and undeservedly so.
Paul Wallace and Natalie Wood in Gypsy |
2021 had some major celebrity deaths, including most prominently
Stephen Sondheim and Betty White, mostly because of the timing.
Sondheim died just before a revival of his musical Company was
hitting the stages on Broadway. And Betty White died on New Year's Eve
at nearly 100 years old.
Another prominent death in the Broadway world was Harvey Evans,
who was one of the Jets as a first replacement in the original stage production
of West Side Story as well as the 1961 film version. By focusing on the two musicals
that featured the lyrics of Stephen Sondheim, West Side Story and Gypsy,
I found a loss, a surprising survivor, and another tragic death that happened long ago.
Harvey Evans recently died and was celebrated for his long career in many musicals
including How to Succeed In Business Without Really Trying and a touring
production of La Cage aux Folles, in which he Played ZaZa.
He even posed nude on the cover of After Dark magazine in a very sexy pose.
In the multiple times that I watched the original film West Side Story
–on television as a kid, in theaters (including a 1988 screening in New York City
where I had the pleasure of meeting director Robert Wise), and then on the
50th anniversary DVD, I basically followed one dancer after another
with each viewing.
I'd be fascinated by every one of Russ Tamblyn's gymnastic tumbling moves.
In another viewing (including three times at a Columbus repertory cinema
while a Dance major at Ohio State University, one time bringing a few classmates),
I would focus on the stunningly handsome Tucker Smith (Ice).
Evans was another Crush as well, as was George Chakiris.
A touchin’ good story
One actor-dancer who continuously intrigued me was David Bean,
who played Tiger, a renamed role from his original performance as
Big Deal in the London production of West Side Story and then later in the film.
His bright red hair, sturdy looks and dancing abilities beguiled me, including
his comic flair as the dopey cop in “Gee, Officer Krupke.”
But for years I couldn't find any information about him.
That all changed with his endearing new Memoir, When You're a Jet,
which was recently published. In it, Bean discusses his early career
as one of the Lost Boys in a production of Peter Pan with Mary Martin,
his friendship with British actor Cyril Ritchard, who played Captain Hook,
and his touring life as a dancer.
His romance with dancer Jean Deeks (who played Anybodys) led to a marriage
and a life beyond dancing as a shopkeeper, farm owner, among other career moves
at various homes in Upstate New York. Bean caps off his memoir with a recent update
and a well-timed description of his cameo role as a fabric seller in the
2021 Steven Spielberg production of West Side Story.
Imagine being a young dancer in such a prestigious film and
getting to meet one of the original dancers and hear stories about
working with greats like Jerome Robbins.
Bean's memoir never goes too far into dishy gossip;
he's respectful of all his colleagues and his life is far from the fictional version
of a gang member in 1950s New York City.
But considering that his good friend George Chakiris,
as well as his boss, Jerome Robbins, and the show’s dance captain
(and Robbins’ boyfriend) Tommy Abbott (Gee-tar), were gay,
Bean never mentions that. But, hey, it was the late ’50s and early ’60s.
Paul Wallace (2nd left) in the Broadway Gypsy |
Historical news
Let's go back to Gypsy. My seventh novel Finding Tulsa is about a gay 1990s
film director who reconnects with his summer theater crush from a production
of the musical based on the life of burlesque star Gypsy Rose Lee.
My fictional narrator, Stan Grosniak, played the young Tulsa while
Lance Holtzer played the young adult version. Their reunion years later
leads to an unusual romance as Stan navigates his Hollywood comeback and
Lance gets finally gets a starring role in Stan’s film.
While I did a lot of research about the 1990s Los Angeles scene and film
directing as well, I didn't need to do much research about being a boy in a
production of Gypsy because that actually happened at a small College
in Ohio where I was raised.
And while my fictional novel focuses on the two versions of Tulsa, in real life
I actually played Yonkers, another newsboy. While I did have a crush on the actor
who played the older Yonkers, I actually realized while looking through the
old program from 1976 that pretty much all the older newsboys were the
objects of my teenage affection. I couldn't find much information about them
(except for one guy who is still a social media friend), but it led me down another
path of research that I could have done while finishing the novel Finding Tulsa.
But what I found would not have been searchable exactly in the 1990s
when most of the novel is set.
I'm talking mostly about Paul Wallace, who played Tulsa in the original
Broadway cast that starred Ethel Merman. Wallace also recreated his role as Tulsa
in the film version in which starred Natalie Wood
(side note: Bert Michaels was in both shows and films of Gypsy and West Side Story.)
All I need now is…
In recently re-reading Gypsy Rose Lee's memoir, I enjoyed discovering certain
scenes that were different from the film and stage play, but also some that matched
it very closely. For example, Tessie Tura the stripper is in the memoir, whereas the
other two strippers are made up. But some lines in the musical were directly taken
from Lee’s memoir, like “Maybe there’s somethin’ wrong with your bumper.”
But here's an interesting discovery; in the memoir, Lee discusses how one
male dancer is discovered in a back alley working on a routine and Louise
discovers him. That dancer's name was actually Stanley, which is ironic considering
the narrator in my novel is named Stanley as well.
The dancer who ends up running away with June was actually a different guy,
but of course in the stage script and screenplay, combining the two made for
better dramatic intent.
This all led me down a path I could have taken while finishing my novel,