Miriam Nelson

Miriam Nelson

Known For: Crew

Date Of Birth:1922-09-21

Miriam Lois Frankel was born in Chicago on Sept. 21, 1919, the only child of Daniel Frankel, a salesman who later produced nightclub shows, and Miriam Elizabeth (Bly) Frankel, a seamstress who went on to a show-business wardrobe department career. At 19 she made her Broadway debut, in Sing Out the News (1938), a musical revue, with June Allyson, whose songs included Sing Ho for Private Enterprise. In 1941, two weeks after Pearl Harbor, she married Gene Nelson, a fellow dancer and actor. They moved to Los Angeles, and good luck followed. Having lunch at Paramount one day with a friend, she ran into a New York pal and came home with a seven-year acting-dancing contract. Ms. Nelson’s onscreen appearances included Lady in the Dark (1944), a straight acting role as Edward G. Robinson’s secretary in Double Indemnity (1944) and versatile dance work in Duffy’s Tavern (1945). After the Nelsons divorced in 1956, she took up choreography full time. Her television projects included The Red Skelton Hour, Father Knows Best, The Lucy Show, The Love Boat and Murder, She Wrote. Ms. Nelson’s first credited big-screen choreography was on Blake Edwards’s He Laughed Last (1956), a crime comedy about a chorus girl. Her final screen credit was Out of the Cold, a romantic drama starring Keith Carradine, released on DVD in 2001.

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Castings

Ike
Out of the Cold
Masquerade in Mexico
Tea for Two
The Great Bank Robbery
Ziegfeld: The Man and His Women
Bring Your Smile Along
Lullaby of Broadway
High Time
Honeymoon Hotel
I'd Rather Be Rich
The Young Lovers
Hawaii
The Restless Breed
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century
Cactus Flower
The Third Girl from the Left
He Laughed Last
The Apartment
Public Pigeon No. 1
I'll Take Sweden
Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice
Cat Ballou
Sunset
A New Kind of Love
Murderers' Row
Visit to a Small Planet