In 1933, Norton met Margot Webb (
nee Marjorie Smith) and the two became known as the ballroom dancing duo "Norton and Margot". The duo performed together from December 1933 to 1938, and then intermittently from 1941 to 1947. As one of the first African American ballroom dance teams in history, Norton and Margot pioneered in a genre rarely open to Black performers during the swing era, confronting significant racial barriers (long before the Civil Rights' Movement of the 1960s) while bringing polished, European-influenced technique to Afro-American vaudeville circuits. They were trained ballet dancers, but were not able to perform in ballet due to racial discrimination., so they settled for the vaudeville scene. The school closed in 1938 due to the demands of their touring schedule and financial challenges. The duo performed as headline dancers from 1933 to 1939. Their engagements extended to other Black vaudeville circuits in cities such as
New York,
Philadelphia,
Baltimore,
Washington, D.C., and
Chicago, as well as various
Midwest nightclubs. Racial discrimination significantly constrained their opportunities, limiting access to white-owned venues and relegating them to less prominent bookings within Black circuits, where they were often treated more as spectacle rather than serious artists and faced unequal pay. In response to these barriers, the duo were only allowed to perform if they passed as a race other than their own (most often Hispanic) to secure engagements that would otherwise have been denied to Black performers. This strategy reflected the broader paradoxes and frustrations Afro-American artists encountered in the swing-era entertainment world, positioned between the declining vaudeville traditions of the 1920s and emerging opportunities of later decades.
International performances The duo performed internationally, primarily in Europe during the 1930s before the outbreak of World War II. They toured locations including
London,
Paris, and
Germany as part of their ballroom dance act. In 1937, the duo joined the Cotton Club Revue for part of their European engagements, appearing at venues such as the
London Palladium and the
Moulin Rouge in Paris, before continuing as an independent act on continental variety shows. During this period, they also performed in Germany until December 1937, when they were expelled under Nazi policies which banned non-Aryans from public performances. This incident was noted in the African American press as breaking the "
Jim-Crow barrier of
Hitler." They received a notice from officials in
Hamburg, allowing them to return home to the United States. These international appearances marked a significant extension of their career beyond the United States, showcasing African American ballroom dance on European stages in the pre-war era. == Film career ==