Ruby Keeler

Ruby Keeler

According to her mother, Al Jolson gave Ruby a dowry of $1 million when they were married.

Although she had been married to Al Jolson's she forbade the use of her name in the film of Jolson's life, The Jolson Story (1946). Portrayed in that film by Evelyn Keyes, Keeler is referred to as "Julie Benson."

Aunt of Joey D. Vieira.

Aunt of Ken Weatherwax. He was Pugsley Addams of "The Addams Family" (1964).

Famous Broadway columnist Mark Hellinger, later to become a movie producer, accompanied Ruby and Al Jolson on their honeymoon, to chronicle the event for the "NY Daily News".



Older sister of Gertrude Keeler and Helen Keeler.

Received a standing ovation at the 1979 Academy Awards when she appeared to co-present the Oscar for the Best Song. She was overwhelmed with emotion.

Ruby began appearing as a singer and dancer in nightclubs when she was 13 years old, after dropping out of the sixth grade at Catholic school. She would work at two or three clubs a night, making a minimum of $150 a week. Her iceman father, Ralph, had costly medical problems, and she became the Keeler family breadwinner.

Ruby, who was Irish, and her 24-years-senior husband Al Jolson, who was Jewish, could not conceive a child, so they adopted a baby boy who was half-Irish and half-Jewish. After she divorced Jolson she had four children with her second husband. Her adopted son, Al Jolson Jr., was a contented member of her new family.

She returned to Broadway in 1971, starring in "No No, Nanette", appearing in a run of 861 performances.

When 40-year-old Al Jolson, her future husband, first met her at Texas Guinan's El Fey Club in New York City one night in 1926, she was a 16-year-old dancer in the chorus line. He married her two years later, when she was 18.

When she was a chorus girl in New York City, Ruby was looked after and protected by a gangster named Johnny Irish. An associate of speakeasy owner and bootlegger Owney Madden--who owned the world-famous Cotton Club in Harlem--and an ally of notorious gangster Dutch Schultz, Irish ran Schultz's nightspots for him. The older and married Irish was said not to have had any romantic interest in Keeler but watched over her because she was very young, somewhat naive and also Irish, like himself. When Al Jolson decided to marry Ruby, he went to Irish to tell him of his intentions. Irish warned Jolson that if he ever mistreated Ruby, he'd pay for the transgression with his life.


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