Marge Champion came into the world already pointed toward a barre. Born in Los Angeles in 1919, she arrived in a house where dance was as natural as breathing. Her father, Ernest Belcher, trained half of Hollywood—Shirley Temple, Cyd Charisse, Fay Wray—and eventually trained the boy who would become her husband. Her older half-sister, Lina Basquette, was already a silent-film star before Marge could spell her own name. It was a home thick with discipline and ambition, and Marge absorbed it like oxygen.
She was teaching ballet at twelve. At fourteen, she stepped into the strangest apprenticeship a dancer could imagine: she was hired by Walt Disney to lend her body—its precision, its lyricism, its youthful softness—to Snow White.
Animators traced her movements. They hung their illusions on her shoulder blades and foot placements. She even doubled, physically, for two dwarfs stacked inside an overcoat so animators could study the wobbling physics of “Silly Song.” The hippo in Fantasia borrowed her lines too. The Blue Fairy in Pinocchio billowed with her breath. She was the anonymous ghost in the machine of early animation, shaping characters the whole world came to know without ever seeing her face.
That anonymity didn’t last.
Because Marge Belcher—soon Marge Champion—was too good, too specific, too alive to stay behind the paper veil. She wanted New York. She wanted the stage. Ballet rejected her for height; she shrugged and turned toward musicals instead. The movies got her first: MGM tapped her for a string of Technicolor fantasies, many of them with Gower Champion, the boy from her father’s studio who became her partner in every sense.
Together, Marge and Gower danced through Hollywood’s golden age.
Till the Clouds Roll By, Show Boat, Lovely to Look At, Everything I Have Is Yours—films where the two of them spun like matched blades. MGM wanted them to be the next Astaire/Rogers; Marge, politely but firmly, resisted being slotted into anyone else’s footprints. She and Gower had their own electricity, bright and clean and optimistic, built on mutual respect rather than myth.
They even carried that partnership into living rooms with The Marge and Gower Champion Show in 1957, one of those mid-century hybrids where sitcom plots kept getting elbowed aside by tap breaks. America hadn’t yet learned how to watch people dance on television, but the Champions tried to teach them anyway.
And then—because life always interrupts the choreography—Marge expanded in directions Hollywood never taught her. She helped create liturgical dance programs in churches. She wrote books about movement and spirit. She coached actors for period dramas, smoothing out 18th-century postures like a tailor fixing seams. She returned to Broadway as a performer and as a choreographer, contributing to Hello, Dolly! and later taking a role in Follies at age 81, because she could. Because she wasn’t done.
Her personal life, shaped by marriages and losses, reads like the shadow-side of her astonishing career. There was Art Babbitt, the Disney animator who created Goofy. Then Gower—dancer, partner, dreamer—whom she divorced in the 1970s. Then director Boris Sagal, whose life ended violently in a helicopter accident. She lost a son in a car crash. She kept dancing anyway, because dance had always been her native language, the one thing that didn’t abandon her.
She lived to 101.
And into her nineties, she was still dancing twice a week with Donald Saddler, another old lion from American theatre. A documentary crew followed them, marveling at two bodies that refused to concede. There was nothing nostalgic about it. Just two dancers, still speaking the language they’d been fluent in since childhood.
Marge Champion left fingerprints all over American performance—on the bones of animation, the golden age of musicals, Broadway, television, sacred dance, and movement coaching. But her greatest legacy may be this simple truth: she treated dance not as an ornament, but as a way of being alive.
When the world remembers Snow White turning, gliding, folding into a curtsey, it remembers Marge. Even in cartoon form, she moved with unmistakable grace.
