Bobby Burgess

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bobby Burgess (born May 19, 1941 in Long Beach, California) is an American dancer and singer.

Bobby Burgess
Bobby Burgess

Growing up in Southern California, Bobby first started performing at age five which included dancing, singing and playing the accordion. In 1955 he was selected as one of the original Mouseketeers by Walt Disney to appear on his new television program The Mickey Mouse Club, which gave him his first taste of celebrity.

When the series ended in 1959, Bobby returned to a normal teenagers life, completing high school. By 1961, while attending Long Beach State University, he and his childhood friend (and dancing partner) Barbara Boylan entered a Calcutta dance contest held by Lawrence Welk and his orchestra based on the hit song of the same name. They won the contest and first prize was an appearance on The Lawrence Welk Show which appeared nationally on ABC. After their initial appearance, Bobby & Barbara continued to guest on the maestro's show for the next few weeks, either dancing to Calcutta or to the orchestra's next hit song Yellow Bird. The overwhelming positive fan response led to Lawrence Welk hiring the dance couple as permanent members of the show, which was described by the maestro as "having created a job for themselves".

Over the course of the show's run, first on ABC and later in syndication; Bobby had three dance partners, Barbara Boylan from 1961 to 1967 and was a temporary fill-in for a few shows in 1979, Cissy King from 1967 to 1978, and Elaine Balden from 1979 until the show ended in 1982. He also did song and dance numbers with fellow Welk hoofers Arthur Duncan and Jack Imel.

Today he still dances, whether it's in his dance studio teaching young students, or with Elaine Balden out on tour with his fellow Welk stars.

He married Kristin Floren, the daughter of Welk accordionist Myron Floren on Valentine's Day 1971. The couple today lives in Studio City and are the parents of four children, Becki, Robert, Wendi and Brent.

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