Antelope Valley Press

Tony-winning choreograp­her, actress Ann Reinking dies

- By MARK KENNEDY AP Entertainm­ent Writer

NEW YORK — Ann Reinking, the Tony Award-winning choreograp­her, actress and Bob Fosse collaborat­or who helped spread a cool, muscular hybrid of jazz and burlesque movement to Broadway and beyond, has died. She was 71.

Reinking died Saturday while visiting family in Seattle, said her manager, Lee Gross. No cause of death was disclosed.

Tributes poured in from the Broadway community, including from Tony Yazbeck, who called her “an absolute inspiratio­n” and Leslie Odom, Jr., who thanked Reinking for being a mentor: “She honored the calling for real. RIP to a legend.” Bernadette Peters took to Twitter to say her heart was broken and Billy Eichner said she was “one of the most mesmerizin­g people I’ve ever seen on stage. A singular genius. RIP.”

Trained as a ballet dancer, Reinking was known for her bold style of dance epitomized by her work in the revival of the Kander and Ebb musical “Chicago,” complete with net stockings, chair dancing and plenty of pelvic thrusts.

Reinking co-starred as Roxie Hart along with Bebe Neuwirth’s Velma, and created the choreograp­hy “in the style of Bob Fosse,” the show’s original director and choreograp­her who died in 1987. She and Fosse worked together for 15 years and she was also his lover for several of them.

Reinking’s work on “Chicago” earned her a 1997 Tony, Drama Desk and Outer Critics Circle awards. Reinking replicated its choreograp­hy in production­s throughout the world — England, Australia, Austria, Sweden, the Netherland­s and elsewhere. She was portrayed by Margaret Qualley in the recent FX series “Fosse/Verdon.”

The musical’s revival was first done in a concert version at City Center’s “Encores” series in 1996 and then moved to Broadway, where in 2011 it became the second longest-running show in Broadway history.

“You know how you hear sometimes a wom

an goes into labor and 10 minutes later she’s got this beautiful baby? You couldn’t believe that it was materializ­ing in such a beautiful way,” she told The Associated Press in 2011 about the early days of the revival.

In 1998, she co-directed “Fosse,” a salute to the man who had the largest influence, both profession­ally and personally, on her life. He once called her “one of the finest dancers in the jazz-modern idiom.”

Her movie credits include “Annie” (1982), “Movie, Movie” (1978) and the documentar­y “Mad Hot Ballroom” (2005), which portrayed Reinking as a ballroom-dance competitio­n judge for New York City kids.

Reinking’s career began in Seattle, where she grew up. In the beginning, she wanted to be a ballet dancer, “like all girls,” she said. As a student, she won a scholarshi­p in San Francisco with the Joffrey Ballet, but at many of the students’ after-hours improvisat­ions, she would just sing and not dance.

Robert Joffrey said that with her outgoing personalit­y and other abilities, she should pursue musical theater. “I waited tables to save up enough money to get here,” she said of New York City, where she arrived with a round-trip ticket back to Seattle and $500. She didn’t need the return trip.

Reinking’s break was strung out over several shows. She was in the ensemble for Broadway’s “Coco,” which starred Katharine Hepburn as Coco Chanel, in 1969, and was in the chorus of “Pippin” in 1972, picked by its director and choreograp­her, Fosse. The ensemble was so small — there were only eight — that the dancers were really seen.

But it was her work on the revival of “Chicago” where Reinking basked in the most attention. The original, a dark indictment of celebrity and hucksteris­m, opened in the summer of 1975 and ran for about 900 performanc­es. Though not in the opening night cast, Reinking eventually slipped into the role of Roxie Hart, taking over the part from Gwen Verdon, Fosse’s third wife and dancing alter ego. In the 1996 revival, which is still on Broadway, Reinking kept the part of Hart opposite Gray and Neuwirth.

 ?? RICHARD DREW/AP ?? Ann Reinking holds her Tony Award for best choreograp­hy for the musical “Chicago” at the 51st annual Tony Awards on June 1, 1997, in New York.
RICHARD DREW/AP Ann Reinking holds her Tony Award for best choreograp­hy for the musical “Chicago” at the 51st annual Tony Awards on June 1, 1997, in New York.

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