The Phnom Penh Post

Former teen idol David Cassidy dies, 67

- Harrison Smith

DAVID Cassidy, an American actor and singer who became a teeny-bopper heartthrob in the early 1970s, starring as shaggy-haired guitarist Keith Partridge on the musical sitcom The Partridge Family, died on Tuesday at a hospital near Fort Lauderdale, Florida. He was 67.

His publicist, Jo-Ann Geffen, told the press on Saturday that he was hospitalis­ed with liver and kidney failure. Cassidy announced earlier this year that he was suffering from dementia and would stop touring.

At the height of his popularity, Cassidy commanded a rabid fan base that drew comparison­s to those of Elvis and the Beatles, with the New York Times reporting that after a 21-yearold Cassidy’s gallbladde­r was removed in 1971, fans called for the singer’s gallstones to be covered in bronze and sold alongside clippings of his hair.

Cassidy’s entrails remained off the market, but for several years his likeness was emblazoned on posters, push-out cards, colouring books and lunchboxes, as the band he led on television – the Partridge Family, a true family outfit that featured his stepmother Shirley Jones – became one of the decade’s defining pop music acts, beloved by a mostly female audience and derided by critics who heard only bubble-gum blandness.

Loosely inspired by a six-sibling pop band called the Cowsills, the group was a spiritual successor to the Monkees, the “prefab four”, who became a hit act in the 1960s after starring in a television show of the same name.

Jones, an Oscar-winning dramatic actress from Elmer Gantry (1960) who was better known for her wholesome star turns in the movie musicals Oklahoma! (1955), and The Music Man (1962), played a widow who performs with her five musical children, travel- PartridgeF­amily ling aboard a psychedeli­c bus from venues that ranged from a feminist rally to a maximum-security prison.

Cassidy was the group’s lead singer and guitarist. A skinny 20-year-old who still looked like a teenager, he said he had little in common with the occasional­ly doltish youngster he played on television. The son of divorced show business parents – his father was Tony-winning actor Jack Cassidy – he nurtured a love of rock music and artistic pretension­s, hoping to parlay his TV work into more serious acting.

His character was joined on the show by siblings Laurie (Susan Dey), Tracy (Suzanne Crough), Chris ( Jeremy Gelbwaks, later replaced by Brian Forster) and Danny (Danny Bonaduce), the wisecracki­ng middle child whose clashes with manager Reuben Kincaid (Dave Madden) provided much of the show’s humour.

The quintet sported matching vests and shoulder-length hair, and scored its first chart-topper with I Think I Love You (1970), a breezy pop song written by Tony Romeo for the eighth episode.

Featured on the first of eight studio albums by the Partridge Family, the song was recorded with Cassidy, Jones and a group of studio musicians who replaced their younger counterpar­ts on the show. It was followed by hits including Doesn’t Somebody Want to Be Wanted, I’ll Meet You Halfway and I Woke Up in Love This Morning.

Cassidy at times pushed back against the show’s family friendly brand of bubble-gum pop, initially refusing to record Doesn’t Somebody Want to Be Wanted because he thought it might affect his cool-guy image. Cutting a deal with the show’s producers, he embarked on a solo career and began performing to sold-out dance halls and stadiums.

“Attendance at a David Cassidy concert is an exercise in incredulit­y,” Life magazine reported in 1971. “Hordes of girls, average age 11 and a half, with hearts seemingly placed inside their vocal cords, shout themselves into a frenzy. After, being unable to rip off a piece of David’s clothing or a hunk of his hair or a limb of his body, they rush out to buy David Cassidy records or posters or send away for mysterious items like the David Cassidy Lover’s Kit” – a souvenir that included a purported childhood photo album of Cassidy.

The singer donned form-fitting white jump suits on stage and became increasing­ly freewheeli­ng in interviews, appearing seminude on the cover of Rolling Stone in 1972 and telling the magazine about his use of “grass and speed and psychedeli­cs”.

Cassidy later described himself as “emotionall­y stunted” and “paranoid” during this period, overwhelme­d by the attention of his fans. “I feel burnt up inside,” he told Britain’s Daily Mail in 1974, announcing his retirement from performing. “I’m 24, a big star . . . in a position that millions dream of, but the truth is I just can’t enjoy it.”

Soon after the interview, a farewell concert in London ended in a nearriot and the death of a 14-year-old girl who suffered a heart attack.

Cassidy, free of performanc­e duties and acting, underwent a period of depression. He veered from television to theatre to music, eventually finding solace in breeding horses and slowly coming to terms with what he described as his unbreakabl­e connection with Keith Partridge – “a shallow airhead”, as Cassidy described the character to Interview magazine in 1991, who was “supposed to be funny”.

David Bruce Cassidy was born in Manhattan on April 12, 1950. After his parents divorced, he moved to California with his mother, actress Evelyn Ward. He then returned to New York after high school and appeared in the disastrous 1969 Broadway musical The Fig Leaves Are Falling.

The show ran for just four performanc­es but helped Cassidy land an audition for The Partridge Family later that year.

Cassidy experience­d a brief television resurgence in the late 1970s, when he was nominated for a best-actor Emmy for his role as an undercover police officer in the NBC anthology series Police Story. The part resulted in a spinoff programme, David Cassidy: Man Undercover, that was cancelled in 1979 after one season.

Returning to the stage, he performed the title role in the Broadway production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolo­r Dreamcoat – replacing another former teen idol, Andy Gibb, in 1982 – and a decade later appeared alongside his half brother Shaun Cassidy in the Willy Russell musical Blood Brothers.

A self-titled album appeared in 1990, featuring the hit Lyin’ to Myself, and Cassidy steadily re-establishe­d himself as a performer, singing his Partridgee­ra classics while appearing in programmes such as the Donald Trump reality series Celebrity Apprentice.

He acknowledg­ed a struggle with alcohol in recent years and found himself in the news for his tumultuous personal life, including drunken-driving charges and a hit-and-run charge. His driver’s licence was suspended, and he was sentenced to take alcoholedu­cation courses.

His marriages to actress Kay Lenz, Meryl Tanz and Sue Shifrin ended in divorce. Cassidy had a daughter, actress Katie Cassidy, from a relationsh­ip and had a son, Beau Cassidy, from his third marriage. A complete list of survivors was not immediatel­y available.

Publicity, Cassidy said, was not something he wanted after his time on The Partridge Family. In its place he sought a certain degree of anonymity.

“I have always tried to be someone who doesn’t get noticed,” he told the Times of London in 2006. “I wear a hat and glasses all the time. I try to be part of our society so I can exist without being a freak.”

 ?? ERNIE SISTO/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Fans at David Cassidy’s concert at Madison Square Garden in New York, March 11, 1972. Cassidy, the heartthrob who struggled with the paradoxica­l isolation of a life lived in the spotlight, died on Tuesday.
ERNIE SISTO/THE NEW YORK TIMES Fans at David Cassidy’s concert at Madison Square Garden in New York, March 11, 1972. Cassidy, the heartthrob who struggled with the paradoxica­l isolation of a life lived in the spotlight, died on Tuesday.

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