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Next story: Moments of Pure Tingling Magic in "Chita Rivera: The Dancer's Life"

Chita Rivera: The Real Thing

The countdown is almost over, and the legendary Chita Rivera, goddess of Broadway, will soon arrive in town to perform her show, Chita Rivera: the Dancer’s Life at Shea’s Performing Arts Center. Rivera is, without question, among the greatest Broadway dancing stars who has ever lived, with only Gwen Verdon and Fred Astaire in the competition. She is that very rare being, a true triple threat—gifted as an actress and a singer, and superhuman as a dancer. Moreover, some of the most important American choreography of the 20th century was devised specifically for her body and talent. Every performance by Chita Rivera is historic.

Chita has been a star since the opening night of West Side Story on Broadway in 1957. Critics were unanimous in their exalted assessment of her performance as Anita, who passionately warns the leading lady to forget “a boy like that who’ll kill your brother,” and who celebrated the dubious benefits of living in “America.” It was Chita’s dancing, of course, that wowed audiences most of all.

So integral was Chita’s performance to the success of West Side Story that the London production was postponed until after the birth of her daughter, Lisa Mordente. The anticipation served to amplify her Broadway success, and the London opening night of West Side Story was heralded as the most explosively exciting of the post-war years.

After West Side Story, Chita returned to Broadway to create the role of Rose in Bye Bye Birdie, opposite Dick Van Dyke. Again, she returned to London to recreate her performance. After Birdie, she took on the leading role in Bajour before taking the starring role in the national tour of Sweet Charity.

Lightning struck again when Chita created the role of Velma Kelly in the original 1975 Broadway production of the Kander and Ebb musical Chicago, directed and choreographed by Bob Fosse. Kander and Ebb similarly fashioned The Rink and Kiss of the Spider Woman around Chita’s unique talents. She earned Tony awards for both shows.

In 2002, Chita was recognized with the prestigious Kennedy Center Honor, designating her as an official national treasure.

While Chita is the empress of Broadway, her film appearances have been relatively rare. Her performance as Nickie in the 1969 film version is Sweet Charity is an exception; the film includes spectacular dance sequences featuring Chita, Shirley Maclaine and Paula Kelly, choreographed and directed by Bob Fosse.

For those who enjoy trivia, two roles created by Chita on Broadway have won Oscars for other actresses: Catherine Zeta-Jones for Velma in Chicago and Rita Moreno for Anita in West Side Story. Janet Leigh played Rose in the film version of Bye Bye Birdie while sporting a brunette Chita Rivera hairstyle.

Chita did make a cameo appearance in the film version of Chicago. When Roxie Hart first arrives at prison, that’s Chita smoking a cigarette and telling her that Mama’s not so bad, “once you get used to her.”

But to understand the essence of Chita Rivera, it is necessary to see her live. Her current tour will give Buffalo that opportunity.

Chita is, today, 74 years old and still dancing. This, despite a 1986 accident that shattered her left leg and required 16 permanent metal screws. The doctors said she’d never dance again; on the contrary, she recovered entirely and went on to win her second Tony Award for Kiss of the Spider Woman in 1993. The years have tempered her powers, but the style is unmistakable and remarkable; the moves are still agile. The detail is still precise; each moment is still perfectly defined and astoundingly graceful. And her stage presence is still incandescent. There has never been anyone quite like Chita Rivera before—and there never will be again.

With very limited film record of Chita Rivera’s work, it is remarkable to see her recreate moments of her original Broadway choreography in person. Indeed, no one who claims to be a fan of American musical theater should miss Chita’s Buffalo engagement. For many, this event represents a once in a lifetime opportunity.

THE ANNOTATED

CHITA RIVERA

Far from a self-congratulatory ego-fest or tell-all memoir, Chita Rivera: The Dancer’s Life is a master class in the career of a Broadway dancer and of late-20th-century dance. In her show, Chita recreates original Broadway choreography and talks about numerous luminaries of American theater and dance with whom she has worked. Yes, she reveals bits of her personal life, her childhood in a rambunctious Puerto Rican family, the men in her life, the triumphs and the slights, but the meat of the show involves what she has learned from the great performers, teachers and choreographers in her life. As Chita reminds us, in a dancer’s life, “It’s not who you slept with; it’s who you stepped with!” Below, Artvoice offers a guided tour of some of the highlights.

BEATRICE ARTHUR

Before she starred on television in Maude or The Golden Girls, Bea Arthur was a highly regarded stage actress in New York. Chita and Bea became close friends in 1955 when they were young aspiring actresses. Both appeared off-Broadway in Shoestring Revue. The two left the show at the same time, both to appear in Seventh Heaven on Broadway. They have remained close friends ever since.

GEORGE BALANCHINE, 1904-1983

The foremost choreographer in the world of 20th-century ballet, Russian-born George Balanchine had danced and choreographed for Sergei Diaghilev at the Ballets Russes before coming to the United States in 1933. Here, he founded the School of American Ballet. As a teenager, Chita auditioned for “Mr. B.,” winning a scholarship to his prestigious school. His company continues to this day as the New York City Ballet, which just featured a week of his ballets in their current season. His legacy endures and his work is actually performed more frequently today than during his lifetime!

ANTONIO BANDERAS

When Antonio Banderas, star of Spanish and Hollywood film, decided to return to his stage roots, he chose the 2003 Broadway revival of the musical Nine. Chita played his French producer, and together they performed a sizzling tango culminating with Chita’s leg fully extended over the shoulder of the standing Banderas. The two became fast friends, renowned for their post-performance entertaining in Chita’s dressing room. Three years later, when Banderas starred as a dance instructor in Take the Lead, and skeptical members of the press asked about his dance credentials, he boasted, “I danced on Broadway for 285 performances with Chita Rivera!”

Leonard Bernstein rehearses with the "West Side Story" cast—that's Sondheim at the piano and Chita with her hands on his shoulders.

LEONARD BERNSTEIN, 1918-1990

Chita calls him “Lenny,” but to the rest of the world, he is the great American conductor and composer, Leonard Bernstein. He was just 39 years old when his score for West Side Story premiered on Broadway with 23-year-old Chita Rivera playing Anita. Chita recalls that at her audition, Bernstein himself played “A Boy Like That” for her on the piano.

Jack Cole claps out the count with Chita during rehearsals for "Zenda."
Rita Hayworth performs Jack Cole's choreography for "Put the Blame on Mame" in "Gilda."
Cole rehearses with Marilyn Monroe.

JACK COLE, 1911-1974

One of the most influential of all American choreographers, Chita winces when young dancers don’t know who Jack Cole was. In addition to work on Broadway, Cole was noted for his work in Hollywood, where young Gwen Verdon was his assistant. Closely associated with Rita Hayworth (Cover Girl and Gilda) and Marilyn Monroe (Gentleman Prefer Blondes and There’s No Business Like Show Business), Cole is credited with having invented an enduring style of Jazz-Ethnic-Ballet. He choreographed Chita in Zenda.

SAMMY DAVIS, JR., 1925-1990

Before West Side Story, in 1956, Chita had a featured role in Mr. Wonderful, starring Sammy Davis, Jr. In the show, she attracted the attention of the public with a series of comic cross-overs with the tag-line “I’m available.” In private, she attracted the attention of Sammy Davis, Jr. During the run, the two had a short-lived romance. They always remained friends.

BOB FOSSE, 1927-1987

Angular, sexy, detailed and highly sophisticated, Bob Fosse’s is probably the most easily recognized American choreographic style. Fosse famously choreographed Chita in Chicago, molding such numbers as “All That Jazz” and “When Velma Takes the Stand” to her unique virtuosity. Other Fosse shows include The Pajama Game with its quintessentially Fosse number, “Steam Heat”; Damn Yankees and Sweet Charity (both with his wife Gwen Verdon); How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying; and the film version of Cabaret starring Liza Minnelli.

Chita rehearses Peter Gennaro's choreography for "West Side Story," 1957.
Buzz Miller and Peter Gennaro.

PETER GENNARO, 1919-2000

Peter Gennaro and Chita were off-Broadway gypsies together before West Side Story. He attracted attention as one of the three featured dancers in Bob Fosse’s “Steam Heat” number in The Pajama Game, and soon began to pick up choreography jobs. He staged (and danced) the “Mu Cha Cha “number from Bells are Ringing with Judy Holliday, and went on to assist the great Jerome Robbins with West Side Story as co-choreographer. Un-credited, he staged the landmark “America” and “Dance at the Gym” numbers. For Chita, he choreographed Bajour in 1964.

DORIS JONES, 1914-2006

“We owe our teachers, the good ones, more than they will ever know,” says Chita. For her, that one special teacher was Miss Doris Jones. As an African-American teenager in Depression-era Boston, Jones found that avenues to classical ballet were closed to her because of her race. In 1941, she and another young dancer, Claire Haywood, founded the Jones-Haywood School for Ballet in Washington, DC with a mission to provide minority students with the opportunity to learn classical dance. Chita’s mother enrolled her in the Jones-Haywood School and it would be Miss Jones who took Chita to New York City to audition for the great George Balanchine.

KANDER & EBB

The great songwriting team of John Kander and Fred Ebb have been loyal to Chita and she to them. If the major muse of their careers was Liza Minnelli, for whom they wrote Flora the Red Menace, Cabaret and The Act as well as the score for the film New York New York, then Chita is a close second. For Chita they wrote Chicago, Kiss of the Spider Woman and The Visit. They wrote The Rink for Chita and Liza to perform together. In the 1970s, the duo penned a cabaret act for Chita. Fred Ebb died in 2004, but the team is currently represented on Broadway by the long-running revival of Chicago and the brand new musical, Curtains.

Liza and Chita in The Rink, 1984.

Liza and Chita in "The Rink," 1984.

LIZA MINNELLI

The friendship between Chita and Liza Minnelli is very deep and goes back to 1975 when Liza stepped into the Broadway production of Chicago while Chita’s co-star, Gwen Verdon, had throat surgery. Liza’s name never appeared on the marquee. Before each performance, the audience was informed that “At this performance, the role of Roxie Hart, usually played by Gwen Verdon, will be played by Liza Minnelli.” The reaction was always an explosion of cheers and applause. In 1984, Liza appeared with Chita on Broadway again in The Rink.

TONY MORDENTE and LISA MORDENTE and all the

DEL RIVEROS

During the run of West Side Story, Chita met and fell in love with Tony Mordente, a dancer in the show. The couple later divorced, but they are the parents of Lisa Mordente and remain quite close. Tony Mordente is a prominent television director. He and Lisa Mordente staged the guest appearance by Dick Van Dyke during the Broadway run of Chita Rivera: The Dancer’s Life. Lisa has a Buffalo connection, having appeared at Studio Arena in the 1978 show, Platinum, starring Alexis Smith. Platinum went on to Broadway, where Lisa received a Drama Desk nomination. In 1981, Lisa received a Tony Award nomination for her performance in Marlowe. Lisa is the dance captain for the national tour of Chita Rivera: The Dancer’s Life. In fact, members of Chita’s family are almost always to be found at her shows, especially her brothers and sisters: Julio, Armando, Carmen and Lola.

JEROME ROBBINS, 1918-1998

If West Side Story was the show that turned Chita Rivera into Chita Rivera, then Jerome Robbins was the choreographer. Chita credits Robbins with giving her “detail, style and substance” as a dancer. While most biographies of Robbins emphasize his nasty personality, Chita has never been known to say a word against him. His extensive dance vocabulary ranged from classical ballet to jazz and back. In addition to West Side Story, the iconic Jerome Robbins image is three sailors dancing his ballet, Fancy Free—a theme he reused in On the Town, both with music by Leonard Bernstein.

ELAINE STRITCH

Chita made her professional debut as a principal dancer in the national touring company of Call Me Madam starring Elaine Stritch. A great Broadway diva with a raspy voice, brash delivery and astounding comic timing, Stritch had been the standby for Ethel Merman in the 1952 Irving Berlin hit. At the time, young Chita was an aspiring ballerina at the American School of Ballet in New York City. Stritch appeared in other prominent shows in the 1950s, and was so admired by Noël Coward that he wrote Sail Away specifically for her. For Sondheim, she was the original Joanne in Company, unforgettably singing “The Ladies Who Lunch.” Off-stage, Stritch gained a reputation for brazen bouts of drunken misbehavior—now under control. In her later career she appeared on Broadway in A Delicate Balance and in the Hal Prince revival of Showboat, as well as in her own autobiographical show, Elaine Stritch at Liberty. She often pops up in television and on film, and was memorable as a recurring feminist defense attorney on Law and Order and as Jane Fonda’s tyrannical mother-in-law in Monster in Law.

DICK VAN DYKE

Chita and Dick Van Dyke

in Bye Bye Birdie, 1960.

Chita played her first starring role opposite Dick Van Dyke in Bye Bye Birdie. Van Dyke then embarked on a successful television and film career, appearing on The Dick Van Dyke Show and in the film version of Bye Bye Birdie, as well as in such films as Mary Poppins and Chitty Chitty Bang Bang. Chita played a recurring character on The New Dick Van Dyke Show. During the Broadway run of Chita Rivera: The Dancer’s Life, Van Dyke made a guest appearance in the show, singing “Rosie” and performing the original choreography during Chita’s birthday week.

Sexy Richard Amaro partners Chita in a series of Act II tangos.

RICHARD AMARO

Who is that hot man dancing with Chita? Chita always uses superior dancers in her shows. Richard Amaro began his career dancing with the Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensemble. He has appeared on Broadway in the original companies of Jerome Robbins’ Broadway, Graciela Daniele’s Dangerous Games in world tours of West Side Story. He appeared with Chita on Broadway in The Dancer’s Life and has partnered her in this show throughout its entire run. Chita has also danced before with Lloyd Culbreath and Richard Montoya, who appeared on Broadway in The Dancer’s Life and are also scheduled to perform with her in Buffalo.

GWEN VERDON,

1926-2000

Born in California, redheaded dancer-actor-singer Gwen Verdon first worked in Hollywood. As a chorus dancer at MGM, she helped Carol Haney dub the taps for Gene Kelly in the title sequence of Singin’ in the Rain, and worked as assistant to choreographer Jack Cole. After a show-stealing appearance in Broadway’s Can-Can (1953), in which Chita had a chorus role, Verdon was featured in a triumphant series of musicals staged by Bob Fosse, whom she eventually married. Most memorably, Verdon starred as Lola in Damn Yankees (1955), the only stage role she repeated on film. Verdon won Tony awards for each of her four 1950s musicals—an accomplishment no other performer has ever matched. She returned to Broadway in Sweet Charity (1966) in which Chita succeeded her to star in the national tour. In the film version of Sweet Charity, directed by Fosse, Chita played Nickie and Shirley Maclaine played Verdon’s role. Verdon’s final Broadway show was Chicago (1975) in which she co-starred as Roxie Hart, opposite Chita’s Velma Kelly. Verdon would often say that her friendship with Chita allowed her to enjoy, later in life, the fun and frivolity she was never allowed to have as a girl, studying dance.