For more information on Michael Bennett, visit Britannica.com.
| Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Michael Bennett |
For more information on Michael Bennett, visit Britannica.com.
| American Theater Guide: Michael Bennett [Di Figlia] |
Bennett [Di Figlia], Michael (1943–87), choreographer and director. Born in Buffalo, he made his debut as a dancer in Subways Are for Sleeping (1961) and, after dancing in several other musicals, he choreographed the short‐lived musicals A Joyful Noise (1966) and Henry, Sweet Henry (1967). But Bennett's dances for Promises, Promises won him widespread recognition and he solidified his reputation with his choreography for Coco (1969), Company (1970), and Follies (1971), co‐directing the last with Hal Prince. He moved closer to totally controlling the conception of his musicals when he served as librettist, director, and choreographer for Seesaw (1973) and over the next several years he interviewed dancers and ran workshops to develop his greatest musical triumph, A Chorus Line (1973). Although his Ballroom (1979) failed to run, Bennett had a final hit with Dreamgirls (1981) before his premature death. Frank Rich wrote, “He keeps ‘Dreamgirls’ in constant motion—in every conceivable direction—to perfect his special brand of cinematic stage effects (montage, dissolve, wipe). . . . Throughout the show, Mr. Bennett uses shadows and klieg lights, background and foreground action, spotlighted figures and eerie silhouettes, to maintain the constant tension.” Biography: One Singular Sensation, Kevin Kelly, 1990.
| Dictionary of Dance: Michael Bennett |
Bennett, Michael (b Buffalo, 8 Apr. 1943, d Tucson, Ariz., 2 July 1987). US dancer, choreographer and Broadway director. He studied tap, jazz, and modern dance as a child. He dropped out of high school in 1960 to dance in a European touring production of West Side Story. Returning to New York a year later, he became a chorus boy, dancing in Subways Are for Sleeping (1961), Nowhere to Go But Up (1962), Here's Love (1963), and Bajour (1964). On television he danced for The Ed Sullivan Show, Hollywood Palace, and The Dean Martin Show. His first work as a billed choreographer was for A Joyful Noise (1966), which closed after only twelve performances on Broadway but still earned Bennett his first Tony nomination for choreography. Henry, Sweet Henry (1967-8) followed, but his first Broadway hit was Promises, Promises (1968), a musical based on Billy Wilder's 1960 film The Apartment. Coco (1969) and Company (1970) followed. For Follies (1971) Bennett was hired as co-director (with Harold Prince) and choreographer, picking up a Tony Award for each. In 1975 he directed, choreographed, and wrote (winning a Pulitzer Prize) A Chorus Line, the longest-running show on Broadway until it was overtaken by Cats in 1997. Other musicals he worked on include Ballroom (1978) and Dreamgirls (1981), which ran for more than 1, 500 performances on Broadway.
| Columbia Encyclopedia: Michael Bennett |
Bibliography
See K. Mandelbaum, A Chorus Line and the Musicals of Michael Bennet (1989).
| Wikipedia: Michael Bennett |
| Michael Bennett | |
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| Born | Michael Bennett DiFiglia April 8, 1943 Buffalo, New York, USA |
| Died | July 2, 1987 (aged 44) Tucson, Arizona, USA |
| Other name(s) | Choreographer, dancer, director, writer |
| Spouse(s) | Donna McKechnie (1976-1977) |
Michael Bennett (April 8, 1943 – July 2, 1987) was an American musical theater director, writer, choreographer, and dancer. He won seven Tony Awards for his choreography and direction of Broadway shows and was nominated for an additional eleven.
Bennett choreographed Promises, Promises, Follies and Company. In 1976, he won the Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical and the Tony Award for Best Choreography for the Pulitzer Prize-winning phenomenon A Chorus Line. Bennett, under the aegis of producer Joseph Papp, created A Chorus Line based on a precedent-setting workshop process which he pioneered. He also directed and choreographed Dreamgirls.
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Bennett was born Michael Bennett DiFiglia in Buffalo, New York, the son of Helen (Ternoff), a secretary, and Salvatore Joseph DiFiglia, a factory worker.[1] His father was Roman Catholic and his mother was Jewish.[2] he studied dance and choreography in his teens and staged a number of shows in his local high school before dropping out to accept the role of Baby John in the US and European tours of West Side Story.
Bennett's career as a Broadway dancer began in the 1961 Betty Comden-Adolph Green-Jule Styne musical Subways Are For Sleeping, after which he appeared in Meredith Willson's Here's Love and the short-lived Bajour.[3] In the mid-1960s he was a featured dancer on the NBC pop music series Hullabaloo, where he met fellow dancer Donna McKechnie.[4]
Bennett made his choreographic debut with A Joyful Noise (1966), which lasted only twelve performances, and in 1967 followed it with another failure, Henry, Sweet Henry (based on the Peter Sellers film The World of Henry Orient).[3] Success finally arrived in 1968, when he choreographed the hit musical Promises, Promises on Broadway. With a contemporary pop score by Burt Bacharach and Hal David, a wisecracking book by Neil Simon and Bennett's well-received production numbers, including "Turkey Lurkey Time", the show ran for 1,281 performances.[5] Over the next few years, he earned praise for his work on the straight play Twigs with Sada Thompson and the musical Coco with Katharine Hepburn.[3] These were followed by two Stephen Sondheim productions, Company and Follies co-directed with Hal Prince.[3]
In 1973, Bennett was asked by producers Joseph Kipness and Larry Kasha to take over the ailing Cy Coleman-Dorothy Fields musical Seesaw. In replacing the director Ed Sherin and choreographer Grover Dale, he asked for absolute control over the production as director and choreographer and received credit as "having written, directed, and choreographed" the show.[6]
Bennett's next project was A Chorus Line. The musical was formed out of hundreds of hours of taped sessions with Broadway dancers. Bennett was invited to the sessions originally as an observer but soon took charge.[7] He co-choreographed and directed the production, which debuted in May 1975 off-Broadway. It won nine Tony Awards and the 1976 Pulitzer Prize for Drama. He later claimed that the worldwide success of A Chorus Line became a hindrance, as the many international companies of that musical demanded his full-time attention.[8] Bennett would later become a creative consultant for the 1985 film version of the musical but left due to creative differences. He always sought creative control over his projects, but Hollywood producers were unwilling to give him the influence he demanded.[9]
Although the film version was but a pale imitation of the original, there are some filmed records which testify to the show's initial power. Television talk-show host Phil Donahue devoted an entire program to the original cast, during which they reminisce and recreate some of the musical numbers. The 2008 feature-length documentary "Every Little Step" chronicles the casting process of A Chorus Line's 2006 revival, which was choreographed by Bennett's long-time associate Baayork Lee, and, in the course of the film, the saga of the original production is re-told as well, through the use of old film clips and revealing interviews from the original collaborators, including Lee, Bob Avian (who was the show's original co-choreographer with Bennett and the director of the revival), composer Marvin Hamlisch and the original's leading lady, Donna McKechnie.
Bennett's next musical was an admired project about late-life romance called Ballroom. Although financially unsuccessful, it garnered 7 Tony Award nominations, and Michael won one for Best Choreography. He admitted that any project that followed A Chorus Line was bound to be an anti-climax.[10] Bennett had another hit in 1981 with Dreamgirls, a backstage epic about a girl-group like The Supremes and the expropriation of black music by a white recording industry. In the early 1980s, Bennett worked on various projects, one of which was titled The Children's Crusade but none of them reached the stage.[11]
He always collaborated with his assistant Bob Avian, who was a lifelong friend.[12]
In 1985, Bennett abandoned the nearly-completed musical Scandal, by songwriter Jimmy Webb, which had been developing for nearly five years through a series of workshop productions.[13] The show was sexually daring, and apparently Bennett's best work, but the conservative climate and the growing AIDS panic made it unlikely commercial material.[14] He was then signed to direct the West End production of Chess but had to withdraw in January 1986 due to his failing health, leaving Trevor Nunn to complete the production using Bennett's already commissioned sets.[15][16]
Unlike his more famous contemporary Bob Fosse, Bennett was not known for a particular choreographic style. Instead, Bennett's choreography was motivated by the form of the musical involved, or the distinct characters interpreted.[17]
In Act 2 of Company, Bennett defied the usual choreographic expectations by deliberately taking the polish off the standard Broadway production number. The company stumbled through the steps of a hat and cane routine ("Side By Side") and thus revealed to the audience the physical limitations of the characters singing and dancing. Bennett made the audience aware that this group had been flung together to perform, and that they were in over their heads. He intended the number to be not about the routine, but rather the characters behind it.[18]
The song "One" from A Chorus Line functions in a different way. The various phases of construction/rehearsal of the number are shown, and because the show is about professional dancers, the last performance of the song-and-dance routine has all the gloss and polish expected of Broadway production values. Bennett's choreography also reveals the cost of the number to the people behind it.[19]
Bennett was influenced by the work of Jerome Robbins. "What Michael Bennett perceived early in Robbins' work was totality, all the sums of a given piece adding to a unified whole".[20] In Dreamgirls, Bennett's musical staging was described as a "mesmerizing sense of movement":
In his younger days, Bennett had a relationship with Larry Fuller, a dancer, choreographer and director.[22]
He had a long professional and personal relationship with the virtuoso dancer Donna McKechnie, who danced his work in both Promises, Promises and Company and finally won the 1976 Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical in the role he had created for her in A Chorus Line. They married each other on December 4, 1976, but after only a few months they separated and eventually divorced in 1979.[23]
He began an affair with Sabine Cassel, the then-wife of French actor Jean-Pierre Cassel.[24] She left her family in Paris to live with Bennett in Manhattan, but the relationship soured.[25]
Bennett's addictions to alcohol and drugs, notably cocaine and quaaludes, severely affected his ability to work and affected many of his professional and personal relationships. His paranoia grew as his dependency did. Worried by his celebrity and his father's Italian background, he began to suspect he might fall victim to a Mafia hit.[26]
Bennett's last lover was Gene Pruitt. In 1986 both Pruitt and friend Bob Herr lived with Bennett for the last 8 months of his life in Tucson, Arizona, where he received care at the Arizona Medical Center. Bennett died from AIDS-related lymphoma at the age of forty-four.[27] He left a portion of his estate to fund research to fight the epidemic.[28][29] Bennett's memorial service took place at the Shubert Theatre in New York (the home at that time of A Chorus Line) on September 29, 1987.[30]
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A Class Act - A Musical About Musicals (2001). Bennett and lyricist Ed Kleban are portrayed in this partly ficionalised life story of Kleban, using some of Kleban's unpublished songs. A Chorus Line's number "One" is included in this musical.
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