Chita Rivera Biography
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Dolores Conchita Figueroa del Rivero, 23 January 1933, Washington, DC, USA. A vivacious singer, dancer, and actress - an exciting and explosive performer - Rivera was born to Puerto Rican parents and grew up in the Bronx. She started dancing when she was seven, and from the age of 11, trained for a career in classical ballet. After studying at the New York City Ballet via a scholarship from choreographer George Balanchine, in 1952 she turned from classical dance and joined the chorus of Call Me Madam on Broadway. Further chorus work in Guys And Dolls and Can-Can was followed by appearances in Shoestring Revue, Seventh Heaven, and Mr. Wonderful (1956). She rocketed to stardom in 1957 as Anita in West Side Story, and stopped the show nightly by singing and dancing herself into a frenzy to the whooping rhythms of America. She caused even more of a sensation when West Side Story opened in London on 12 December 1958; it is still regarded by many as the most exciting first night of the post-war years. Two years later she was back on Broadway as Dick Van Dykes secretary Rose, in the first successful rock n roll musical, Bye Bye Birdie, and she recreated her role in London in the following year. A musical adaptation of the The Prisoner Of Zenda (1963), in which she starred with Alfred Drake, folded before it reached New York, but a year later, Rivera was acclaimed for her role as a gypsy princess in Bajour on Broadway. In the late 60s, she toured in various productions including Sweet Charity, and also appeared in the 1969 film version with Shirley MacLaine. After more national tours in the early 70s in musicals such as Jacques Brel Is Alive And Well And Living In Paris and Kiss, Me Kate, in addition to several straight roles, she co-starred with Gwen Verdon in the sinfully seductive Chicago (1975). John Kander and Fred Ebb wrote the score, and they also devised and developed Chita Riveras cabaret act, which included a number called Losing, a reference to the number of Tony Award nominations she had received. She gained one more nomination for her performance in Bring Back Birdie (1981), which closed after only four nights, and Merlin (1983) was also unsuccessful. Rivera was finally awarded the coveted Tony - and a Drama Desk Award - when she co-starred with Liza Minnelli in The Rink (1984), another of Kander and Ebbs projects. Shortly afterwards, she was involved in a serious car accident which mangled my leg from the knee down. After having 12 bolts inserted in the bones, she was back on Broadway, along with Leslie Uggams, Dorothy Loudon, and others, in Jerrys Girls, a tribute to the composer Jerry Herman.
During the rest of the 80s, she performed in cabaret and continued to tour in America and other countries including the UK. In 1988/9, she joined the Radio City Music Hall Rockettes in a national tour of Can-Can that lasted for over a year. In 1991, she was inducted into New Yorks Theatre Hall Of Fame, along with Kander and Ebb. She was subsequently widely applauded - and won London Evening Standard and Tony Awards - for her outstanding dual performance as the movie star Aurora and the Spider Woman in Kander and Ebbs musical Kiss Of The Spider Woman. After 749 performances in Toronto, London and New York, in November 1994 she set out on the shows two-year road tour of North America. Her outstanding contribution to the musical theatre was recognized in the early 90s by the Drama Desks Annual Achievement Award, and the first annual Bandai Musical Award for Excellence in Broadway Theatre. While in Washington, DC during 1996 with The Kiss Of The Spider Woman, she was presented with an honorary Gold Record by the Recording Industry Association of America for her contribution to American sound recording. In the late 90s, Rivera co-starred with Carol Channing on stage in Broadway Legends (Together At Last!) and toured her own revue, Chita & All That Jazz, through the US regions. In June 1998, she also appeared in a unique reunion of Sweet Charity at the Avery Fisher Hall at New Yorks Lincoln Center, and in the following year starred as Roxie Hart in the Las Vegas production of Chicago. She left that show after three months in order to play the same role in the hit West End version. Her subsequent work early in the new millennium included the part of the proverbial hooker with the heart of gold in Arthur Laurents new play, Venecia, and a US tour of the family musical, Casper. In February 2001, Rivera was honoured by the Drama League in New York.
Source: The Encyclopedia of Popular Music by Colin Larkin. Licensed from Muze.
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