Powell's movie career didn't truly take off until 1951, when she appeared in #Royal Wedding with dance legend Fred Astaire. But Powell continued to be typecast as the innocent teenager, until she landed a more mature role in what is probably her best-known movie, #Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, in which she starred alongside Howard Keel. By the late '50s, however, it appeared as though Powell's movie career had come to a halt, which led to appearances on television, stage work, and a nightclub act choreographed by Gower Champion. Powell starred in a Broadway revival of #Irene in 1973 (replacing Debbie Reynolds), which led to more work in summer stock and road shows, including +The Jane Powell Show, +My Fair Lady, +Peter Pan, +The Unsinkable Molly Brown, +Carousel, +The Boy Friend, +Brigadoon, and +The Sound of Music, in addition to +South Pacific and I Do! I Do! -- both of which featured her previous #Seven Brides co-star, Howard Keel.
During the '80s, Powell landed regular work on TV shows, including #Murder She Wrote, #Growing Pains (playing Alan Thicke's mother), #Marie, and a long running part on the daytime soap opera, #Loving. Additionally, Powell also appeared in the musical documentary #That's Dancing!, made a fitness video for arthritis sufferers, and was one of many '50s musical stars to appear in a special performance at the 1986 Academy Awards show. In 1988, Powell penned a revealing autobiography, -The Girl Next Door and How She Grew, and during the '90s, appeared in a few documentaries -- including 1992's #Nelson and Jeanette and #The Making of Seven Brides for Seven Brothers, and in 1999, appeared in the movie #Picture This. In the early 21st century, several compilations of her musical output from the '40s and '50s were issued, including A Song in the Air: Debut Recordings and A Heart That's Free, as well as a pair of two-for-one releases -- Hansel Gretel/Alice in Wonderland and Romance/A Date with Jane Powell. ~ Greg Prato, Rovi