LOS ANGELES - Choreographer Michael Kidd, whose joyously athletic dances for ballet, Broadway, and Hollywood delighted audiences for half a century and won him five Tonys and an Oscar, has died.
Mr. Kidd died at his Los Angeles home Sunday night of cancer, his nephew, Robert Greenwald, told The
To moviegoers, Mr. Kidd was best known for the 1954 film "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers," in which a bunch of earthy backwoodsmen (some of them really stage dancers) prance exuberantly with their prospective brides.
He also directed dances for Danny Kaye in "Knock on Wood," took Fred Astaire out of his top hat to play a private eye in a Mickey Spillane spoof in "The Band Wagon," and taught Marlon Brando how to hoof for "Guys and Dolls."
There is no Oscar category for choreography, so the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences presented Mr. Kidd with a special award in 1997 for "his services in the art of the dance in the art of the screen."
"It's a total shock - this came from out of the blue," he said then.
For his work in theater, Mr. Kidd won Tonys for "Finian's Rainbow" (1947), "Guys and Dolls" (1951), "Can-Can" (1954), "Li'l Abner" (1957), and "Destry Rides Again" (1960).
In one of his few ventures into television, he directed Mikhail Baryshnikov in "Baryshnikov in Hollywood," which was nominated for an Emmy in 1981.
"I was amazed by his energy and his willingness to reinvent all the time if the situation didn't work," Baryshnikov said.
Originally a dancer with the Ballet Theater in New York, Mr. Kidd was given a chance to choreograph in 1945 and devised a sentimental story, "On Stage!" in which he also played the male lead. In it, a shy young dancer learns her craft with the help of a backstage worker who returns to sweeping the floor after she achieves her success.
Two years later, Mr. Kidd was hired to stage the dances for the hit "Finian's Rainbow" and his career soared.
"Dancing," Mr. Kidd told the Times in 1954, "should be completely understandable - every move, every turn should mean something, should be crystal clear to the audience. If you can make them laugh or cry, move them emotionally . . . you've done your job."
His other stage work included "Love Life," "Arms and the Girl," "Wildcat" (with Lucille Ball), "Ben Franklin in Paris" (Robert Preston), and "The Rothchilds" (Hal Linden).
He began his movie work in 1952 with "Where's Charley," starring Ray Bolger. Other films included "Star!" with Julie Andrews and "Hello Dolly" with Barbra Streisand and Walter Matthau.
Mr. Kidd also choreographed and directed "Merry Andrew," starring Kaye, and appeared on-screen dancing with Gene Kelly and Dan Dailey in "It's Always Fair Weather."
The great New York City Ballet dancer Jacques d'Amboise, who was in "Seven Brides for Seven Brothers," said at the time that Mr. Kidd was "willing to do anything himself that he expects of his dancers. And he's a great dancer himself - we respect that."
Born Milton Greenwald in New York City, he was the son of a barber. He studied chemical engineering at City College but quit after three years. "It didn't deal with human beings," he complained.
He eventually won a scholarship to the American Ballet school.
Mr. Kidd first marriage, to Mary Heater, a dancer, ended in divorce. He leaves his wife, Shelah Hackett, a dancer; two daughters, Kristine and Susan, from his first marriage and two children from his second marriage, Matthew and Amy.![]()


