
Mobile, Alabama, USA
Fayard Antonio Nicholas was an American choreographer, dancer and actor. He and his younger brother Harold Nicholas made up the Nicholas Brothers tap dance duo, who starred in the MGM musicals An All-Colored Vaudeville Show, Stormy Weather, The Pirate, and Hard Four. The Nicholas brothers also starred in the 20th Century-Fox musicals Down Argentine Way, Sun Valley Serenade, and Orchestra Wives. In 1932, when he was 18 and his brother was only 11, they became the featured act at Cotton Club in New York City. The brothers earned fame with a unique style of rhythm tap that blended "masterful jazz steps with daredevil athletic moves and an elegance of motion worthy of ballet". They appeared in the Ziegfeld Follies on Broadway and in London they worked with jazz choreographer Buddy Bradley. The performances led them to a career in film. Nicholas appeared in over 60 films, including the 1943 musical Stormy Weather with their signature staircase dance. His career was interrupted from 1943 to 1944 when he served in the U.S. Army during World War II. Nicholas achieved the rank of Technician fifth grade while in WWII. After his dance career ended, Nicholas and his wife, Katherine Hopkins Nicholas, embarked on a lecture tour discussing dance. In 2003, Nicholas served as "Festival Legend" at the third "Soul to Sole Tap Festival" in Austin, Texas. Nicholas was inducted into the National Museum of Dance C.V. Whitney Hall of Fame in 2001.

as self

as Self - Tap Dancer
1964

as Self
1978

as self
1955

as Performer
1948

as El mismo
1976

as Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
1988

as Ulysses
2007

as (archive footage) (uncredited)
1974

as Dancer
1943

as Dancer (as Nicholas Brothers)
1942

as Benny Smith
1970

as Self
2003
as Self
2016

as Self (archival footage)
2022

as Self (archive footage)
2019

as Self
2016

as Ulysses
2007

as Self (archive footage)
2007

as Self
2003

as Self
2003

as Self
2002

as Mr. Maynard
2002

as Self
2002

as Self (uncredited)
2002

as Self
1998

as Himself
1992

as Self (archive footage) (uncredited)
1988

as From 'Down Argentine Way' (archive footage)
1985

as Self (archive footage)
1975

as (archive footage) (uncredited)
1974

as Benny Smith
1970

1956

as Bailarín
1953

as Bailarín
1953

as Himself
1952

as Performer
1948

as (archive footage) (uncredited)
1944
as self
2 ep.