (1968).

Marge and Gower Champion divorced in 1973, but Marge, on her own, choreographed the feature film "The Day of the Locusts" (1973) and won an Emmy for creating the dances for the celebrated TV-movie "Queen of the Stardust Ballroom" (CBS, 1975), the story of a widow (Maureen Stapleton) who finds a new lease on life at a ballroom dance hall. In 1977, she married director Boris Sagal and began working with him on several of his TV projects. She did the choreography for the miniseries "Ike" (ABC, 1979) and was dialogue coach for the miniseries "Masada" (ABC, 1981). When Sagal was killed in a tragic accident while on location in 1981, Champion curtailed her activities. But she appeared on "Harry Belafonte: Don't Stop the Carnival," a 1988 HBO special reuniting her with a performer with whom she had appeared on TV in the late 50s. Champion, often billed since the late 70s as Champion Sagal, was also a consultant for the 1987 PBS documentary "Agnes: The Indomitable De Mille," and, in 1988, choreographed a show for the Berkshire Theatre Festival in Massachusetts.

Life Events

1936

Made stage debut before 23,000 people at Hollywood Bowl

1937

Human model for animated "Snow White"

1939

First film as actress, "The Story of Vernon and Irene Castle", starring Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire

1945

Formed "Gower and Bell" with Gower Champion; Broadway debut, "Dark of the Moon"

1949

With Gower, starred on TV's "Admiral Broadway Revue" (NBC)

1951

Brief star buildup for "Marge and Gower Champion" dance team by MGM, beginning with prominent supporting roles in the color remake of the musical "Show Boat"

1952

Co-starred with husband Gower Champion in the medium-budget MGM musical, "Everything I Have Is Yours"

1955

Last MGM musical, "Jupiter's Darling", starring Esther Williams

1957

Starred on TV in "The Marge & Gower Champion Show" (CBS)

1973

Choreographed dance sequence in the feature "The Day of the Locusts"

1975

Choreographed the TV-movie "Queen of the Stardust Ballroom" (CBS)

1987

Served as consultant for "Agnes: The Indomitable de Mille" (PBS)

1988

Choreographed the stage production of "Stepping Out" at the Berkshire Theatre Festival in Massachusetts

2000

Returned to stage performing, teamed with Donald Saddler for the revival of "Follies"

Photo Collections

The Long Gray Line - Behind-the-Scenes Photos
The Long Gray Line - Behind-the-Scenes Photos
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

Family

Ernest Belcher
Father
Ballet coach at Hollywood studios; choreographer.
Gladys Belcher
Mother
Lina Basquette
Step-Sister
Actor. Prominent in silent film; her mother was married to Ernest Belcher.
Richard Belcher
Brother
Gregg Champion
Son
Director. Born on November 20, 1956.
Blake Champion
Son
Born on February 14, 1962; died in an automobile accident in May 1987 at age 25.
Katey Sagal
Step-Daughter
Actor. Stars "Married, With Children".
Liz Sagal
Step-Daughter
Actor. Twin of Jean.
Jean Sagal
Step-Daughter
Actor. Twin of Liz.

Companions

Art Babbitt
Husband
Commercial artist. First marriage; divorced after two years of marriage.
Gower Champion
Husband
Choreographer. Married on October 5, 1947; divorced in 1973; died in August 1980.
Boris Sagal
Husband
Director. Married from January 1, 1977 until his death on May 22, 1981.

Bibliography

"Catch the New Wind"
Marge Champion with Marilee Zdenek
"God Is a Verb"
Marge Champion with Marilee Zdenek

Notes

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

Since 1995, Champion has been on the nominating committee for the Tony Awards.