Ruby Keeler (born August 25, 1909, Halifax, Novia Scotia, Canada—died February 28, 1993, Rancho Mirage, California, U.S.) was a Canadian-born American actor and dancer who starred as a fresh-faced ingenue who would triumphantly emerge from the chorus line to replace an ailing or temperamental star in a string of lavish, formulaic Depression-era film musicals remembered for the colossal kaleidoscopic dance sequences orchestrated by choreographer-director Busby Berkeley.
After moving with her family to New York City at the age of 4, Keeler took some dancing lessons and, at the age of 14, landed her first chorus job. She then honed her tap-dancing skills in the city’s speakeasies until a Broadway producer gave her a job in the chorus of Bye Bye Bonnie (1927). This was followed by a featured role in The Sidewalks of New York. Though Florenz Ziegfeld offered her a sizable role in Whoopee, Keeler dropped out before rehearsals because she had met and married (1928) her first husband, Al Jolson, while on a trip to the West Coast. In 1929 she appeared for only a month in Ziegfeld’s Stage Girl, returning to join Jolson.
Keeler’s film debut was in the smash hit 42nd Street (1933), in which she played opposite Dick Powell, who starred with her in a rapid succession of extravaganzas, including Gold Diggers of 1933, Dames, Footlight Parade, Flirtation Walk, Shipmates Forever, and Colleen. In 1935 Keeler and Jolson adopted a baby boy, and she appeared with her husband in their only film together, Go into Your Dance. Keeler starred in Ready Willing and Able (1937) and Mother Carey’s Chickens (1939) before her last starring role in Sweetheart of the Campus (1941).
In 1940 Keeler and Jolson were divorced, and her career fizzled out. She remarried and went into retirement before being persuaded, at the age of 60, to stage a dancing comeback in the 1971 Broadway revival of No, No, Nanette, which ran for 871 performances. Keeler once again retired from show business after that extraordinary success but resurfaced in cameo roles in They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? (1969) and Phynx (1970).