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Tommy Rall

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Years active
  
1942-1988

Name
  
Tommy Rall


Role
  
Dancer

Spouse
  
Karel Shimoff (m. 1967)

Tommy Rall tommy rall facepreciation

Full Name
  
Thomas Edward Rall

Born
  
December 27, 1929 (age 94) (
1929-12-27
)

Awards
  
Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Musical Performance

Movies
  
Seven Brides for Seven Br, Kiss Me Kate, My Sister Eileen, Invitation to the Dance, Walk the Proud Land

Similar People
  
Marc Platt, Jeff Richards, Matt Mattox, Howard Keel, Russ Tamblyn

Invitation to dance tommy rall


Thomas Edward "Tommy" Rall (born December 27, 1929 in Kansas City, Missouri) is an American ballet dancer, tap dancer and acrobatic dancer who was a prominent featured player in 1950s musical comedies. He later became a successful operatic tenor in the 1960s, making appearances with the Opera Company of Boston, the New York City Opera, and the American National Opera Company.

Contents

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The great tommy rall


Biography

Tommy Rall Tommy Rall 365 funny pics

Rall was raised in Seattle. As a child he had a crossed eye which made it hard for him to read books, so his mother enrolled him in dancing classes. In his early years he performed a dance and acrobatic vaudeville act in Seattle theaters and attempted small acting roles.

Tommy Rall HistoryForSale Autographs and Manuscripts Tommy Rall

His family moved to Los Angeles in the 1940s, and Rall began to appear in small movie roles. His first film appearance was a short MGM film called Vendetta. He began taking tap dancing lessons and became a member of the jitterbugging Jivin' Jacks and Jills at Universal Studios.

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Rall joined Donald O'Connor, Peggy Ryan and Shirley Mills in several light wartime Andrews Sisters vehicles including Give Out, Sisters (1942) Get Hep to Love (1942) Mister Big, and others. He appeared in the films The North Star and Song of Russia (1944).

Tommy Rall Funny Girl Barbra Streisand Tommy Rall Tommy Rall Tony

Rall took ballet lessons and danced in classical and Broadway shows, including Milk and Honey, Call Me Madam and Cry for Us All. Jerry Herman said of Rall in Milk and Honey: "[Donald] [Saddler] did extraordinary choreography for Tommy Rall, who was suddenly so admired by the audience that [the producer] put his name on the marquee under the three stars. It was very, very earned by him. He was a terrific singer and dancer."

Tommy Rall Tommy Rall Did It All

He is best known for his acrobatic dancing in several classic musical films of the 1950s, including Kiss Me, Kate as "Bill" (1953), Seven Brides for Seven Brothers as "Frank" (1954), Invitation to the Dance (1956), Merry Andrew as "Giacomo Gallini " (1958), and My Sister Eileen as "Chick" (1955).

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Rall's film career waned as movie musicals went into decline. He had a role in the movie Funny Girl, as "The Prince" in a parody of the ballet Swan Lake. On Broadway he danced to acclaim as "Johnny" in Marc Blitzstein and Joseph Stein's 1959 musical Juno (based on Seán O'Casey's play Juno and the Paycock). Ken Mandelbaum wrote: "DeMille provided two fine ballets: her second act 'Johnny' in which Tommy Rall danced out Johnny's emotions...was the evening's highlight."

Tommy Rall Tommy Rall BiographyChapter 4 More Film Work

Rall was highly respected by his contemporaries—including dance greats Gene Kelly and Donald O'Connor—with the latter describing Rall as one of the “greatest dancers living...above Astaire and Kelly.”

Personal life

Tommy Rall Kathryn Grayson escorted by dancer Tommy Rall Kathryn Grayson

Rall was briefly married to his Juno co-star, Monte Amundsen. He is now married to former ballerina Karel Shimoff.

In 2007, a dance instructor by the name of Fredric Brame was found to have been posing as Tommy Rall since the late 1960s. His biographies, resumes, and playbills all support that Brame was Fredric Brame aka Tommy Rall by the credits listed. When Rall found out about the masquerade decades later, through a friend of the family, Rall contacted the Montgomery County (Texas) Sheriff's office. No legal action was taken against Brame since he technically did not commit a crime. Rall only wanted Brame to stop taking credit for his work and if he continued or did it again a lawsuit would be filed.

Filmography

Sources: TCM; MasterWorks Broadway

Features:

  • What's Cookin'? (1942)
  • Private Buckaroo (1942)
  • Give Out, Sisters (1942)
  • Get Hep to Love (1942)
  • It Comes Up Love (1943)
  • Mister Big (1943)
  • Always a Bridesmaid (1943)
  • The North Star (1943)
  • Song of Russia (1944)
  • Ziegfeld Follies (1945)
  • Good News (1947)
  • Kiss Me Kate (1953)
  • Seven Brides for Seven Brothers (1954)
  • My Sister Eileen (1955)
  • The Second Greatest Sex (1955)
  • World in My Corner (1956)
  • Invitation to the Dance (1956)
  • Walk the Proud Land (1956)
  • Merry Andrew (1958)
  • Funny Girl (1968)
  • Pennies from Heaven (1981)
  • Dancers (1987)
  • Saturday the 14th Strikes Back (1988)
  • Broadway: Beyond the Golden Age (2014) (documentary)
  • Short Subjects:

  • Vendetta (1942)
  • Trumpet Serenade (1942)
  • Stage work, Broadway

    Source: MasterWorksBroadway; Internet Broadway Database

  • Ballet Theatre (1946)
  • Look Ma, I'm Dancin'! (as Tommy) (1948)
  • Small Wonder (1948)
  • Miss Liberty (as The Boy, The Dandy, Another Lamplighter) (1949)
  • Call Me Madam (Principal Dancer) (1950) (also understudy for Russell Nype)
  • Juno (as Johnny Boyle) (1959)
  • Milk and Honey (as David) (1961)
  • Cafe Crown (as David Cole) (1964)
  • Cry for Us All (as Petey Boyle) (1970)
  • References

    Tommy Rall Wikipedia