Eleanor Powell - 175 Pennsylvania Avenue,
Crestwood, NY 10707
Known as "The Girl from Pennsylvania Avenue", Eleanor Torrey
Powell was originally born November 21, 1912, in Springfield, Mass.
Her mother, wanting Eleanor to learn to overcome her shyness, placed
her in dancing school when she was but 13. She studied Ballet and
"Acrobatic Dancing" and was discovered by Gus Edwards dancing in
Atlantic City while still a child. Edwards put her in one of his
celebrated Children's Reviews. Powell caught "the bug"
and set her sites on Broadway. She took 10 lessons in Tap (for $35)
and made her Broadway debut in 1928. One year later her "machine-gun
footwork" earned her the title "World's Greatest Feminine Tap
Dancer".
In 1935 Eleanor Powell "went Hollywood" starring in George
White's Scandals. Word has it she so longed for the
comfort and serenity of her Crestwood lifestyle, that when MGM
approached her about doing another Hollywood film, she demanded a
significant increase in wages and star billing. To her surprise, she
got both (!).
Eleanor Powell stayed in Hollywood through the late 1930s,
making some of the greatest musicals of the era. She became known as
the Queen of Tap, and starred opposite Fred Astaire and
George Murphy (both in the Broadway Melody
series), among other celebrated tappers, although her forte was
as a soloist. She made a total of 13 films between 1935 and 1950,
giving up life on the "silvery screen" with her marriage to Glenn
Ford.
Her fifth film, Broadway Melody of 1938 ( in which she
starred opposite Robert Taylor,) found her in the company of another
noted Crestwoodian, Robert Benchley.
Powell also had a public television show called "Faith of our
Children," in the 1950's based on her Sunday School Classes. Even
more than her film career she loved being with children and once
said "There's nothing in the word like having a child love you."
After her divorce from Ford, Powell started an short but successful
night-club career. Eleanor Powell died February 11th, 1982,
of cancer
Eleanor Powell called Crestwood home in the early 1930s. Some
old-timers recall with fondness this down-to-earth star of stage and
screen. When she was rehearsing at home, the sound of her "tapping"
on her home's hardwood floors would resonate throughout the
neighborhood.
An amateur ornithologist, Ms. Powell could often be found
birdwatching along the Bronx River at dawn.