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Dixie Dunbar

Biography

Dixie Dunbar

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Overview

  • Born
    January 19, 1919 · Montgomery, Alabama, USA
  • Died
    August 29, 1991 · Miami Beach, Florida, USA (heart attack)
  • Birth name
    Christina Elizabeth Dunbar
  • Height
    1.51 m

Biography

    • She was a vivacious, kewpie doll-like dancer/entertainer of 1930s Broadway and Hollywood musicals. Dixie Dunbar was born Christine Elizabeth Dunbar in Montgomery, Alabama on January 18, 1918, and raised in Atlanta, Georgia. Nicknamed "Tootsie" by her mother, she took dancing lessons at an early age and it was quickly learned that Dixie had a natural talent. Her mom took her to New York where her heavy Southern drawl had her quickly renamed "Dixie."

      After dancing in big band orchestras, nightclubs and classy restaurants for a spell, the 16-year-old was signed for a featured role in the Fox film George White's Scandals (1934) and was coached by legendary musical master himself. She performed in two songs -- "So Nice" with Cliff Edwards (aka "Ukulele Ike") and "My Dog Loves Your Dog" with Alice Faye, Rudy Vallee and Jimmy Durante. In the same year Dixie shouldered up to "Wizard of Oz" legends Ray Bolger and Bert Lahr on Broadway in "Life Begins at 8:40."

      Twentieth Century-Fox was taken by the teenager's spunky demeanor and signed her up where she appeared in both dancing and non-dancing roles including Soldat de carrière (1935), Le Roi du burlesque (1936), Le premier né (1936), Parade du football (1936), Dortoir de jeunes filles (1936), Tourbillon blanc (1936), Chante, bébé, chante! (1936), Les as du stade (1937), Mam'zelle vedette (1938), La folle parade (1938), Walking Down Broadway (1938). She also had different roles in two of the "Jones Family" film series -- Educating Father (1936) and Back to Nature (1936).

      Unable to rise above the "B" material into leading lady status, Dixie, unhappy with filmmaking and disappointed at the lack of success she had, abandoned movie-making altogether in 1939 and returned to the 'Great White Way' to appear in "Yokel Boy" with Buddy Ebsen, Phil Silvers and Judy Canova. In 1940, she met and married Gene Snyder, the co-director of the Rockettes of Radio City Music Hall.

      Dixie later toured in a nightclub act but things died down pretty quickly. One vision of Dixie, ironically, was of only her legs! From 1949 to 1951, she was "seen" dancing in the now-famous television commercials ads that featured her totally covered head to hips by a giant Old Gold cigarette box! Divorced from Snyder in 1953, she married twice more (Robert M. Herndon, an executive of Cinerama Corp., Jack L. King, who predeceased her), and had no children from any of her marriages. Once operating a restaurant in Florida, she began losing her eyesight to glaucoma in the late 1970's. Dixie died on August 29, 1991, age 72, following multiple heart attacks.
      - IMDb mini biography by: Gary Brumburgh / gr-home@pacbell.net

Family

  • Spouses
      Jack L. King(October 1958 - September 6, 1979) (his death)
      Robert M. Herndon(December 13, 1954 - August 1957) (divorced)
      Gene Snyder(1940 - 1953) (divorced)

Trivia

  • Danced enclosed in Old Gold cigarettes package in the 1950s.
  • Second husband, Robert M. Herndon, was an executive of Cinerama Corp. whom she met while appearing on TV. Third husband Jack L. King, who predeceased her, was a millionaire from Miami Beach. She had no children.
  • According to Martin Grams' book "'Science Fiction Theatre'--A History of the Television Program, 1955-57", Dunbar became a ZIV-TV electrician.

Quotes

  • I did whatever I was told to do [in Hollywood], but I never really enjoyed making movies like I did being in a show.
  • I enjoyed my career but it was my mother who had all the ambition.

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