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Buster West
Buster West
from Wikipedia

James "Buster" West (31 March 1901 – 19 March 1966) was an American dancer and actor who was a featured performer in vaudeville, the Broadway stage, motion pictures and television. West was known as being one of those performers who was "born in a suitcase", as his father John West and mother were both vaudeville performers and he performed with them as a child.[1]

Key Information

Career

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1923 advertisement for the vaudeville act Wells, Virginia, and West with whom West began his career.

Buster West achieved success in vaudeville and the legitimate stage as an eccentric dancer, achieving his breakthrough in the Broadway musical revue George White's Scandals of 1926.[1] One of the stars of that show was another eccentric dancer, Tom Patricola, with whom West would star in short comedies made by the Educational Film Corporation of America, one of the lower-tier production companies in the film industry's Poverty Row. Though he made his film debut as himself in a cameo in Broadway After Dark (1924), the bulk of his movie career was spent in shorts made between 1929 and 1938. He made only one more film, in 1949.

West's television career consisted of two appearances as a dancer on The Frank Sinatra Show in 1951, and appeared in single episodes on Alfred Hitchcock Presents and The Lucy Show in the 1960s.

In 1944, he co-starred with Jackie Gleason in the musical Follow the Girls, a smash hit that ran for 888 performances. His next (and last) Broadway appearance was in another smash, The Pajama Game, when he replaced Eddie Foy Jr. in one of the leads.

Personal life

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West was married to the acrobatic dancer and film actress Lucille Page, with whom he appeared with in vaudeville in Berdell and Wellington and in the short Moonlight and Melody (1935). Lucille died in 1964, while Buster died in 1966 from brain cancer. He was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills) in the Hollywood Hills[2][failed verification] neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.

Selected filmography

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References

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from Grokipedia
'''James "Buster" West''' (March 31, 1901 – March 19, 1966) was an American dancer and actor known for his work as a vaudeville performer and his appearances in Hollywood films during the 1930s and 1940s. His career began in vaudeville, where he gained recognition for his acrobatic tap dancing style and comedic timing, often performing in family acts with his parents. He transitioned to Broadway and then to motion pictures, appearing in several musical and comedy features and shorts during the early sound era. West's energetic performances and versatility in dance made him a notable figure in the entertainment industry of his time, though his film career was relatively brief compared to his stage work. He collaborated with various performers, including his wife Lucille Page, and appeared alongside major stars such as Laurel and Hardy in productions that highlighted his talents in eccentric tap dancing and physical comedy.

Early life

Family background and childhood

Buster West was born James West on March 31, 1901, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, into a family deeply immersed in vaudeville. His father, John West, was a vaudeville performer, and his mother was also a performer in the circuit, resulting in West being raised on the road and often described as "born in a suitcase" due to the constant touring lifestyle of his parents. From childhood, West performed in family vaudeville acts alongside his parents, gaining early stage experience within the family troupe. Early billing included family acts such as Wells, Virginia, and West, advertised in 1923, before he transitioned to independent vaudeville work in the 1920s.

Vaudeville career

Early family act

After beginning his career as part of a family vaudeville act during childhood, Buster West transitioned to independent performances in the 1920s, where he developed his distinctive style as an eccentric dancer. This eccentric dancing approach, featuring loose, rubbery movements and acrobatic elements, became the core of his vaudeville identity and set him apart from more conventional performers. West achieved notable success in this solo phase, appearing at premier venues including the Palace Theatre in New York City, with documented appearances there as late as 1935. These early post-family acts solidified his reputation as a leading eccentric dancer on the vaudeville circuit before his later collaborations.

Partnership with Lucille Page

Buster West formed a notable partnership with Lucille Page, an acrobatic dancer and actress born in 1913, after their marriage. They performed together in vaudeville under the billing Berdell and Wellington, combining West's eccentric dancing with Page's acrobatic abilities in shared routines that proved popular during the era. Their collaboration also included a joint appearance in the short film Moonlight and Melody (1935). West and Page remained married until her death in 1964.

Broadway career

Debut and 1920s appearances

Buster West made his Broadway debut in the musical revue George White's Scandals of 1926, appearing as an eccentric dancer. This marked his first major non-vaudeville stage credit, transitioning from his family vaudeville act to legitimate theatre. The production provided breakthrough recognition for his distinctive, mercurial dancing style, establishing him as a notable performer in Broadway revues. He later appeared in the 1928 Broadway musical Ups-a Daisy, playing the role of "Pinky" Parks, continuing his early work in New York theatre during the decade.

Later Broadway productions

Buster West made a significant return to Broadway in the 1940s with his role in the wartime musical comedy Follow the Girls. He played Dinky Riley in the production, which opened at the New Century Theatre on April 8, 1944, and co-starred alongside Jackie Gleason as Goofy Gale. The show, conceived as a lighthearted revue-style musical featuring songs, dances, and comedy aimed at servicemen, transferred to multiple theaters during its run and closed on May 18, 1946, after 882 performances. In the 1950s, West took on another prominent Broadway assignment when he replaced Eddie Foy Jr. in the role of Vernon Hines during the original production of The Pajama Game. The musical, which opened on May 13, 1954, at the St. James Theatre, became a major hit under the direction of George Abbott and Jerome Robbins, with choreography by Bob Fosse, and continued until November 24, 1956, totaling 1,063 performances. West's involvement in this long-running success highlighted his continued presence in notable Broadway musicals into the mid-1950s.

Film career

Short comedies (1929–1938)

Buster West's primary contribution to cinema during this period was a series of two-reel comedy shorts produced by Educational Pictures, a Poverty Row studio specializing in low-budget sound films for the independent market. These shorts, spanning from the late 1920s through 1938, represented the bulk of his screen appearances and typically blended slapstick gags with vaudeville-inspired dance routines. West frequently collaborated with fellow eccentric dancer and comedian Tom Patricola, a partnership that carried over their stage experience from venues like George White's Scandals. Their films often placed the duo in relatable, everyday scenarios—such as workplaces, dance halls, or romantic mix-ups—that served as setups for frantic physical comedy, acrobatic dance numbers, and playful rivalry between the performers. West usually appeared as a character named "Buster," emphasizing his rubber-limbed dancing style alongside Patricola's nimble song-and-dance antics. Representative titles from this era include Fresh from the Fleet (1936), in which West played a sailor named Buster, The Screen Test (1936), Any Old Port (1936), Parked in Paree (1936), Hurray for Hooligan (1937), Going, Going, Gone! (1937), Girls Ahoy (1937), Hi-Ya Doc! (1937), Ready to Serve (1937), Jitterbugs (1938), and Beautiful, But Dummies (1938). He also shared one short, Moonlight and Melody (1935), with his wife Lucille Page. These productions highlighted the era's emphasis on quick, energetic musical-comedy formats tailored for theater programs.

Later feature and cameo roles

Buster West's involvement in feature films remained sporadic, primarily consisting of cameos, uncredited appearances, and specialty contributions rather than leading roles. He made his screen debut with an early cameo as himself in the silent film Broadway After Dark (1924). In 1938, he contributed to the feature Radio City Revels by performing the song "Swingin' in the Corn" on the soundtrack. Following the conclusion of his primary short comedy period in 1938, West's film work declined sharply, with no additional theatrical credits until more than a decade later. His final motion picture appearance came in an uncredited capacity as a Specialty Dancer in The Last Bandit (1949). These limited roles reflected a shift in his career toward stage productions during the intervening years.

Television appearances

1960s guest roles

In the 1960s, Buster West made occasional guest appearances on television in acting roles, marking a shift to smaller-scale television work later in his career. In the 1960s, West took on acting roles in dramatic and comedic series, playing the Movie Foreman in the Alfred Hitchcock Hour episode "Starring the Defense" (1963). He also guest-starred as Tom in the The Lucy Show episode "Lucy Becomes a Father" (1964), which centered on a camping trip storyline. These sporadic television credits were his final screen appearances.

Personal life

Marriage and collaborations

Buster West was married to dancer and actress Lucille Page, intertwining their personal life with a long-standing professional partnership. Their relationship extended to joint performances in vaudeville, where they worked together as a dance team. The couple also collaborated on screen, notably appearing together in the 1935 Vitaphone short Moonlight and Melody, in which West's character marries a character played by Page amid comedic circumstances involving a theater owner. Their marriage endured until Page's death in 1964.

Death

Final years and passing

In his later years, Buster West made few public appearances. His final known performance was in an episode of The Lucy Show in 1964. West died on March 19, 1966, in Encino, California, at the age of 64. He was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Hollywood Hills) in Los Angeles.
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