Kerry Butler

Kerry Marie Butler (born June 18, 1971)[1] is an American actress known primarily for her work in theatre. She is best known for originating the role Barbara Maitland in Beetlejuice, Penny Pingleton in Hairspray, and Clio/Kira in Xanadu, the latter of which earned her a Tony Award nomination for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical.

Kerry Butler
Kerry Butler performing at the Epcot International Festival of the Arts on February 6, 2017
Born
Kerry Marie Butler

(1971-06-18) June 18, 1971[1]
Alma materIthaca College
OccupationActress
Years active1974–present
Spouse(s)
(
m. 1991)
[2]
Children2
Websitewww.kerrybutler.net

Early life

Born in the Bensonhurst neighborhood of Brooklyn, Butler began acting in commercials at age three.[3] She notes that growing up, "When I saw Annie ... I knew that was what I wanted to do."[4] After a four-year hiatus imposed by her mother, Kerry started acting again at the age of nine and has been at it since.[3]

Butler graduated from Ithaca College in 1992, where she majored in musical theatre.

Career

Butler toured with the musical Oklahoma! in Europe in the role of Ado Annie. Other New York roles included Vicki in the workshop of Bright Lights, Big City, Barrow in The "I" Word and Claudia in The Folsom Head. She also has done work on various commercials.[5]

Butler made her Broadway debut in 1993 in the role of Ms. Jones in the musical Blood Brothers, where she also understudied the role of Linda. In 1995, Butler originated the role of Belle for the Toronto production of Disney's Beauty and the Beast, where she was nominated for the DORA Award for her performance, and eventually transferred to Broadway. After playing Belle for over two years, she left the musical in September 1997 and was replaced by Debbie Gibson. She then moved over to Les Misérables to play Eponine.

In 2001, Butler played the love interest Shelley in the acclaimed Off Broadway original musical Bat Boy: The Musical.[6] Though the show had a "fanatical following," Butler noted that "We were really building an audience before Sept. 11. And after that we never recovered. People didn't want to go out at all, let alone downtown."[4] Bat Boy closed in December 2001.[7]

Hairspray

In February 2002 Butler was cast as Penny Pingleton (a role she had originated in workshops) in Hairspray, the musical version of the John Waters 1988 film of the same name. After an out-of-town tryout in Seattle, Hairspray opened on Broadway on August 2002 and "became an immediate Broadway smash."[8] Even in a star-studded ensemble cast, reviewers singled Butler out for her sparkling performance as the whacky best friend.[9] The show won eight Tony Awards including Best Musical. For her performance, Butler was nominated for the Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle Awards, and received the Clarence Derwent Award.

While Hairspray went into pre-production, Butler played the free-spirited performance artist Maddie in the limited run of the intimate Australian musical Prodigal at the York Theatre. In March 2002 Butler also appeared on the TV show Sesame Street as Ms. Camp, a letter carrier. During her run in Hairspray Butler filmed a TV pilot for Fox entitled Twins, but it was not picked up for the season.[10]

After starring in Hairspray for a year Butler left the cast in July 2003 and was succeeded by Jenn Gambatese.

Little Shop of Horrors and beyond

Kerry Butler performing at a benefit concert for Hurricane Katrina in New York City, October 23, 2005.

Following the end of her Hairspray contract, Butler was cast in the role of Audrey in the second, more successful, Broadway production of the musical, Little Shop of Horrors. Butler revisited her long-lost childhood Brooklyn accent to play Audrey, the love interest with a sadistic dentist boyfriend and a heart of gold.[11] A fan of Little Shop composer Alan Menken,[2] who also wrote the music for Beauty and the Beast, Butler received an Outer Critics Circle nomination for Little Shop.

After leaving the show in the summer of 2004, Butler traveled to San Francisco where she created the role of scheming, foul-mouthed teenager Dedee Truitt in the new musical The Opposite of Sex, which had its world premiere at the Magic Theatre that fall. The musical is based on Don Roos' 1998 film starring Christina Ricci and Lisa Kudrow.[12]

In the fall of 2005, Butler appeared in the original Off-Broadway musical Miracle Brothers at the Vineyard Theatre. She played the role of Isabel, a mother made miserable by the rebelliousness of her son as well as her unhappy marriage. In the summer of 2006 she reprised her role of Dedee in The Opposite of Sex at the Williamstown Theatre Festival, and followed that by taking on the role of Kate, the Ayn Rand-loving runaway bride, in the New York Musical Theatre Festival production of Party Come Here.

Butler also portrayed the manipulative heiress and recovering alcoholic Claudia Reston on the ABC soap opera One Life to Live, from January 2006 until January 2007, when her character was written off the show.

Xanadu

Beginning May 2007 through September 2008, Butler returned to the Broadway stage to star in the new musical Xanadu, based on the 1980 roller-disco film starring Olivia Newton-John. She played the dual role of Clio/Kira, a Greek muse who inspires and falls in love with a struggling artist. Butler mastered roller skating for the role and spent nearly the duration of the show on skates.[13] Widely expected to be a flop, the musical opened in July 2007 to extensive critical acclaim and was the surprise hit of the summer.[14]

For her role in Xanadu, Butler was nominated for the Tony Award for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical[15] and the Drama League Award for Distinguished Performance.[16]

In February and March 2008, Butler appeared as Reese, the thieving assistant to a fashion designer, in the first season of the television series Lipstick Jungle, on NBC.[17]

Faith, Trust & Pixie Dust

In May 2008, Butler released her first solo album on the PS Classics label. The album is entitled Faith, Trust & Pixie Dust and features some of Butler's favorite songs from Disney films and shows given "intimate, acoustic" arrangements. The title is taken from the lyrics of the Jonatha Brooke song "I'll Try", from the film Return to Neverland, which is featured on the album. Of note is the track "This Only Happens in the Movies", an unreleased song written by Alan Menken (for the unrealized prequel to Who Framed Roger Rabbit), being given its inaugural recording.[18] The full track listing is below.

In a unique contest sponsored by her official site, Butler let fans submit suggestions for one song to be included on the album, with the winner, chosen by Butler, joining her in the studio when the song was recorded. The winning entry was "God Help the Outcasts", from the animated film The Hunchback of Notre Dame.[18]

Butler in 2011

Catch Me If You Can, Rock of Ages

The following year, Butler was again featured as a guest star on major television shows. In May 2009 she appeared on an episode of NBC's 30 Rock, as a member of a group of New York ladies of leisure with a surprising secret. The following month, she appeared on the ABC series Cupid, as Debbie, a working-class masseuse who attempts to improve herself to impress her wealthy boyfriend.

In the summer of 2009, Butler appeared in the world premiere of Catch Me If You Can at the 5th Avenue Theatre, the same venue where Hairspray had its pre-Broadway tryout.[19][20] She played Brenda Strong, the Southern ingénue who falls in love with the con artist Frank Abagnale, Jr. (The role was played by Amy Adams in the Steven Spielberg film version of Catch Me If You Can.)

In September 2009, Butler began a six-month engagement in the Broadway musical Rock of Ages, playing six performances a week.[21] She played the lead role of Sherrie, a small-town girl who moves to the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles to pursue her dream of becoming an actress. She left the production on March 13, 2010.

In April 2010, Butler made her New York City cabaret debut at Feinstein's at the Regency with a show of songs she has performed on Broadway, as well as personal favorites.

In October 2010, Butler starred in the New York Musical Theatre Festival production of Pandora's Box, playing the title role of Pandora, a slightly naive suburban housewife whose life is turned upside down by the arrival of a mysterious stranger. She also appeared as Mary Jo Clarkson, an Islamist terrorist on the CBS television show Blue Bloods.

From March to September 2011, Butler reprised the role of Brenda Strong in the Broadway production of Catch Me if You Can at the Neil Simon Theatre, the same Broadway theatre where Hairspray played.[22] For this role she was nominated for the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical.[23]

Also in September 2011, Butler appeared on the series finale of Rescue Me as an overprotective mother who argues with Denis Leary's character on a playground.

The Best Man, The Call, Under My Skin

From March through September 2012, Butler appeared in the Broadway revival of Gore Vidal's The Best Man. She played Mabel Cantwell, the Southern wife of a presidential candidate. The production costarred Angela Lansbury, James Earl Jones, Candice Bergen, Eric McCormack, John Larroquette, Michael McKean, and Jefferson Mays.[24] It was her first Broadway role in a drama, rather than a musical.

On February 18, 2013, Butler played Evelyn Nesbit in a concert production of Ragtime at Avery Fisher Hall.[25] Also that month, she appeared on an episode of White Collar, playing a skeptical art dealer.

From March through May 2013, Butler appeared Off-Broadway in The Call, a new play by Tanya Barfield, a co-production between Playwrights Horizons and Primary Stages. In it, she played Annie, an urban artist who decides to adopt a baby from Africa. The play was very personal to Butler.

In May 2013, Butler appeared on an episode of Law and Order: SVU as Ariel Randolph, a mother with a secret life whose bad decisions have tragic consequences.

From April to June 2014, Butler appeared Off-Broadway in Under My Skin, a comedy by Robert Sternin and Prudence Fraser (of The Nanny fame). She played Melody Dent, a temp at a health insurance company who, thanks to a freak accident and divine intervention, ends up switching bodies with the male CEO of the company.

Return to musical theatre; additional television appearances

In October 2014, Butler starred in the York Theatre Company production of Big alongside John Tartaglia. She played Susan Lawrence, who works at a toy company and becomes the love interest of the main character.[26]

In December 2014, Butler appeared on The Mysteries of Laura as a protective mother and on Elementary as a birdwatcher.

From March through June 2015, Butler appeared Off-Broadway at New World Stages in Clinton: The Musical, a satirical look at the years of Bill Clinton's presidency. She played Hillary Clinton and received good reviews for her role.

In April 2015, Butler lent her vocal talents to the animated children's program Wallykazam!, voicing the character of Nancy the Noodle.

In October 2015, Butler made her solo debut at Feinstein's/54 Below with Seth Rudetsky on piano, performing hits from her career as well as telling behind-the-scenes stories.

In November 2015, Butler appeared on The Mindy Project as Jody's sister-in-law (and sometime mistress) Ann Marie.

Butler appears in the Netflix television mini-series Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, which was released beginning in November 2016.[27] She plays Claudia, therapist to Lorelai and Emily Gilmore.

Disaster, Mean Girls

From February to May 2016, Butler appeared on Broadway in Disaster!, by Seth Rudetsky and Jack Plotnick, a parody of 1970s disaster movies featuring hit songs from that decade.[28] She played Marianne, a career-oriented reporter who, while investigating the story of a poorly constructed casino ship, runs into an unexpected person from her past. The reviews for the show have generally been favorable, especially from The New York Times, which listed the show as a Critic's Pick.[29] However, due to poor ticket sales, the show closed on May 8, 2016.[30]

From October to December 2017, Butler appeared in the Broadway-bound musical adaptation of Mean Girls, by Tina Fey, Jeff Richmond, and Nell Benjamin. The show had an out-of-town tryout at the National Theatre in Washington, DC. Butler played the roles of Ms. Norbury (played by Tina Fey in the film), Mrs. Heron and Mrs. George.[31]

From March to September 2018, Butler played the roles of Ms. Norbury, Mrs. Heron, and Mrs. George in Mean Girls on Broadway. On August 14, 2018 it was announced that Butler will play her final performance on September 9 and will be replaced by Jennifer Simard.[32]

Reviews took note of her standout performance in the three very different roles. The Hollywood Reporter noted her role as "...stand-in from the movie, sardonic math teacher Ms. Norbury, played here by Kerry Butler, acing triple-duty with distinctive takes also on Cady's earnest mother and Regina's self-described "cool mom,"".[33] Variety wrote, in reviewing the Washington, DC production: "Kerry Butler offers delightful turns as the teacher, Mrs. Norbury, precisely mimicking Fey's role in the film, along with a hysterical portrayal of Regina's developmentally arrested mother (Amy Poehler in the film). The latter includes a delicious parody of “Saturday Night Live's” iconic skit, “The Californians.”"[34]

Beetlejuice

From October to November 2018, Butler appeared in the world premiere of the musical Beetlejuice at the National Theatre in Washington, DC, in the role of Barbara Maitland.[35] Barbara, along with her husband Adam, is a woman of simple pleasures, and also a recently deceased ghost who finds herself haunting her own house, newly occupied by the living Deetz family, as well as contending with the trickster ghost Beetlejuice.

From March 2019, Butler is reprising the role of Barbara Maitland in the Broadway production of the show.

Personal life

Butler continues to perform in various workshops, readings and benefit concerts. She is a vegetarian and activist whose concerns include youth mentoring, human rights violations, genocide and environmental issues.[36]

Butler is married to childhood friend[9] Muppet writer and puppeteer Joey Mazzarino, and they have two daughters, whom they adopted from Ethiopia.[2] The older daughter, Segi, is the inspiration for the Sesame Street song I Love My Hair.[37] Their second daughter's name is Sumaya.

Credits

Theatre

Year Title Role Notes
2018–2020 Beetlejuice Barbara Maitland Broadway – Winter Garden Theatre

Regional – National Theatre

2017–2018 Mean Girls Mrs. Heron / Ms. Norbury / Mrs. George Broadway – August Wilson Theatre

Regional – National Theatre

2016 Disaster! Marianne Broadway
2012 The Best Man Mabel Cantwell Broadway
2009–2011 Catch Me If You Can Brenda Strong Broadway

Regional – 5th Avenue Theatre

2009–2010 Rock of Ages Sherrie Broadway
2007–2008 Xanadu Clio/Kira Broadway
2003–2004 Little Shop of Horrors Audrey Broadway
2002–2003 Hairspray Penny Pingleton Broadway

Regional – 5th Avenue Theatre

1998–1999 Les Misérables Eponine Broadway
1995–1997 Beauty and the Beast Belle Broadway
1993 Blood Brothers Ms. Jones Broadway
2015 Clinton: The Musical Hillary Rodham Clinton New World Stages (Stage 3)
2014 Under My Skin Melody Dent Little Shubert Theatre
2013 The Call Annie Primary Stages/Playwrights Horizons
2010 Pandora's Box Pandora The New York Musical Theatre Festival
2006 Party Come Here Kate The New York Musical Theatre Festival
2004, 2006 The Opposite of Sex Dedee Truitt Williamstown Theatre Festival
2005 Miracle Brothers Isabel Vineyard Theatre
2003 Prodigal Maddie York Theatre
2001 Bat Boy: The Musical Shelley Parker Union Square Theatre
The "I" Word Barrow New York
The Folsom Head Claudia New York
Oklahoma! Ado Annie European Tour

Film

Year Title Role Notes
2001 Second Honeymoon Jennifer Luckenbill
2000 Borough of Kings Anna Callahan
2001 Campfire Stories Beatrice
2018 The Miseducation of Cameron Post Ruth Post

Television

Year Title Role Notes
2016 Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life Claudia
2015 The Mindy Project Ann Marie Zoey Kimball-Kinney
2015 Wallykazam! Nancy the Noodle
2014 Elementary Astrid
2014 The Mysteries of Laura Zoey's Mom
2013 Law & Order: Special Victims Unit Ariel Randolph
2013 White Collar Leslie
2011 Rescue Me Marsha
2010 Blue Bloods Mary Jo Clarkson
2009 Cupid Debbie
2009 30 Rock Lyle
2008 Lipstick Jungle Reese
2000, 2006–2007 One Life to Live Heather, Claudia Reston
2002 Sesame Street Charlotte Camp
1995 Princess Gwenevere and the Jewel Riders Gwenevere

Video Games

Year Title Role Notes
2018 Red Dead Redemption 2 Pedestrians
2006 Rockstar Games Presents Table Tennis Haley

Demos, readings, concerts, and workshops

  • Broadway Vacation
  • Seeing Red
  • Beetlejuice
  • The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas
  • Hazel
  • Clinton: The Musical
  • Big
  • Ragtime
  • Cinderella
  • Through the Door
  • Romy and Michele's High School Reunion
  • The Dogs of Pripyat
  • The Green Heart
  • Hollywood Lies
  • The Nutty Professor
  • The Front
  • Catch Me If You Can
  • Baby
  • Xanadu
  • One Step Forward
  • In Your Dreams
  • The Little Mermaid
  • Pandora's Box
  • The Man in the White Suit
  • Legally Blonde: The Musical
  • The Wedding Singer
  • Easter Rising
  • Robber Bridegroom
  • Piece
  • Taboo
  • Bright Lights, Big City
  • Le Passe Muraille (later named Amour)

Cast recordings

  • Beetlejuice - Original Broadway Cast, 2019
  • Mean Girls: The Musical - Original Broadway Cast, 2018
  • Disaster! - Original Broadway Cast, 2016
  • Clinton: The Musical - Original Off-Broadway Cast, 2015
  • Catch Me If You Can - Original Broadway Cast, 2011
  • Dear Edwina - World Premiere Cast, 2008
  • Xanadu - Original Broadway Cast, 2007
  • Anna Karenina - The Broadway Musical, 2007
  • Little Shop of Horrors - New Broadway Cast, 2004
  • Hairspray - Original Broadway Cast, 2003
  • Prodigal - Original Off-Broadway Cast, 2003
  • Bat Boy - Original Off-Broadway Cast, 2001

Solo album

  • Faith, Trust & Pixie Dust - Released on May 13, 2008

Track Listing:

  1. "This Only Happens in the Movies"
  2. "When You Wish Upon a Star"
  3. "I'll Try"
  4. "Call Me a Princess"
  5. "Colors of the Wind"
  6. "It's a Small World"/"God Help the Outcasts"
  7. "Baby Mine"
  8. "Minnie's Yoo Hoo"
  9. "Second Star to the Right"
  10. "The Bare Necessities"
  11. "When She Loved Me"
  12. "Disneyland"

Other recordings

  • Featured on Out of Our Heads: The Music of Kooman and Dimond - "I Think That He Likes Me", 2011
  • Featured on Ballroom Remixed - "Bad at Being Good", 2011
  • Featured on Carols for a Cure: Volume 9 - "Away in a Manger", 2007
  • Featured on The Broadway Musicals of 1945 - "Here I Go Again", duet with Eddie Korbich; "It Doesn't Cost Anything to Dream"; "Slightly Perfect", duet with Scott Ailing; "What's the Use of Wond'rin", duet with Marc Kudisch, 2007
  • Featured on Guy Haines' New Guy in Town - "Sure Thing", duet with Guy Haines, 2005
  • Featured on NEO: New, Emerging, Outstanding - "Any Day", duet with Laura Bell Bundy and "Inside Your Heart", duet with Deven May, 2005
  • Featured on Jamie deRoy & Friends: Volume 6: When I Grow Up - "Some Shoes Are Harder Than Others to Fill", 2005
  • Featured on Jamie deRoy & Friends: Volume 5: Animal Tracks - "Lion Tamer", 2003
  • Featured on Jamie deRoy & Friends: Volume 4: Family - "The Portrait", 2002
  • Featured on Sleep Well Tonight: Lullabies for Little Dreamers - "Sleep Safe Tonight"; "Hush Little Baby"; "All The World Is Sleeping"; "Lambs Are Sleeping", duet with Kaitlin Hopkins; Meet Me On The Other Side; Moon Sun, 2002

Awards and nominations

Year Award ceremony Category Show Result
1996 DORA Award Outstanding Female Performance in a Principal Role Beauty and the Beast Nominated
2003 Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Hairspray Nominated
Drama Desk Award Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Nominated
Clarence Derwent Award Most Promising Female Performance Won
2004 Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Actress in a Musical Little Shop of Horrors Nominated
2008 Drama League Award Distinguished Performance Xanadu Nominated
Tony Award Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical Nominated
2011 Drama Desk Award Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Catch Me If You Can Nominated
2018 Outer Critics Circle Award Outstanding Featured Actress in a Musical Mean Girls Nominated

References

  1. Kerry Butler on IMDb
  2. "Kerry Butler - Q&A" Broadway.com, September 24, 2007
  3. Biography - Kerry Butler official website Archived January 19, 2008, at the Wayback Machine kerrybutler.net
  4. "Kerry Butler interview" Archived August 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine HainesHisWay.com
  5. "Kerry Butler official website - Resume" Archived January 17, 2008, at the Wayback Machine kerrybutler.net
  6. Jones, Kenneth. " 'Bat Boy, the Musical' Spreads Its Wings and Opens Off-Broadway March 21" Playbill, March 21, 2001
  7. Jones, Kenneth. "Bat Boy's Wings Clipped; Musical Closes Dec. 2" Playbill, November 8, 2001
  8. Hairspray Broadway.com
  9. "This Hairspray actress has the roller of her life" Archived December 31, 2007, at the Wayback Machine New York Daily News, August 13, 2002
  10. "Kerry Butler interview" BroadwayWorld.com, October 16, 2003
  11. 2003 "Fall Theatre Preview" New York Magazine, 2003
  12. The Opposite of Sex Broadwayworld.com
  13. "Review: Xanadu" talkinbroadway.com, July 10, 2007
  14. "Xanadu Breaks Helen Hayes Box-Office Record" Archived July 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com, July 12, 2007
  15. 2007-2008 "Tony Nominations Announced; In the Heights Earns 13 Noms" Archived May 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com, May 13, 2008
  16. "LuPone, Ebersole and Baranski to Present Drama League Awards" Archived May 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com, May 6, 2008
  17. "Xanadu Star Butler Lands Recurring Role on NBC's Lipstick Jungle" Archived February 20, 2008, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com, January 17, 2008
  18. "Kerry Butler's Faith, Trust and Pixie Dust Set For May Release" broadwayworld.com, February 28, 2008
  19. "Kerry Butler Cast in World Premiere of 'Catch Me If You Can' Musical" Archived March 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com
  20. "Butz, Tveit, Wopat, Butler, Hart, deBenedet to Star in 'Catch Me If You Can' Premiere" Archived March 16, 2009, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com
  21. " 'Rock of Ages' to Welcome Kerry Butler in September" Archived August 30, 2009, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com
  22. "Norbert Leo Butz, Aaron Tveit, Kerry Butler and Tom Wopat Set for Broadway's 'Catch Me If You Can' " Archived November 12, 2010, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com
  23. "56th Annual Drama Desk Nominations Announced; 'Book of Mormon' Scores 12 Nominations" Archived September 2, 2011, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com
  24. "Kerry Butler Joins 'The Best Man'; Casting Now Complete" broadwayworld.com, January 5, 2012
  25. " 'Ragtime' Avery Fisher Hall Staging" Archived February 4, 2013, at the Wayback Machine playbill.com
  26. "John Tartaglia, Kerry Butler and More Cast in York Theatre Company's Mufti Production of Big" playbill.com, October 6, 2014
  27. McPhee, Ryan. "Christian Borle & Kerry Butler Will Join Sutton Foster in Netflix's Gilmore Girls Revival; Yes, They'll Sing!" broadway.com, April 7, 2016
  28. Lloyd Webber, Imogen (November 5, 2015). "Look Out! All-Star Disaster! Will Hit Broadway, Starring Adam Pascal, Roger Bart, Faith Prince & More". Broadway.com. Retrieved March 8, 2016.
  29. Isherwood, Charles (March 8, 2016). "Review: Mayhem! Gambling! Disco! In 'Disaster!' It's All There for the Spoofing". nytimes.com. Retrieved March 13, 2016.
  30. Fierberg, Ruthie (May 3, 2016), Disaster! Announces Closing Date, Playbill
  31. "Mean Girls Musical Finds Its Plastics in Taylor Louderman and Ashley Park; Additional Casting Announced | Playbill". Playbill. Retrieved November 1, 2017.
  32. Clement, Olivia. "Jennifer Simard to Join 'Mean Girls' on Broadway" Playbill, August 14, 2018
  33. Rooney, David. "'Mean Girls': Theater Review" Hollywood Reporter, April 8, 2018
  34. Harris, Paul. "D.C. Pre-Broadway Review: 'Mean Girls'" Variety, November 19, 2017
  35. McPhee, Ryan. "Kerry Butler, Rob McClure, Leslie Kritzer Join Broadway-Aimed Beetlejuice Musical; Full Cast Announced" Playbill, August 22, 2018
  36. "Kerry Butler's official website - Causes". Archived from the original on December 2, 2007.
  37. "'I Love My Hair': A Father's Tribute To His Daughter". NPR.
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