Rosemary Hall: Difference between revisions
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Rosemary Hall was right there in the original seven who kicked off the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders in 1972, the tiny crew Tex Schramm hand-picked from a hundred hopefuls to flip sideline chants into full-on jazz routines. She lasted just that one season, but she made it count- high kicks, big grins, helping launch the fringe uniform craze that blew up on calendars and TV specials. | Rosemary Hall was right there in the original seven who kicked off the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders in 1972, the tiny crew Tex Schramm hand-picked from a hundred hopefuls to flip sideline chants into full-on jazz routines. She lasted just that one season, but she made it count- high kicks, big grins, helping launch the fringe uniform craze that blew up on calendars and TV specials. | ||
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==Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders (1)== | ==Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders (1)== | ||
[[:category:Dallas_Cowboys_Cheerleaders_of_1972_-_73|'''1972''']] | |||
==Sources== | ==Sources== | ||
Latest revision as of 21:26, 2 February 2026

Rosemary Hall was right there in the original seven who kicked off the Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders in 1972, the tiny crew Tex Schramm hand-picked from a hundred hopefuls to flip sideline chants into full-on jazz routines. She lasted just that one season, but she made it count- high kicks, big grins, helping launch the fringe uniform craze that blew up on calendars and TV specials.
No fancy backstory: She was a Dallas girl with drill team roots, probably danced her way through TCU classes like the rest. Fans remember her from the Smithsonian photo, frozen mid-pom-pom toss, looking like she knew this gig was about to explode.
Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders (1)
Sources
Sport Illustrates
Texas Monthly