Today would have been Gene Kelly's 100th birthday. He is a dancing,
singing, and acting legend from Pittsburgh. He has strong roots here
through family, and also is the legacy of the Gene Kelly Awards. Many
people know him from his movie Singing in the Rain, but he also
revolutionized the way dance and theater is filmed on camera.
University of Pitt students are celebrating his legacy today along with
the University's 225th anniversary.
The University of Pittsburgh is observing its own 225th anniversary
and the 100th anniversary of the birth in Pittsburgh of special Academy
Award-honored dancer, director, choreographer, actor, singer, and Pitt
alumnus Gene Kelly with two events:
• From 3 to 4 p.m. Aug. 23, Kelly’s actual birth date, some 3,000
incoming University of Pittsburgh freshmen are slated to hold umbrellas
while taking part in a choreographed dance on the lawn adjacent to
Pitt’s Petersen Events Center.
• From 8 to 9:30 p.m. Oct. 25, Patricia Ward Kelly, Gene Kelly’s
widow and the author of a forthcoming memoir about him, will host
“Pitt’s Gene Kelly Centennial Celebration,” an evening of Kelly on film
with Pittsburgh- and Pitt-centered commentary on Kelly’s life and
career. The leading authority on the cinema and stage legend, Mrs. Kelly
has recently given sold-out presentations on Gene Kelly at the Academy
of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences in Los Angeles and Lincoln Center in
New York City.
Part of Pitt’s New Student Orientation 2012, the Aug. 23 event will
attempt to shatter the Guinness World Record for the “Greatest Number of
People Simultaneously Performing an Umbrella Dance at a Single Venue.”
The current record, set in September 2011 in Bucharest, Romania,
involved 1,461 participants.
Holding aloft the umbrellas, which will be handed to them as they
enter the Petersen Events Center’s lawn area, the Pitt students taking
part in this attempt will dance the Cupid Shuffle, a popular line dance.
Witnesses, head-counters, and videographers will document the event and
send the information to the Guinness authorities for their verification
of the new world record.
The dance event honoring Kelly, one of Pitt’s most renowned alumni,
has been designed to remind spectators and participants alike of Kelly’s
iconic dance sequence from the classic 1952 film musical Singin’ in the Rain,
in which he dances up and down a rain-drenched street twirling an
umbrella and splashing in puddles. This sequence is considered by many
to be the most memorable dance performance on film. Kelly is credited
with bringing an energetically athletic, authentically American dancing
style to Hollywood musicals, and for changing the look of dance on film
through his revolutionary innovations with the camera, choreography, and
animation.
Kelly received the Bachelor of Arts degree in economics from Pitt in
1933. While at Pitt, he became involved with the University’s Cap and
Gown Club, serving as its director from 1934 to 1938, and taught dance
at his family’s dance studio in Pittsburgh’s Squirrel Hill neighborhood;
he would also choreograph musicals at the Pittsburgh Playhouse and
Nixon Theater. Kelly enrolled in Pitt’s School of Law but left after a
couple of months to concentrate on teaching dance.
Kelly’s younger brother Fred, also a Pitt alumnus, was honored in
2004 when the lobby of Pitt’s Stephen Foster Memorial—home to Pitt’s
Charity Randall Theatre and Henry Heymann Theatre—was renamed the Fred
Kelly Lobby.
Pitt students set new Guinness World Records at the last two New
Student Orientations, for the “World’s Largest Torch-lit Logo” in 2010
and the “World’s Largest Glow Stick Design” in 2011.
For more information please see the University of Pittsburgh.
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