The 44 Postcard Project has taken me to some strange and unexpected places. One of the most fascinating -- researching the life of MGM dancer and starlet Vera-Ellen.
Children's author (Hugging the Rock) and poet Susan Taylor Brown donated this postcard for my project:
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| Susan shared that this postcard was sent to her mother by a pen pal from Holland. |
Vera Ellen, who started dancing as a way to gain strength after a childhood illness, partnered with the greatest onscreen dancers. Ever.
She was in:
| On the Town, opposite Gene Kelly |
| White Christmas, opposite Danny Kaye |
| and Three Little Words, with the great Fred Astaire. |
Inexplicably, Vera Ellen never broke through to the level of fame that her co-stars achieved. Remember this scene from White Christmas?
She had a difficult life, which you can read about here, and died as a recluse.
The postcard Susan sent me is a publicity shot from On the Town. It comes from a lengthy dance number: "Miss Turnstiles."
My poem went out to a Baltimore poet who shares my love for classic musicals. I'll follow it with my favorite Vera Ellen dance routine, also from White Christmas.
Vera Ellen
learned
to dance at ten
after an illness made her weak,
after an illness made her weak,
took
to it, tap danced on her toes
from Ohio to Broadway,
partnered Kelly and Astaire,
from Ohio to Broadway,
partnered Kelly and Astaire,
the
studio loved
her apple blossom appeal,
her tiny waist -- the smallest
in showbiz -- a debt
to anorexia that she
must repay, but not before
vamping on the red carpet
in skintight gold lamé
that shocked reporters,
her apple blossom appeal,
her tiny waist -- the smallest
in showbiz -- a debt
to anorexia that she
must repay, but not before
vamping on the red carpet
in skintight gold lamé
that shocked reporters,
she
quipped, Why not?
Isn’t
this what Oscar
always wears?
always wears?
by Laura Shovan
Just WOW.
Thank you so much for sending the card, Susan. I loved watching the old movie clips. And I feel life my life is a little bit richer because I learned -- and learned to appreciate -- Vera Ellen.
P.S. Project watchers. I went hunting in my basement office for some old art postcards I thought I'd saved. Can you believe I found a stash of over 40 cards, some of them dating back to my 1989 summer at the University of London.
Here's a peek:
I'll post details on my postcard stash later.

