Bob Fosse, center, leads the cast through an energetic dance number during a rehearsal of his musical “Big Deal” at the Minskoff Rehearsal Studios, Broadway, March 31, 1986
Photo from Associated Press
Bob Fosse was born 95 years ago today.
An actor, dancer, musical theatre choreographer, director, screenwriter, film editor and film director, Fosse won an unprecedented eight Tony Awards for choreography, as well as one for direction. He was nominated for an Academy Award four times, winning for his direction of Cabaret (beating Francis Ford Coppola for The Godfather).
Born in Chicago to a Norwegian American father, Cyril K. Fosse, and Irish-born mother, Sara Alice Fosse, Fosse was the second youngest of six children. He teamed up with Charles Grass, another young dancer, and began a collaboration under the name The Riff Brothers. They toured theaters throughout the Chicago area.
After being recruited into the military, Fosse was placed in the variety show, Tough Situation, which toured military and naval bases in the Pacific. He then moved to New York with the ambition of being the new Fred Astaire.
Fosse’s appearance with his first wife and dance partner, Mary Ann Niles (1923–1987), in Call Me Mister brought him to the attention of Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis. Fosse and Niles were regular performers on Your Hit Parade during its 1950-51 season, and during this season Martin and Lewis caught their act in New York's Pierre Hotel. Martin and Lewis scheduled them to appear on the Colgate Comedy Hour.
Fosse was signed to a MGM contract in 1953. His early screen appearances included Give A Girl A Break, The Affairs of Dobie Gillis and Kiss Me Kate, all released in 1953. A short sequence that he choreographed in the latter (and danced with Carol Haney) brought him to the attention of Broadway producers.
Fosse was reluctant to move from Hollywood to theatre. However, he made the move, and in 1954, he choreographed his first musical, The Pajama Game, followed by George Abbott's Damn Yankees in 1955. It was while working on the latter show that he first met Gwen Verdon, the redheaded rising star and his future wife. He married her in 1960.
Verdon won her first Tony Award for Best Actress in Damn Yankees (she had won previously for best supporting actress in Can-Can).
Fosse appears in the film version of Damn Yankees, which he also choreographed, in which Verdon reprises her stage triumph as "Lola." They partner with each other in the mambo number, "Who's Got the Pain."
In 1957, Fosse choreographed New Girl in Town, also directed by Abbott, and Verdon won her second Leading Actress Tony. That year he also choreographed the film version of "Pajama Game," starring Doris Day.
In 1960, Fosse was, for the first time, both director and choreographer of a musical called simply, Redhead. With Redhead, Verdon won her third Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical. The show won the Tony for best musical and Fosse carried off the award for best choreography. Fosse partnered with Verdon as her director/choreographer again with Sweet Charity and again with Chicago.
Fosse won the Tony for Best Direction of a Musical in 1973 with Pippin. He performed a memorable song and dance number in Stanley Donen's 1974 film version of The Little Prince, and in 1977, Fosse had a small role in the romantic comedy, Thieves.
Notable distinctions of Fosse's style included the use of turned-in knees, sideways shuffling, rolled shoulders and jazz hands. With Astaire as an influence, he used props such as bowler hats, canes and chairs. His trademark use of hats was influenced by his own self-consciousness.
According to Martin Gottfried in his biography of Fosse, "His baldness was the reason that he wore hats and was doubtless why he put hats on his dancers." He used gloves in his performances because he did not like his hands. Some of his most popular numbers include "Steam Heat" (The Pajama Game) and "Big Spender" (Sweet Charity).
Fosse directed five feature films. His first, Sweet Charity in 1969, starring Shirley MacLaine, is an adaptation of the Broadway musical he had directed and choreographed. Fosse shot the film largely on location in Manhattan.
His second film, Cabaret, won eight Academy Awards, including Best Director, which he won over Francis Ford Coppola for The Godfather starring Marlon Brando. The film was shot on location in Berlin. Liza Minnelli and Joel Grey both won Oscars for their roles.
Fosse went on to direct Lenny in 1974, a biopic of comic Lenny Bruce starring Dustin Hoffman. The film was nominated for Best Picture and Best Director Oscars, among other awards.
However, just as Fosse picked up his Oscar for Cabaret, his Tony for Pippin and an Emmy for directing Liza Minnelli's television concert, Liza with a Z, his health suffered. He underwent open-heart surgery.
In 1979, Fosse co-wrote and directed a semi-autobiographical film, All That Jazz, which portrayed the life of a womanizing, drug-addicted choreographer-director in the midst of triumph and failure. All That Jazz won four Academy Awards, earning Fosse his third Oscar nomination for Best Director. It also won the Palme d'Or at the 1980 Cannes Film Festival.
On September 23, 1987, Fosse died from a heart attack at George Washington University Hospital, while the revival of Sweet Charity was opening at the nearby National Theatre.
Here, Fosse’s former wife, Gwen Verdon, narrates a film features various clips of Fosse dancing.