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Rand, Rand Institute for Recovery randrecovery.com |
Sally Rand (April 3, 1904 [1] – August 31, 1979) was born as Helen Harriet Beck in Hickory County, Missouri. She also performed under the name Billie Beck. She was a burlesque dancer and actress, most noted for her ostrich feather fan dance and balloon bubble dance.
[edit] CareerDuring the 1920s, Sally Rand acted on stage and appeared in silent films. Cecil B. DeMille gave her the name Sally Rand, inspired by a Rand McNally atlas. She was selected as one of the WAMPAS Baby Stars in 1927. After the introduction of sound film, she became a dancer, known for the fan dance, which she popularized starting at the Paramount Club. Her most famous appearance was at the 1933 Chicago World's Fair entitled Century of Progress. She had been arrested four times in a single day during the fair due to perceived indecent exposure while riding a white horse down the streets of Chicago, but the nudity was only an illusion. She also conceived and developed the bubble dance, in part to cope with wind while performing outdoors. She performed the fan dance on film in Bolero, released in 1934.[citation needed] In 1936, she purchased The Music Box burlesque hall in San Francisco, which would later become the Great American Music Hall. She starred in "Sally Rand's Nude Ranch" at the Golden Gate International Exposition in San Francisco in 1939 and 1940.[2] She appeared in the late 1950s in an episode of To Tell the Truth with host Bud Collyer and panelists Polly Bergen, Ralph Bellamy, Kitty Carlisle, and Carl Reiner. She did not "stump the panel" but was correctly identified by all four panelists. She continued to appear on stage doing her fan dance into her sixties. Rand once replaced an ailing Ann Corio in the stage show, This Was Burlesque, during the 1960s. Rand appeared at the Mitchell Brothers in San Francisco in the early 1970s. Later, she appeared with Tempest Storm and Blaze Starr.[citation needed] [edit] DeathShe died in 1979 in Glendora, California, aged 75, from undisclosed causes. [edit] In popular culture
Spectropia, played by Helen Pickett of the Wooster Group.
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