Cyd Charisse could do it all — sing, act, and “dance like a goddess.” With her legendary legs and graceful presence, she became a symbol of elegance during Hollywood’s Golden Age, standing beside stars like Fred Astaire and Gene Kelly.
Born Tula Ellice Finklea in Texas in 1922, her childhood was far from glamorous. After battling polio, her parents enrolled her in ballet to rebuild her strength. “I was skinny, and it looked like a good way to build me up,” she later said. What began as therapy became her life’s passion. By her teens, she was training in Los Angeles, London, and Paris, eventually adopting the name Cyd Charisse.
Her early film roles were small, but her talent stood out. She gained major attention dancing with Gene Kelly in Ziegfeld Follies. Her most iconic moment came in Singin’ in the Rain, where, without speaking, she mesmerized audiences in the “Broadway Melody” sequence. In The Band Wagon, Astaire praised her as “beautiful dynamite.”
When asked who she preferred dancing with, she answered: “I’d say they were the two greatest dancing personalities ever to grace the screen… But it’s like comparing apples and oranges — they’re both equally wonderful.”
Off-screen, Charisse avoided scandal and focused on her craft. She married singer Tony Martin in 1948, and their marriage lasted over 60 years. Tragedy struck in 1979 when her daughter-in-law died in the crash of American Airlines Flight 191, a devastating loss for the family.
Cyd Charisse died in 2008 at age 86. Though an era ended, her legacy lives on. Through elegance, strength, and emotion expressed without words, she redefined the Hollywood dancer — and decades later, audiences still marvel at her performances.