Michael Kidd
Michael Kidd (born
Milton Greenwald; August 12, 1915 – December 23, 2007) was an American film and stage
choreographer, dancer and actor, whose career spanned five decades, and who staged some of the leading Broadway and film musicals of the 1940s and 1950s. Kidd, strongly influenced by
Charlie Chaplin and
Léonide Massine, was an innovator in what came to be known as the "integrated musical", in which dance movements are integral to the plot.
He was probably best known for his athletic dance numbers in ''
Seven Brides for Seven Brothers'', a 1954
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer musical. Film critic Stephanie Zacharek called the barn-raising sequence in ''Seven Brides'' "one of the most rousing dance numbers ever put on screen". He was the first choreographer to win five
Tony Awards, and was awarded an honorary
Oscar in 1996 for advancing dance in film.
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