Ruby Keeler
Ruby Keeler (born Ethel Hilda Keeler; August 25, 1909 – February 28, 1993) was a Canadian-born American actress, dancer, and singer renowned for her tap-dancing roles in Warner Bros. musical films during the 1930s.[1] Her breakthrough came with the 1933 film 42nd Street, where she portrayed a chorus girl elevated to stardom, launching a series of hits choreographed by Busby Berkeley, including Gold Diggers of 1933 and Footlight Parade.[2] These productions, often co-starring Dick Powell, featured elaborate overhead formations and provided escapist entertainment amid the Great Depression.[3] Keeler's early career began on Broadway as a teenager in chorus lines, boosted by her 1928 marriage to entertainer Al Jolson, which facilitated her Hollywood entry despite their 1939 divorce amid reports of his demanding lifestyle.[1] She retired from films in 1941 following her second marriage to businessman John Lowe, with whom she raised four children, before staging a comeback at age 61 in the 1971 Broadway revival of No, No, Nanette, earning the George M. Cohan Award that year and Harvard's Hasty Pudding Award in 1972.[1] Keeler died of cancer in 1993, leaving a legacy tied to the golden age of movie musicals.[1]
Early Life
Birth and Family Background
Ethel Hilda Keeler, professionally known as Ruby Keeler, was born on August 25, 1909, in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.[1][4] She was the eldest daughter of Ralph Hector Keeler and Elnora "Nellie" Lahey Keeler, part of an Irish Catholic family of six children.[5][6] Her father worked in local industry, with accounts varying between employment at a ropeworks factory and as a grocer.[7][5] Two of her sisters, Helen and Gertrude, later attempted brief careers in performance.[6]Immigration and Childhood in New York
Keeler immigrated to the United States in 1912 at the age of three with her parents, Ralph and Nellie (née Lahey) Keeler, departing from Dartmouth, Nova Scotia, where her father had held an unstable position at a local ropeworks factory.[7] The move was motivated by the prospect of steadier employment and higher wages in New York City.[1][6] The family settled on Manhattan's Lower East Side, a crowded enclave of working-class immigrants, residing in modest tenement housing amid economic challenges typical of early 20th-century urban newcomers.[8] Ralph Keeler took up work as a truck driver to support the household, though opportunities remained limited for the Irish Catholic family.[6] Keeler's childhood unfolded in this environment of poverty, where she attended public school but increasingly gravitated toward performance arts, fostering an early passion for dance through informal lessons and observation of neighborhood entertainment.[1] By her preteen years, financial pressures prompted her to contribute to the family income, including stints as an usherette, while her mother's supplemental laundry work helped sustain them during lean periods.[6]Broadway Career
Dance Training and Debut
Keeler began receiving dance instruction around age 10 while attending St. Catherine of Siena parochial school on New York's East Side, where a teacher visited weekly to instruct students in various styles, including tap.[6] After only three months of such training, she dropped out of the sixth grade and started performing as a singer and dancer in nightclubs and speakeasies, honing her tap skills in venues like El Fay.[9][10] At age 13 in 1923, despite being underage, Keeler lied about her age to audition for Broadway and secured her debut as a chorus dancer in George M. Cohan's musical The Rise of Rosie O'Reilly, which opened at the Fulton Theatre on June 27.[3][11][12] During the audition process, she reportedly improvised by joining dancers on stage uninvited, prompting the director to question her presence; her bold response—"I asked you!"—helped land the role.[9] This chorus position marked her entry into professional theater, though she remained in ensemble roles initially, performing buck-and-wing dances typical of the era's hoofing style.[11]Rise to Prominence in Musical Theater
Keeler secured her first named roles in quick succession during 1927, appearing as Ruby in Bye, Bye, Bonnie, which opened on January 13 and ran for 125 performances at the Majestic Theatre. Later that year, she played Mazie Maxwell in Lucky, a musical comedy that premiered on March 22 and closed after 67 performances. These parts marked her transition from anonymous ensemble work to featured performer status, showcasing her emerging talents as a dancer and singer in New York's vibrant musical scene.[13] By late 1927, Keeler took on dual roles as Mamie and Ruby in Sidewalks of New York, which debuted on October 3, 1927, and played for 112 performances at the Erlanger Theatre.[14] This production further honed her stage presence amid the era's chorus-heavy revues and comedies, building audience recognition through consistent visibility in mid-tier musicals.[13] Her ascent culminated in the lead role of Dixie Dugan in Florenz Ziegfeld's Show Girl, a backstage musical that opened on July 2, 1929, at the Ziegfeld Theatre and ran for 111 performances until October 5.[15] Featuring music by George Gershwin, lyrics by Ira Gershwin and Gus Kahn, and co-starring Jimmy Durante, the show cast Keeler—freshly married to Al Jolson—as an aspiring performer navigating Broadway ambitions, a role that propelled her to star billing under Ziegfeld's prestigious banner.[15][16] This opportunity, influenced by her husband's fame, established Keeler as a prominent figure in musical theater, drawing acclaim for her energetic tap routines and youthful appeal before her pivot to film.[13]Hollywood Career
Transition to Film via Marriage to Al Jolson
Keeler met Al Jolson in Los Angeles in 1928, having been dispatched there from New York to support publicity efforts for The Jazz Singer, Jolson's groundbreaking 1927 film that introduced synchronized dialogue to cinema.[17] The 21-year-old dancer and the established performer, then 41, married on September 21, 1928, in Jersey City, New Jersey, following a brief courtship.[18] Their union relocated Keeler to Hollywood, aligning her career trajectory with Jolson's burgeoning film endeavors at Warner Bros., where he held significant contractual influence after the success of his early talkies.[19] Jolson, leveraging his star power, facilitated Keeler's entry into motion pictures by arranging a screen test and advocating for her opportunities within the studio system.[20] This connection culminated in her film debut in Warner Bros.' 42nd Street on March 9, 1933, where she portrayed chorus girl Dorothy Brock in the Busby Berkeley-choreographed musical that propelled her to stardom.[17] Though Keeler maintained some Broadway engagements post-marriage, the relocation and Jolson's endorsements shifted her focus from stage to screen, marking the onset of her Hollywood phase amid the early 1930s musical boom.[19]Breakthrough in Warner Bros. Musicals
Ruby Keeler achieved her breakthrough in Hollywood with the lead role of Peggy Sawyer in Warner Bros.' 42nd Street (1933), a backstage musical directed by Lloyd Bacon.[21] In the film, released on March 9, 1933, Keeler portrayed a novice chorus dancer elevated to stardom after the production's prima donna suffers an injury on opening night, showcasing her tap-dancing skills alongside co-stars Warner Baxter, Bebe Daniels, and Dick Powell.[22] The production marked Keeler's credited film debut and introduced Busby Berkeley's innovative overhead choreography techniques to Warner Bros. films, with music by Harry Warren and lyrics by Al Dubin.[21] The film's financial success, grossing significantly during the Great Depression, propelled Keeler to stardom and initiated a cycle of Warner Bros. musicals featuring her and Powell as the wholesome romantic leads.[23] Following 42nd Street, Keeler starred in Gold Diggers of 1933 (June 1933) and Footlight Parade (September 1933), both choreographed by Berkeley, which replicated the formula of elaborate production numbers and rags-to-riches narratives centered on show business.[24] These films collectively earned over $5 million in domestic rentals for Warner Bros. by 1935, establishing Keeler as a key figure in the studio's musical output.[17] Keeler and Powell appeared together in seven Warner Bros. musicals between 1933 and 1936, capitalizing on their on-screen chemistry to draw audiences seeking escapist entertainment.[25] Her appeal lay in her energetic tap routines and relatable persona, contrasting with more glamorous stars, which aligned with Berkeley's vision of synchronized, geometric dance formations that became synonymous with Warner Bros. musicals of the era.[24] This breakthrough phase solidified Keeler's position as a top box-office draw until the mid-1930s.[26]Collaboration with Dick Powell and Peak Fame
Ruby Keeler's on-screen partnership with Dick Powell began in 42nd Street (1933), directed by Lloyd Bacon, in which she played aspiring chorus girl Peggy Sawyer opposite Powell as singer Billy Lawler.[22] The film featured innovative choreography by Busby Berkeley and became a major box office success, grossing significant profits and helping stabilize Warner Bros. amid financial difficulties during the Great Depression.[22][27] This collaboration extended to six additional Warner Bros. musicals released between 1933 and 1936: Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933), Footlight Parade (1933), Dames (1934), Flirtation Walk (1934), Shipmates Forever (1935), and Colleen (1936).[28][29] These productions highlighted elaborate production numbers, Keeler's energetic tap dancing, and Powell's crooning, establishing the duo as a reliable draw for audiences craving lighthearted escapism.[23][30] From 1933 to 1936, Keeler reached the height of her stardom through these films, which collectively propelled her to prominence as a leading musical performer and contributed to the genre's popularity during the early sound era.[9] Individual entries like Gold Diggers of 1933 and Shipmates Forever also achieved strong commercial performance, reinforcing her appeal as a wholesome, relatable figure in Depression-era cinema.[30]Career Decline and Retirement from Cinema
Following the success of her collaborations with Dick Powell in Warner Bros. musicals, Keeler's film output shifted toward less commercially viable projects in the late 1930s. Her 1937 vehicle Ready, Willing and Able failed to replicate the box-office appeal of earlier hits like 42nd Street (1933), which grossed nearly $1.5 million domestically, amid changing audience preferences for musicals as the genre's novelty waned post-Depression era boom.[31] In a 1937 interview, Keeler expressed dissatisfaction with her abilities, stating she did not feel capable of carrying a film on her own, contributing to her waning studio confidence.[1] Keeler's personal life intersected with professional setbacks; her 1939 divorce from Al Jolson, after a tumultuous marriage marked by his controlling influence over her career choices, further disrupted her Hollywood momentum.[32] Subsequent non-musical roles, such as in Mother Carey's Chickens (1938), and a low-budget Columbia Pictures feature Sweetheart of the Campus (1941), underscored the decline, with the latter representing her final screen appearance amid diminishing opportunities for her tap-dancing persona in evolving cinematic tastes. Keeler retired from cinema in 1941 following Sweetheart of the Campus, prioritizing family after remarrying businessman John Homer Lowe on July 30, 1941, and subsequently raising four adopted children.[33] This decision aligned with her expressed career doubts and the era's shift away from Berkeley-style extravaganzas, leading to a 30-year hiatus from performing until a Broadway revival in 1971.[34]Later Career
Return to Performing Arts
After nearly three decades in retirement following her departure from Hollywood in the early 1940s, Ruby Keeler returned to the performing arts in 1971 by starring as Sue Smith in a Broadway revival of the 1925 musical No, No, Nanette.[35] Producer Harry Rigby, seeking to capitalize on nostalgia for 1930s musicals, cast Keeler—then aged 61—alongside Jack Gilford as her husband Jimmy Smith and Helen Gallagher in a supporting role, with choreography by Donald Saddler and supervision by her former Warner Bros. collaborator Busby Berkeley.[36] The production opened on January 19, 1971, at the 46th Street Theatre, where it achieved commercial success with 861 performances, drawing audiences eager for Keeler's renewed tap-dancing routines in numbers like "I Want to Be Happy."[37] Keeler's performance earned critical praise for its vitality and precision, with reviewers noting her ability to recapture the energetic hoofing that defined her early career despite the physical demands and her extended absence from the stage.[34] The revival's success stemmed in part from its evocation of flapper-era charm and Keeler's personal history, positioning her comeback as a rare instance of a faded star reclaiming prominence in live theater rather than relying on filmed retrospectives. Following the New York run, Keeler toured with the production across the United States for two additional years, extending her return until health issues prompted her withdrawal in 1973.[38]Stage and Television Appearances
Keeler made sporadic television appearances in the 1950s and 1960s, reflecting growing nostalgic interest in her early musical career.[10] In 1964, she guest-starred in episode 18, "The Show Must Go On," of the ABC circus drama series The Greatest Show on Earth, starring Jack Palance.[39] That same year, she performed in the television special Hooray for Hollywood, showcasing her singing and dancing talents.[5] On stage, Keeler appeared in a summer stock revival of the comedy Bell, Book and Candle in 1968, marking an early step in her return to live performance.[5] Her major comeback arrived with the 1971 Broadway revival of the 1925 musical No, No, Nanette, adapted by Burt Shevelove, in which she portrayed the wealthy wife Sue Smith alongside Jack Gilford as her husband Jimmy.[40] Directed by Busby Berkeley with choreography by Donald Saddler, the production previewed from January 7 and officially opened on January 19, 1971, at the 46th Street Theatre, running for 861 performances until its closure on February 3, 1973.[41] This engagement represented Keeler's first Broadway role in 42 years, since her 1929 appearance in Show Girl.[8] Critics and audiences praised Keeler's vibrant tap-dancing and enduring charm, which contributed to the revival's commercial success and her personal resurgence as a performer in her early 60s.[32] She capped the run's acclaim by performing "I Want to Be Happy" with the cast at the 1972 Tony Awards.[42] Following No, No, Nanette, Keeler largely retired from stage and television work, focusing on personal life until cameo film roles in the 1970s and 1980s.[5]Personal Life
Marriages and Divorces
Keeler married entertainer Al Jolson on September 21, 1928, in a secret ceremony aboard the RMS Olympic en route to Europe for their honeymoon.[43][44] The couple adopted a son, Albert Peter Lowe (originally named Al Jolson Jr.), during their marriage.[18] Their union ended in divorce on December 26, 1939, with Keeler testifying that Jolson ridiculed her professionally and personally, leading to an inferiority complex.[45][1] On October 29, 1941, Keeler wed businessman John Homer Lowe Jr. in Los Angeles, California.[46] The marriage produced four children: three daughters and one son. Lowe and Keeler remained married until his death on February 23, 1969.[47]Family and Children
Keeler adopted Al Jolson Jr., born Asa Yoelson Jr. in 1935 to Jolson's previous wife, during her marriage to the singer; the boy, nicknamed "Sonny Boy," was renamed Peter Albert Lowe following her 1939 divorce and 1941 remarriage, and remained part of her family thereafter.[48][49] With her second husband, businessman John Homer Lowe Jr., whom she married on October 29, 1941, in Los Angeles, Keeler had four biological children: a son, John H. Lowe III (born circa 1943), and three daughters, Theresa, Christine, and Kathleen.[46][50][51] The family resided primarily in California, where Keeler focused on raising her children after retiring from entertainment. John H. Lowe III later worked as a Broadway stage manager, including on productions like Pippin.[52] Lowe Sr. died of cancer in 1969 at age 57, leaving Keeler to raise the younger children as a widow.[53][47]Death and Legacy
Final Years and Illness
In 1974, while visiting a daughter in Montana, Keeler suffered a cerebral aneurysm that required emergency brain surgery at Columbus Hospital in Great Falls, leaving her in critical condition.[54] She endured a two-month hospitalization, multiple subsequent brain operations, and the lingering effects of a stroke, which significantly limited her physical abilities and ended her dancing career.[1] Through intensive therapy and personal resolve, she regained sufficient function to resume limited public engagements.[55] Following her recovery, Keeler served as a spokeswoman for the National Stroke Association, leveraging her experience to raise awareness about stroke recovery and prevention.[50] In her later years, she resided in Rancho Mirage, California, where persistent health issues continued to affect her, though she made sporadic appearances, including a cameo in the 1989 film Beverly Hills Brats.[1] Keeler died of cancer on February 28, 1993, at her Rancho Mirage home, at the age of 83.[56][50] Her son, John Lowe, confirmed the cause, noting it followed a period of declining health.[1]Posthumous Recognition and Cultural Impact
Following her death on February 28, 1993, Keeler's contributions to early sound-era musicals received formal preservation recognition through the United States National Film Registry. Her breakthrough film 42nd Street (1933), in which she starred as chorus girl Dorothy Brock's understudy Peggy Sawyer, was selected in 1998 for its "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant" qualities, ensuring archival protection by the Library of Congress.[57] Similarly, Gold Diggers of 1933, featuring Keeler alongside Joan Blondell and Dick Powell in Busby Berkeley's elaborate production numbers, joined the registry in 2003, highlighting the era's innovative choreography and escapist appeal during the Great Depression.[57] Keeler's cultural impact lies in her embodiment of the wholesome, relatable performer in Warner Bros.' backstage musicals, which blended tap dancing with narrative optimism to captivate audiences amid economic hardship. Her energetic, low-to-the-ground "buck-and-wing" tap style—rooted in Irish clogging traditions—contrasted with more acrobatic contemporaries, influencing the genre's emphasis on accessible, high-spirited routines that prioritized spectacle over virtuosity.[58] These films, including pairings with Powell in titles like Footlight Parade (1933), helped establish the template for Depression-era musicals, where synchronized overhead formations by Berkeley amplified Keeler's charm and propelled the studio's output to box-office dominance, with 42nd Street alone grossing over $2 million domestically on a $400,000 budget.[24] Though Keeler's on-screen persona was often self-deprecating about her singing and dancing abilities, her legacy endures in the revival of these works through classic film screenings and their role in inspiring later adaptations, such as the Tony Award-winning 1980 Broadway musicalization of 42nd Street, which drew directly from her film's structure and energy.[34] Her films remain staples in discussions of Hollywood's transition to sound musicals, underscoring a pivotal shift toward integrated song-and-dance sequences that prioritized emotional uplift over realism.[17]Filmography
Feature Films
Ruby Keeler made her feature film debut in Show Girl in Hollywood (1930), appearing as herself in a cameo role.[26] Her breakthrough came with the Warner Bros. musical 42nd Street (1933), where she portrayed chorus girl Peggy Sawyer who rises to stardom, co-starring with Dick Powell and directed by Lloyd Bacon with choreography by Busby Berkeley.[22] This film launched her as a leading lady in a string of backstage musicals.[26] Keeler starred opposite Powell in several subsequent productions, including Gold Diggers of 1933 (1933) as Polly Parker, Footlight Parade (1933) as Bea Thorn, Dames (1934) as Mabel Divine, Flirtation Walk (1934) as Kit Faversham, Shipmates Forever (1935) as June Olsen, and Colleen (1936) as Colleen Riley.[26] She also appeared with her husband Al Jolson in Go into Your Dance (1935), playing Bonnie Blair. Later films included Ready, Willing and Able (1937) as Laura Waldon, Mother Carey's Chickens (1938) as Sue Carey, a non-musical drama, and her final feature Sweetheart of the Campus (1941) as Betty Blake.[26]| Year | Title | Role |
|---|---|---|
| 1930 | Show Girl in Hollywood | Herself |
| 1933 | 42nd Street | Peggy Sawyer |
| 1933 | Gold Diggers of 1933 | Polly Parker |
| 1933 | Footlight Parade | Bea Thorn |
| 1934 | Dames | Mabel Divine |
| 1934 | Flirtation Walk | Kit Faversham |
| 1935 | Go into Your Dance | Bonnie Blair |
| 1935 | Shipmates Forever | June Olsen |
| 1936 | Colleen | Colleen Riley |
| 1937 | Ready, Willing and Able | Laura Waldon |
| 1938 | Mother Carey's Chickens | Sue Carey |
| 1941 | Sweetheart of the Campus | Betty Blake |
Short Subjects
Keeler's early film appearances included short subjects that showcased her dancing talents prior to her feature film breakthrough. In 1928, she starred in the 10-minute short Ruby Keeler, a Movietone production featuring her performing tap dance routines. During her marriage to Al Jolson, Keeler appeared in Hollywood newsreel-style shorts. Screen Snapshots Series 9, No. 20 (1930), produced by Columbia Pictures, featured her as herself, identified as Mrs. Al Jolson, amid glimpses of celebrity life.[59] To promote her feature Dames (1934), Warner Bros. released the 9-minute Vitaphone short And She Learned About Dames, in which Keeler appeared as herself alongside clips from her musical numbers, including interactions with director Busby Berkeley and co-stars like Lyle Talbot.[60] Other shorts included Casino de Paree (1935), a musical variety short highlighting her performance skills.[2] Keeler also featured in later compilation shorts using her footage, such as Calling All Girls (1942), which incorporated clips from Footlight Parade (1933) to illustrate chorus line selection processes at Warner Bros.[61]| Title | Year | Type/Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ruby Keeler | 1928 | Tap dance performance short; Movietone production. |
| Screen Snapshots Series 9, No. 20 | 1930 | Newsreel short; appearance as Mrs. Al Jolson.[59] |
| And She Learned About Dames | 1934 | Promotional short for Dames; self-appearance with film clips.[60] |
| Casino de Paree | 1935 | Musical variety short.[2] |
| Calling All Girls | 1942 | Compilation short; archive footage from Footlight Parade.[61] |