Doreen Tracey, an original Disney Mouseketeer, dies at 74
She was not on the list.
Doreen Tracey, a former child star who played one of the
original cute-as-a-button Mouseketeers on "The Mickey Mouse Club" in
the 1950s, has died, according to Disney publicist Howard Green. She was 74.
Tracey died from pneumonia Wednesday at a hospital in
Thousand Oaks, California, following a two-year battle with cancer.
Tracey maintained ties to Disney and show business
throughout her life, appearing in the film "Westward Ho the Wagons!"
and touring with the Mouseketeers. She later served as a publicist to musician
Frank Zappa and worked at Warner Bros.
It was the pig-tailed Tracey and her talented co-stars —
including Annette Funicello — who appeared on television in black hats with
ears following the anthem "M-I-C, K-E-Y, M-O-U-S-E ..." on ABC's
"The Mickey Mouse Club." Millions of kids raced home from school to
watch in wonder as the bouncy Mouseketeers announced themselves at the top of
the show.
"The Mickey Mouse Club" was the brainchild of Walt
Disney during the flowering of his company's fortunes in the mid-1950s. To help
finance the Disneyland park, he agreed to supply ABC with TV shows. One was
designed for children in the pre-dinner hour.
The hour-long show proved a sensation with its Oct. 3, 1955,
debut. It flourished for two seasons, then was reduced to a half-hour for two
more. Tracey stayed for its four-year run.
The black-and-white series was syndicated in 1962-65. The
1990s version of "The Mickey Mouse Club" launched the careers of
singers Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears and Christina Aguilera, and actors
Keri Russell and Ryan Gosling.
Born in London on April 3, 1943, to parents who worked in
vaudeville, Tracey arrived in the United States when she was 4 and learned to
sing and dance. She nabbed a spot on "The Mickey Mouse Club" when she
was 12.
Lorraine Santoli, a former executive at Disney who wrote
"The Official Mickey Mouse Club Book," said Tracey remained close to
her Disney roots, maintaining long-time friendships with her fellow
Mouseketeers.
Tracey strained her relationship with Disney by posing for a
men's magazine in 1976 with nothing on except her mouse ears and later wearing
nothing but an open trench coat in front of Disney Studios. Still, she often
appeared at Mickey Mouse Club reunion shows at Disneyland and at Disney
conventions, last celebrating the show's 60th anniversary in 2015.
Tracey is survived by her son, Bradley, and two
grandchildren, Gavin, 9, and Autumn, 12.
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