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Victor Moore Totally Explained
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Everything about Victor Moore totally explainedVictor Moore (born February 24, 1876, in Hammonton, NJ; died July 23, 1962, in East Islip, NY) was a star of stage and screen.
He appeared in over 58 films and 21 Broadway shows. He first appeared on Broadway in " Rosemary" ( 1896). Also appeared in George M. Cohan's " Forty-five Minutes from Broadway", which opened January 1, 1906, and its sequel, " The Talk of the Town" ( 1907). He went on to star in such great shows as " Oh, Kay!" ( 1926) as Shorty McGee, Gershwin's " Of Thee I Sing" ( 1931) with William Gaxton, “ Let 'Em Eat Cake” ( 1933), Cole Porter's " Anything Goes" ( 1934) as Moonface Martin, and Irving Berlin's " Louisiana Purchase" ( 1940) as Oliver P. Loganberry.
He also appeared in Hollywood films such as Swing Time ( 1936) with Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, Make Way for Tomorrow ( 1937), the film version of Louisiana Purchase ( 1941), On Our Merry Way (1948), and Ziegfeld Follies ( 1955).
Victor Moore is interred in a crypt in a mausoleum at Cypress Hills Cemetery in Brooklyn, New York.
The Victor Moore bus terminal at the New York City Subway's 74th Street-Roosevelt Avenue-Broadway station in Jackson Heights, Queens, served by the E, F, V, G, R, and 7, and Q33, Q19B and Q47 buses, is named for him.
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