• Berkeley William Enos, (November 29, 1895 – March 14, 1976)[1] known professionally as Busby Berkeley, was an American film director and musical choreographer.
  • Busby Berkeley, Ruby Keeler, and Dick Powell in Dames (1934). Busby Berkeley, Joan Blondell, Byron Haskin, and Dick Powell in Stage Struck (1936).
  • · · Join us for a night of lively discussion with NPR’s renowned film and art critic, Bob Mondello on June 4th! Bob has personally selected the Busby Berkeley...
  • Between 1930 and the end of the WWII, Busby Berkeley had choreographed and directed the scenes of musical numbers in nearly 30 film titles.
  • Documents the life and work of Busby Berkeley, playful and exuberant Choreographer and Film pioneer during the age of the Motion Picture Musical. This Turner...
  • The Busby Berkeley Number trope as used in popular culture. Know all those big, splashy musical numbers with elaborate sets and precise, fancy choreography …
  • This is the famous “The Shadow Waltz” scene from Gold Diggers of 1933, and the genius of choreographer-director Busby Berkeley (1895–1976), the man who...
  • It is strange but true that Busby Berkeley never had a dancing lesson and, in his early days, he was very afraid of people finding out.
  • ...ayrıca stephin merritt 'in * hayranlık duyduğu adamlardan birisidir; merritt bu adam için iki şarkı yazmıştır: (bkz: busby berkeley dreams ) (bkz: the way you say...
  • Stage and film choreographer and director Busby Berkeley took the Hollywood musical — where exuberant excess was the standard — to its greatest heights of...