Renee Carroll

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Born
Rebecca Shapiro

(1908-03-06)March 6, 1908
DiedMay 1985 (aged 77)
Mallorca, Spain
OccupationsHatchecker, writer, actress
Renee Carroll
Carroll in 1940s
Born
Rebecca Shapiro

(1908-03-06)March 6, 1908
DiedMay 1985 (aged 77)
Mallorca, Spain
OccupationsHatchecker, writer, actress

Renee Carroll (born Rebecca Shapiro; March 6, 1908 – May 1985) was an American hatcheck girl, writer, and occasional actress associated with the Theater District, Manhattan. She worked for over two decades at Sardi's restaurant in Manhattan, where she became a fixture in the community, authored a memoir, and supported theater productions and emerging actors.

Renee Carroll was born Rebecca Shapiro on March 6, 1908, on Manhattan's Lower East Side. Her parents, Herman Shapiro, an Orthodox rabbi, and Gertrude Frances Nathan, raised her alongside her siblings, Anna and Solomon Reuben Shapiro.[1][2] She attended public school until the age of 15 before leaving formal education.[1]

Although her parents wished for her to pursue law, Carroll chose to take business classes and briefly worked in a law office. Dissatisfied with the work, she turned to dancing and found employment as a taxi dancer at the Roseland Ballroom, earning small fees for partnering with patrons.[1] Carroll’s rebellious nature led to tensions with her father, resulting in her being locked out of the family home. She adopted her pseudonym, Renee Carroll, inspired by a fictional character, and fabricated a backstory to obscure her origins.[1]

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