- Kitty Malone worked with Bob Fosse in choreographing the "sound of feet" in the dance sequences on the 1978 film, "Cabaret." Known as the Foley, it is one of a group of sound processes that work in tandem with visual strategies as they function similarly to heighten the affective, sensory, and phenomenological film style dimensions.
- "Gianni Schicchi" was presented on April 28, 1952 at the Ed Lendreth Auditorium by the School of Fine Arts Opera Workshop and the Fine Arts Ballet of Texas Christian University. Student Kitty Malone was one of twenty-two dancers in the production.
- As a member of the Touring Players Kitty Malone performed in three sketches at the Theater de Lys in Greenwich Village under the auspices of the American National Theater and Academy. After the April 1953 performance in New York the Touring Players moved to a drama festival in Monterey, California, USA.
- The Nome Goes Happy celebration of the longest day of the year in 1962 included Kitty Malone, Diamond Lil, and the Can-Can Girls.
- Reserved seat tickets for the Soiree de Ballet performances on June 1, 2, and 3, 1956 which included Kitty Malone as one of the dancers were priced at $1.65 (tax included). Performances were held at the Courtyard Theater in Dallas, Texas, USA.
- From 1956 to 1964 The Kitty Malone School of Dance was in business at 4815-C Green Oaks Drive in Fort Worth, Texas, USA. The school had instruction for ages 3 and up in tap, ballet, majorette baton, tumbling, modern jazz, and adult exercise.
- Miss Kitty Malone, Fort Worth dancer, was selected from 41 qualifying performers who had appeared in one or more 1956 Starlight Concerts was named winner of a $200 Starlight Concert scholarship founded by Midwestern Security Trust Company. She had appeared on the Fair Park Band Shell stage that summer. Kitty had studied with David Preston in Fort Worth, and Toni Beck, Nikita Talin and Buster Cooper in Dallas, Texas, USA.
- Kitty Malone was identified as one of twelve Dallas Chapter faculty members in March 1955 for the National Association of Dance and the Affiliated Arts.
- In May 1957 Kitty Malone was one of ten dancers who were selected for the summer ensemble for the Texas State Fair Musicals productions.
- A curtain raiser ballet before two Puccini opera, "La Funciulla," performances by the Fort Worth Civic Opera on April 4 and 6, 1951, "Shindig," included Kitty Malone as one of twenty dancers. The ballet included Texas rangers, bartenders, and can-can girls in a saloon.
- The final production of the summer for Texas State Fair Musicals in 1958 was "The King and I." The role of Princess Ying was played by Kitty Malone.
- The Community Opera Guild's presentation of the comic opera "The Bartered Bride" at McFarlin Auditorium in Dallas, Texas, USA on May 3, 1956 featured Kitty Malone and Larry Roquemore of Fort Worth, Texas, USA as principal dancers.
- A ballet, "L'Amour vs, D'Or" featured Kitty Malone as a tailor presented in the Redford Memorial Auditorium on McMurry Campus by the Texas Christian University Fine Arts Ballet.
- The 1956 Texas State Fair Musical applications were received from eighty dance hopefuls. Kitty Malone was one of fourteen dancers elected for the summer following an audition process.
- The 85th Annual Old Settlers Wise County (Texas) Reunion on August 1, 1958 featured a Friday night show by the Kitty Malone Dancing School.
- Ross Taylor began his career as a sound editor. Kitty Malone as a dancer. Together they have performed "the Foley" in choreographing the "sound of feet" on over fifty motion pictures and many television programs.
- Kitty Malone was a cheerleader and Yell Leader for the North Side High School Steers in 1949 in Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
- Ross Taylor and Kitty Malone created "the Foley" for "Apocalypse Now," "The Deep," "Urban Cowboy," "Star Wars," "The Electric Horseman," "China Town," "9 to 5," and "The China Syndrome.".
- Five dancers, including Kitty Malone, accompanied the presentations of a Gershwin Starlight Concert numbers, "Someone to Watch Over Me" and "I've Got Rhythm" to conclude the 1956 concert series.
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