Gene Nelson Movies
Nineteen-year-old Leander Berg billed himself as Gene Berg when he made his professional debut as a skater in
Sonja Henie's LA-based ice show. He was still Gene Berg when, while serving in World War II, he was featured as a dancer in the 1942 Broadway revue This is the Army. It wasn't until the 1948 stage musical Lend an Ear that Gene Berg reemerged as
Gene Nelson. Signed to a 20th Century-Fox contract in 1947, Nelson co-starred in several of that studio's Technicolor song-and-dance fests, then moved on to the musical unit at Warner Bros. His best-known filmusical assignment was as high-kickin' cowpoke Will Parker in the 1955 superproduction
Oklahoma. After briefly attempting to establish himself in dramatic roles, Nelson turned to directing. He called the shots in several
Sam Katzman productions of the 1960s, notably the
Elvis Presley vehicles
Kissin' Cousins (1963) and
Harum Scarum (1965), and the 1965 Hank Williams Sr. biopic
Your Cheatin' Heart. He also directed dozens of TV episodes, working on such weeklies as
The Rifleman,
The Donna Reed Show and
Mod Squad. There was talk that a serious injury in the mid-1950s had forced Gene Nelson to forego dancing in favor of directing; if so, he was sufficiently recovered in the 1970s, displaying his still-impressive terpsichorean skills in the Broadway musicals Follies and Good News. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide