Taylor Davis Popular Books

Taylor Davis Biography & Facts

Frances Taylor Davis (September 28, 1929 – November 17, 2018) was an American dancer and actress who was a member of the Katherine Dunham Company, and the first African American ballerina to perform with the Paris Opera Ballet. Credited as Elizabeth Taylor, she had roles in the Broadway musicals Mr. Wonderful, Shinbone Alley, and was an original cast member of West Side Story. Taylor also appeared in the Off-Broadway productions of Carmen Jones and Porgy and Bess. At the peak of her career, she left Broadway to marry jazz musician Miles Davis. Life and career Early life Taylor was born on September 28, 1929, in Chicago, Illinois. Taylor grew up in the Rosenwald Courts in Chicago. Her father worked at the post office. She began dancing classical ballet at the age of 8, and by the age of 16 she was performing Swan Lake. Her instructor encouraged her to audition for the Edna McRae School of the Dance where she became the only African American student. While attending the school, Taylor met dancer and choreographer Katherine Dunham who offered her a scholarship to study dance at the Katherine Dunham Company. Taylor finished high school then briefly attended college, but decided to pursue a dancing career instead. Career Taylor joined the Katherine Dunham Company, where she was taught by Walter Nicks. She trained and toured extensively with the dance company in Europe and South America. In December 1951 Taylor was recruited for a special presentation to perform with the Paris Opera Ballet, becoming the first African American to be invited to perform with the ballet company. Taylor received rave reviews from the press for her performances in Paris. She was compared to French ballet dancer Leslie Caron. She performed with Benny Goodman at the London Palladium. While in London, Taylor rehearsed with Sadler's Wells Ballet. In 1953 Taylor was asked by Sammy Davis Jr. to appear as his girlfriend in his ill-fated ABC television show, Three for the Road – with the Will Mastin Trio. They had met at Ciro's nightclub where she was performing with the Katherine Dunham dance troupe. The show was about struggling musicians, not the usual stereotypical portrayals of African Americans during that time. The cast included actresses Ruth Attaway and Jane White, and Frederick O'Neal who founded the American Negro Theater. They filmed a pilot in the fall of 1953, but the network couldn't get a sponsor, so the show was postponed and eventually dropped. In 1954, Taylor rejoined the Katherine Dunham dance troupe as one of Dunham's lead dancers for engagements in Rome. Taylor relocated to New York City to act on Broadway. She was credited as Elizabeth Taylor because there was already an actress named Frances Taylor, so she used her middle name. Taylor appeared in the Off-Broadway productions of Porgy and Bess and Carmen Jones at New York City Center. She appeared in the three Broadway musicals: Mr. Wonderful, Shinbone Alley, and West Side Story. On the opening night of West Side Story in September 1957, Taylor received the company's "gypsy robe" for being the outstanding dancer in the cast. In April 1958, it was reported by Jet magazine that Taylor quit the production to pursue a singing-dancing career, but Taylor later revealed that she was dating jazz musician Miles Davis who forced her to quit the production in March 1958. According to Taylor, Davis told her "a woman should be with her man. I want you out of West Side Story." In 1959, Davis allowed Taylor to conduct her own dancing classes for a while. Her students included Julie Robinson, who was a Dunham trouper and the wife of actor Harry Belafonte, and Edna Mae Robinson, who was a chorus line dancer and the wife of boxer Sugar Ray Robinson. When Taylor married Davis in December 1959, he prevented her from working which hindered her career. Choreographer Jerome Robbins who Taylor had worked with in the Broadway musical West Side Story asked Davis if she could appear in the film West Side Story (1961); he refused. Sammy Davis Jr. approached Davis about Taylor appearing in the musical Golden Boy (1964); again he refused. Following her split from Davis in 1965, Taylor taught private dance classes, appeared in television specials with performers such as Elvis Presley, and had a role as the maid in the film The Party (1968). After Taylor retired, she became a restaurant hostess in Los Angeles. She worked at Hamburger Hamlet, Roy's Restaurant, Le Dome, and Chasen's. Personal life Taylor first met Davis when she was dancing at Ciro's nightclub in Los Angeles in 1953. When she traveled back to Chicago, Davis was also in town for gigs. Taylor introduced Davis to her family and he asked her father for her hand in marriage to which he said, "No." Taylor also rejected his proposal. Instead, Taylor married Jean-Marie Durand in Mexico City in 1955 where they were both performing. Durand was of Haitian descent and also a member of the Katherine Dunham's dance troupe; they met in Argentina in 1954. Following the marriage, she left the troupe and gave birth to a son, Jean-Pierre Durand. After Taylor separated from her husband, she ran into Davis in New York City in 1957 and he told her, "Now that I've found you, I'll never let you go." Taylor and Davis were married in Toledo, Ohio, on December 21, 1959. She became his muse, influencing his change in musical direction. He wrote the song for her called "Fran Dance" on his album Jazz Track (1959). Her role in the musical Porgy and Bess inspired his album Porgy and Bess (1959). His album Sketches of Spain (1960) was inspired by a flamenco performance Taylor insisted they attend. Davis also put Taylor on the cover of multiple albums, including Someday My Prince Will Come (1961). However, their marriage was marred by domestic violence. Davis became increasingly violent towards Taylor as his cocaine addiction and alcohol abuse worsened. "Every time I hit her, I felt bad because a lot of it really wasn't her fault but had to do with me being temperamental and jealous," Davis wrote in his 1990 memoir Miles: The Autobiography. Shortly after Taylor and Davis were photographed together for the cover of his album E.S.P. (1965), she fled from him and went to stay with her friend, singer Nancy Wilson in California. Taylor filed for divorce in 1966; it was finalized in 1968. She was one of the interviewees for the documentary Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool; it was released posthumously in 2019. Taylor had a relationship with George Barrie, CEO of Fabergé. In 1990, Taylor filed a lawsuit charging her long-time friend Eartha Kitt with assault and battery. Taylor alleged that Kitt attacked her after they had drinks at the Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel. Death Taylor died at the age of 89 on November 17, 2018. She was survived by her son Jean-Pierre Durand, step-daughter Cheryl Davis, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren. Filmography Stage References External links Frances Taylor at IMDb Elizabeth Taylor at the Interne.... Discover the Taylor Davis popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Taylor Davis books.

Best Seller Taylor Davis Books of 2024

  • Behind the Shoulder Pads synopsis, comments

    Behind the Shoulder Pads

    Joan Collins

    USA TODAY BESTSELLER“I’ve had many amazing adventures in my life. Some stories, though, I have only ever shared with my friends.… Until now!”Dame Joan Collins has always believed t...

  • Taylor Davis - Favorites synopsis, comments

    Taylor Davis - Favorites

    Taylor Davis

    The Violin PlayAlong series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily. Just follow the music, listen to the audio to hear how the violin should sound, and then play...

  • Seen and Unseen synopsis, comments

    Seen and Unseen

    Marc Lamont Hill & Todd Brewster

    A riveting exploration of how visual media has shifted the narrative on race and reignited the push towards justice by the author of the “worthy and necessary” (The New York Times)...

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    The Three Kentucky Presidents

    Holman Hamilton

    The three Kentucky presidentsAbraham Lincoln, Zachary Taylor, and Jefferson Daviswere profoundly shaped by their experiences in Kentucky, poised as it was on the border between the...

  • Finding My Voice synopsis, comments

    Finding My Voice

    Russell Watson

    Russell 'The Voice' Watson is a star with a real story to tell. While most stars of today find success early, Russell was still working in a Salford factory at the age of 30. He sp...

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    Bold Words from Black Women

    Tamara Pizzoli

    Celebrate the power of Black womanhood in this firstofitskind collection of inspirational quotes from fifty activists, artists, and leaders, featuring bold, attentiongrabbing illus...

  • The War to End All Wars synopsis, comments

    The War to End All Wars

    Taylor Davis

    High school level text that details the beginnings of World War I to its conclusion. Important innovations and inventions are displayed in stunning 3D models.

  • Black Ballerinas synopsis, comments

    Black Ballerinas

    Misty Copeland

    From New York Times bestselling and awardwinning author and American Ballet Theatre principal dancer Misty Copeland comes an illustrated nonfiction collection celebrating dancers o...

  • Taylor Davis and the Clash of Kingdoms synopsis, comments

    Taylor Davis and the Clash of Kingdoms

    Michelle Isenhoff

    I would get stuck with an archenemy who won't stay dead... "Why do I have to pay a toll? No one else is forking out dough, you big baboon." I wouldn't recommend repeating those w...

  • The Holocaust Remembered synopsis, comments

    The Holocaust Remembered

    Taylor Davis

    A brief educational book about the Holocaust. This book covers the beginnings of this tragedy through the liberation of the camps. This book is designed to teach high school studen...

  • Dressing Up the Stars synopsis, comments

    Dressing Up the Stars

    Jeanne Walker Harvey

    Discover the true story of how a shy miner’s daughter became one of the most legendary costume designers in Hollywood in this inspiring nonfiction picture book biography.As a child...

  • The War to End All Wars synopsis, comments

    The War to End All Wars

    Taylor Davis

    High school level text that details the beginnings of World War I to its conclusion. Important innovations and inventions are displayed in stunning 3D models.

  • Taylor Davis synopsis, comments

    Taylor Davis

    Taylor Davis

    The Violin PlayAlong series will help you play your favorite songs quickly and easily. Just follow the music, listen to the online audio to hear how the violin should sound, and th...

  • Talking Swing synopsis, comments

    Talking Swing

    Sheila Tracy

    From Palace to Palais, the musicians who played in the big bands tell their own stories, bringing to life an unforgettable era.Prewar reminiscences give an insight into a nevertobe...

  • The Second Life of Mirielle West synopsis, comments

    The Second Life of Mirielle West

    Amanda Skenandore

    The glamorous world of a silent film star’s wife abruptly crumbles when she’s forcibly quarantined at the Carville Lepers Home in this pageturning story of courage, resilience, and...

  • Taylor Davis Boxed Set synopsis, comments

    Taylor Davis Boxed Set

    Michelle Isenhoff

    Finalist in the 2015 kidjudged Wishing Shelf Independent Book Awards (Flame of Findul). Lauded by kids for its snarky humor, the Taylor Davis series was first published as serial ...

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    Who Pays The Piper

    Mackenzie Smith

    It's 1999. The SAS have been sent to the jungle of Sierra Leone to rescue a group of British soldiers taken hostage by the notorious West Side Boys. Captain Christian McKie leads a...

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    The Books That Changed My Life

    Bethanne Patrick

    One hundred of today’s most prominent literary and cultural icons talk about the books that hold a special place in their heartsthat made them who they are today.Leading authors, p...

  • The Trip synopsis, comments

    The Trip

    Deborah Davis

    From the author of Strapless and Guest of Honor, a “jaunty romp through American popart history” (The Washington Post) about a littleknown road trip Andy Warhol took in 1963, and h...

  • Taylor Davis and the Quest for the Immortal Blade synopsis, comments

    Taylor Davis and the Quest for the Immortal Blade

    Michelle Isenhoff

    “Don’t let it touch you!” Ranofur yelled. He bounded toward Elena with lightning speed, but the opaque, shimmering form was already closing with her. “If it makes contact, it will ...

  • Taylor Davis and the Flame of Findul synopsis, comments

    Taylor Davis and the Flame of Findul

    Michelle Isenhoff

    Angels. Monsters. An enemy who cannot die. Sometimes life gooses you when you're not looking. You might be happily coasting through days in a little New Jersey suburb, dreaming ab...