Jump to content

Sharon Baird: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Good Job
Camwad83 (talk | contribs)
top: Added birth date to Infobox to match with article and reference
Tags: Mobile edit Mobile app edit Android app edit
Line 9: Line 9:
| caption = Baird in 2015
| caption = Baird in 2015
| nationality = [[United States|American]]
| nationality = [[United States|American]]
| birth_date = <!-- Valid citation required for date of birth for BLP. (WP:BLPPRIVACY) -->
| birth_date = {{Birth date and age|1943|8|16|mf=y}}
| birth_place = [[Seattle, Washington]], U.S.
| birth_place = [[Seattle, Washington]], U.S.
| death_date =
| death_date =

Revision as of 13:05, 16 February 2024

Sharon Baird
A photo of Sharon Baird in 2015
Baird in 2015
Born (1943-08-16) August 16, 1943 (age 81)
NationalityAmerican
Occupations
  • Actress
  • voice actress
  • singer
  • dancer
  • puppeteer
Years active1950–present
SpouseDalton Lee Thomas (1964-1972) (divorced)

Sharon Baird is an American actress, voice actress, singer, dancer and puppeteer who is best known for having been a Mouseketeer.

Early life

Baird was born August 16, 1943 Seattle, Washington to Eldon Baird, an aerospace worker, and Nikki Marcus, a future talent agent. She has one younger brother, Jimmy, also a former child actor. She began dance lessons at age three, and won a "Little Miss Washington" contest at five. Her mother took her to California for the national competition and fell in love with the climate. The family relocated to Los Angeles, California, where Baird continued her dance lessons with Louis da Pron, among others.[1]

Career

Baird appeared in her first film, Bloodhounds of Broadway, in 1950. At age nine she began regular appearances on The Colgate Comedy Hour television show with Eddie Cantor. She did episodes of several different television shows, and an unbilled song-and-dance number with Dean Martin in Artists and Models (1955) (which also featured fellow mouseketeer Nancy Abbate), just before being selected for the Mickey Mouse Club.[citation needed]

A photo of Baird as a Mouseketeer circa 1956
Baird as a Mouseketeer circa 1956

Contrary to the impression given by Disney publicity, many of the Mickey Mouse Club cast had some prior experience in films and television. Baird was among the most experienced of these professionals, and performed with the show's "Red Team", or first-string unit, for all three seasons of original programming (1955–1958). Her specialty was tap, but she did other forms of dancing, as well as singing and acting on the show.[citation needed]

After filming completed in 1958, Baird finished high school at Hollywood Professional School, then attended Los Angeles Valley College where she made the National Honor Society and was president of her class. She briefly interrupted her education in May 1959 for a short performing tour of Australia with the Mouseketeers, then graduated from college in 1963 with degrees in mathematics and secretarial science.[citation needed]

In 1964, Baird married singer Dalton Lee Thomas, and, with a male friend of his, worked up a nightclub act called "Two Cats and a Mouse", which faded out, along with the marriage, by 1969.[1]

During the 1970s she worked extensively as a live "puppet" for Sid and Marty Krofft, among others, doing children's shows such as H.R. Pufnstuf, The Bugaloos, New Zoo Revue, Sigmund and the Sea Monsters and Land of the Lost. She did rotoscoping work for Ralph Bakshi's late seventies film The Lord of the Rings. She was the live-action model for the part of Frodo Baggins, for which she did not receive screen credit.[citation needed]

In 1980, Baird, along with the other Mouseketeers, did a television special for The Wonderful World of Disney, reprising her "tap dancing while jumping rope" routine. She then joined a smaller number of her colleagues in performing live shows at Disneyland on weekends for several years during the early 1980s.[citation needed]

Later life

In 1984, Baird appeared on stage in the comedy special Gallagher: Over Your Head, doing a tap dancing routine and assisting Gallagher during his famous Sledge-O-Matic routine. For the critically panned cult film Ratboy, she played the title character under heavy makeup, being credited as S.L. Baird to hide her gender. Baird gradually ceased doing professional engagements in the 1990s. She later relocated from Southern California to Reno, Nevada.[2]

Film

Television

References

  1. ^ a b Jerry Bowles, Forever Hold Your Banner High, 1976, pg 113; ISBN 0-385-11622-5
  2. ^ Profile, amomama.com. Accessed August 26, 2022.