Busby Berkeley - TV Tropes
- ️Fri Aug 31 2012
Busby Berkeley (November 29, 1895 – March 14, 1976), born William Berkeley Enos, was a film director and choreographer best known for his trademark of forming large groups of dancers into intricate geometric patterns, usually filmed from overhead.
He is best known for his films produced during the Great Depression. Berkeley was choreographer or "director of musical numbers" on many of the most famous musicals made in the 1930s. Later in his career he got occasional non-musical directing gigs, like the 1939 drama They Made Me a Criminal with John Garfield.
Today any scene depicting large groups of people choreographed into intricate, highly disciplined routines and patterns is an homage to Busby Berkeley.
Not to be confused with Bubsy, though the bobcat's name may have been a homage to Busby.
Films featuring his work:
- Whoopee!, Berkeley's first film (choreographer)
- Bird of Paradise (choreographer)(uncredited)
- 42nd Street (choreographer)
- Gold Diggers of 1933 (choreographer)
- Gold Diggers of 1935 (choreographer/director of musical numbers)
- Gold Diggers of 1937 (choreographer/director of musical numbers)
- Footlight Parade (choreographer)
- She Had to Say Yes (director)
- Fashions of 1934 (creator/director of musical numbers)
- Dames (choreographer/director of musical numbers)
- Stage Struck (director)
- They Made Me a Criminal (director) — A Film Noir! No singing! No dancing! No scantily-clad chorus girls!
- Babes in Arms (director)
- Ziegfeld Girl (director of musical numbers)
- For Me and My Gal (director)
- The Gang's All Here (director)
- Take Me Out To The Ball Game (director)
- Million Dollar Mermaid (choreographer) (Berkeley only worked on two Esther Williams films; this is one of them.)