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Lillian Powell

Lillian Powell
Lillian Powell 01.JPG
NYPL Digital Gallery
Born Lillian Ruth Powell
(1896-05-29)May 29, 1896
Victoria, British Columbia
Died May 31, 1992(1992-05-31) (aged 96)
Los Angeles, California
Occupation Dancer, teacher and television actress

Lillian Ruth Powell (May 29, 1896 – May 31, 1992) was a Canadian-born American Denishawn-trained dancer who performed in early experimental silent film musicals. She would later teach dance and physical education before embarking on a nearly two-decade career in television.

She was born in Victoria, British Columbia, where some six months after her birth she was adopted by Charles and Eliza Powell and brought south to live in Ventura, California. Powell's adoptive parents later divorced and by 1910 she was living in San Diego where Eliza Powell worked as a milliner at a local department store. Powell later studied piano and attended Technical High School in Oakland, California.

By 1918, Powell was a dancer with Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn at their Denishawn studio in Hollywood, California. That September she appeared in a Denishawn concert staged at Oakland’s Pantages Theatre in a dance called The Driad. The following year she began touring with the Denishawn Dancers playing the title rôle in Julnar of the Sea a spectacular ballet Shawn based on the Arabian Nights character Julnar, the sea queen.

In 1922, Powell performed Shawn’s Bubble Dance and one of his Egyptian dances (with Martha Graham) in short silent films by Hugo Riesenfeld in his attempt to synchronize a dance routine on film with a live orchestra and on-screen conductor. On April 15, 1923, Powell appeared in a short film Lillian Powell Bubble Dance, presented in a program of 18 short films made in the Lee DeForest Phonofilm sound-on-film process at the Rivoli Theater in New York City. The films were co-presented by Riesenfeld who was musical director of the Rivoli. A copy of this film was found in 1976 in Australia, and was restored by the National Film and Sound Archive.

In the late 1920s Powell was a dancer with Jack Klein (or Kline) and the Californians, a West Coast vaudeville act.

Miss Lillian Powell, formerly of the big-time Eastern circuits, proved not only one of the most exquisite girls in physical charms, but also the most salient example of dancing grace ever seen in a West Coast theater here. Her numbers include an Oriental nautch dance, and later a famous Grecian balloon number, which the gifted young woman danced for Prince George of England recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Fairbanks at Beverly Hills, when the son of King George visited Pickfair.


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