Woman who played Snow White in Disney movie dies at 101
Marge Champion, who served as the real-life model for Walt Disney’s Snow White, has died at the age of 101.
The actress was also well known for starring alongside her husband and dance partner Gower Champion in a string of MGM musicals in the 1950s.
She later won an Emmy Award for choreographing the 1975 TV film Queen of the Stardust Ballroom.
She died in Los Angeles on Wednesday, dance instructor Pierre Dulaine confirmed to The Hollywood Reporter.
Marge and Gower Champion danced together in TV shows, Broadway musicals and films such as George Sidney’s 1951 remake of Show Boat, which also starred Howard Keel, Kathryn Grayson and Ava Gardner.
The couple were also seen together in Mr Music (1950) starring Bing Crosby, Lovely to Look At (1952), Give a Girl a Break (1953) and Jupiter’s Darling (1955).
Marge Champion was born Marjorie Celeste Belcher in Hollywood in 1919. Her father was dance and ballet teacher Ernest Belcher, who was friends with Walt Disney.
When Disney’s animation team were working on Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, they studied a young Marge’s movements on a sound stage in order to make the character move more realistically.
From the age of 14, Champion would work with them for one or two days per month for two years, during which time she was paid $10 per day.
“None of them [the all-male animation team] had been a young girl or knew how a dress would do this or that or the other thing,” she explained in a 1998 interview with the Archive of American Television.
Released in 1937, the groundbreaking film was the first full-length animated feature to be made by a US studio, and became a box office sensation.
Champion also served as a model for the Blue Fairy in Pinocchio, Hyacinth Hippo in Fantasia, and Mr Stock in Dumbo.
Gower and Marge Champion married in 1947, but divorced in 1973. Gower died in 1980 at the age of 61.