The Ed Sullivan Show
The Ed Sullivan Show is an American TV variety show that originally ran on CBS from Sunday June 20, 1948 to Sun...
Acting
According to one jazz dance source, Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson was the chief instigator for getting tap dance "up on its toes." Early forms of tap, including the familiar "buck and wing", contained a flat-footed style, while Robinson performed on the balls of his feet with a shuffle-tap style that allowed him more improvisation. It obviously got him noticed and it certainly made him a legend.
Born Luther Robinson in Richmond, Virginia, on May 25, 1878, he was orphaned in infancy and reared by a grandmother. He took his brother Bill's name for his own once he went professional. His brother, in turn, took the name Percy and later became a renowned drummer. Hoofing in beer gardens at age 6, Bojangles joined traveling companies and vaudeville tours in his teens and slowly built up a successful reputation in nightclubs and musical comedies. He headlined with Cab Calloway many times at the famous Cotton Club in Harlem. Bojangles' unique sound came from using wooden taps and his direct claim to fame would be the creation of his famous "stair dance," which involved tapping up and down a flight of stairs both backwards and forwards. Both black and white audiences were taken by his style and finesse and, following the demise of vaudeville, he easily transferred his talents to Broadway. Lew Leslie, a white producer, put together "Blackbirds of 1928," an all-black revue that would prominently feature Bill and other black musical talents.
From there it was films for the now old-timer. In the 1930s various studios usurped his patented talent in their old-fashioned Depression-era musicals. Times being what they were, he was typically cast as a butler or servant. Nevertheless, he enjoyed immense popularity, especially when partnered with reigning #1 box office moppet Shirley Temple. Bojangles would be featured in four of Shirley's sentimental vehicles: The Little Colonel (1935) (in which he recreated his "stair dance" with her), The Littlest Rebel (1935), Just Around the Corner (1938) and Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm (1938). In addition, he assisted in the choreography on one of her other films, Dimples (1936). For the most part Bill was a specialty player, but every once in a while he got into the thick of things, playing Lena Horne's love interest in One Mile from Heaven (1937) for instance. Still tapping his heart out as a 60-year-old, Bojangles returned to the stage in "The Hot Mikado" which was a tuneful jazz reworking of Gilbert and Sullivan's classic operetta. Suffering from a chronic heart condition, he slowed down in the mid-'40s and died in New York City in 1949 of heart disease.
Browse movies and TV shows featuring Bill Robinson
The Ed Sullivan Show is an American TV variety show that originally ran on CBS from Sunday June 20, 1948 to Sun...
The relationship between an aspiring dancer and a popular songstress provides a retrospective of the great Afri...
A documentary film about dancing on the screen, from its origins after the invention of the movie camera, over...
Virgie Cary's father, a rebel officer, sneaks back to his rundown plantation to see his dying wife and is arres...
Rebecca's Uncle Harry leaves her with Aunt Miranda who forbids her to associate with show people. But neighbor...
After Southern belle Elizabeth Lloyd runs off to marry Yankee Jack Sherman, her father, a former Confederate co...
A female journalist travels to a new neighborhood after getting a (false) lead and is surprised by what she fin...
Horse trainer Steve Tapley is caught between the feuding Martingale and Shattuck families. He sides with young...
Horse trainer Steve Tapley is caught between the feuding Martingale and Shattuck families. He sides with young...
Bill "Bojangles" Robinson made his movie acting debut in this 1932 film, featuring Putney Dandridge, James Bask...
A circus performer falls in love with the son of a plantation owner in antebellum New Orleans. When the young m...
Chronicling the Harlem Renaissance era, this retrospective documentary tracks the origins of the soulful music...
Two-bit radio station owner Spud Miller doubles as the station's sole announcer. On the verge of bankruptcy, Sp...
At the Indianapolis Speedway mobsters try to bump off a young racer just as they did his dad. Junk yard owner t...
A group of prison inmates pass the time playing football and romancing ladies in this prison escape crime music...
Documentary featuring more than one dozen musical outtakes from classic 20th Century-Fox films.
Penny helps her idealistic architect father get his dream of a slum clearance project; The little miss dances w...
Tap Dance History: From Vaudeville to Film is a collection of rarely seen original film footage from Soundies a...
A talented tap dancer who can't get an audition uses his prowess at playing craps to gain ownership of a musica...
A wealthy young man falls hard for a beautiful showgirl, and her wily father quickly realizes the naïve boy wou...
"Let's Scuffle" is a short subject -- a single song-and-dance number -- that appears to have been cut from a fe...
A grab-bag of singers and dancers, featuring New York-based performers such as Rae Samuels, Bill "Bojangles" Ro...
A Soundie with Bill Robinson and the tune "By an Old Southern River."
Benny is fascinated by famous actors and dancers but his father just wants him to work at the delicatessen.