Cheryl Holdridge

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Cheryl Holdridge

Cheryl Holdridge on The Mickey Mouse Club
in 1957
Born June 20, 1944 (1944-06-20) (age 63)
New Orleans, Louisiana
Years active 1955 - 1964
Spouse(s) Lance Reventlow (1964-1972)
Manning J. Post (1976-1999)

Cheryl Holdridge (born June 20, 1944) is an American actress, best known for having been a cast member of the original Mickey Mouse Club.

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[edit] Early life

Holdridge was born in New Orleans, Louisiana. Her mother Julie (1908-2001) was a former dancer who had performed on Broadway with her partner Dick Mason. Julie brought her to California when she married Herbert C. Holdridge, a retired Brigadier General active in fringe political movements. He adopted her and gave her his family name, a secret that she only revealed to an interviewer in 1976.[1] Holdridge grew up in Sherman Oaks and Van Nuys, California. She started dance lessons from an early age with Joyce Cole in North Hollywood, learning both ballet and tap.

[edit] Career

Holdridge first performed professionally at the age of nine, when she landed a role in the New York City Ballet's version of The Nutcracker Suite in Los Angeles. Her first screen appearance was as an uncredited extra in the 1956 film production of Carousel.

She auditioned for The Mickey Mouse Club in the spring of 1956, was hired, and joined the club's "Red Team"--the most visible and popular of the Mouseketeers. Though a good dancer, her weak singing voice kept her in the background of most musical numbers performed by the Mouseketeers. A competent actress with a pleasant speaking voice, she was employed for two of the show's episodic serials: Boys of the Western Sea and Annette.

After the show's run ended, Cheryl returned to Van Nuys High School. She received a big break when she was cast in two episodes of Leave It to Beaver in 1959. (She would later play an occasional recurring role on that show as Wally Cleaver's girlfriend, Julie Foster).

In May 1960, Holdridge went on a live tour to Australia with other former Mouseketeers. While there, she became involved with Lucky Star, an Australian singer.[2] She would later be linked in fan magazines and gossip columns with many other celebrities, including Elvis Presley.

Holdridge's television career went into high gear starting in 1960. She had guest appearances on over twenty different shows, including The Rifleman, My Three Sons, Bewitched, Bringing Up Buddy, and The Dick Van Dyke Show. She was also cast in the lead role of Betty in an unsold television series pilot based on the Archie Comics. While still very much in demand, Holdridge left acting abruptly in 1964 to get married.

After the death of her second husband, Holdridge made a cameo appearance in the 2000 feature film, The Flintstones in Viva Rock Vegas. In 2005 she appeared at Disneyland for 50th anniversary celebrations of both the opening of the park and The Mickey Mouse Club. More recently, she appeared in televised documentary specials about Cary Grant (2005), and Barbara Hutton (2006), and has also done a special feature interview for a Disney DVD.

[edit] Personal life

Holdridge's first husband was sportsman and athlete Lance Reventlow, the only son of mercantile heiress Barbara Hutton and her second husband, a Danish count. The couple were devoted to each other, but maintained residences in separate states. Reventlow died in the crash of a small plane eight years after their marriage.

Her second husband was Manning J. Post, a major figure in Democratic politics in California.

Holdridge is a long-time supporter of environmental causes and charities, and with her second marriage became more active in fund-raising events. Manning Post died of natural causes in 1999. Both of her marriages were childless.

[edit] Filmography

[edit] Television credits

[edit] References

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  1. ^ Forever Hold Your Banner High, by Jerry Bowles, 1976, pg 62 ISBN 0-385-11622-5
  2. ^ Forever Hold Your Banner High, by Jerry Bowles, 1976, pg 65 ISBN 0-385-11622-5

[edit] External links