Ray Bolger was born and grew up in Dorchester, MA[?], a middle-class neighborhood. His father was a house-painter, his mother a homemaker. He was inspired by the vaudeville shows he attended when he was young to become an entertainer himself. He began his career as a dancer. His limber body and ability to ad lib movement won him many starring roles on Broadway in the 1930s.
His film career began when he signed a $3,000 a week contract with MGM in 1936. His best-known film prior to The Wizard of Oz was The Great Ziegfield[?] (1936).
Bolger's performance in Oz was a tour de force. He displayed the full range of his physical, comedic, and dramatic talents playing the character searching for the brain that he's always had. Bolger's sympathy for Dorothy[?]'s plight, his cleverness and bravery in her rescue from the Wicked Witch of the West[?] and his deep affection for her shone through, endearing the character -- and Bolger -- in the public mind forever.
Following Oz Bolger moved to RKO Studios. He starred in several more films and had a sitcom called Where's Raymond? 1953. He also made frequent guest appearances on television. In 1985 he and Liza Minnelli, the daughter of his Oz co-star Judy Garland, starred in That's Dancing! -- a film also written Jack Haley, Jr.[?], the son of Tin Man actor Jack Haley.
Mr. Bolger died in Los Angeles, CA, in 1987 of cancer just five days after his eighty-third birthday. He was the last of the Oz principal actors to pass away.
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