Marge Padgitt had always loved Ginger Rogers.
"I was a fan of Ginger Rogers, as was my mother," said Padgitt, a longtime resident of Independence, Mo. "She got me interested in old-time movies and, of course, Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers dancing. There was nothing like the two of them. They were the best."
So it's only fitting that Padgitt not only owns the Independence home where the beloved actress, dancer and singer was born but has turned it into the Ginger House Museum, Birthplace of Ginger Rogers, which opened to the public recently.
The process began in early 2016, when Padgitt was planning to buy a house as part of her real estate investment business, Three Trails Cottages. Her daughter, the company's finance manager, immediately started looking.
"Ten minutes later she said, 'Mom you have to buy this house.' And I said, 'What house?' And she said, 'Well, it's the Ginger Rogers house,' " Padgitt said from the living room of the home. "I went out the next day and put money down on it.
"We paid too much, but considering what it is, we didn't mind doing that because we really wanted to have it." And she wanted the public to enjoy it, too.
Rogers, born Virginia Katherine McMath in the home on July 16, 1911, is best known for the many 1930s musicals in which she danced with Astaire, most notably "Top Hat" and "Swing Time."
The last time Rogers visited the Craftsman-style bungalow was July 16, 1994, for her 83rd birthday celebration.