San Diego Union-Tribune

VERSATILE ENTERTAINE­R ELECTRIFIE­D STAGE, SCREEN FOR NEARLY 70 YEARS

Performer cast as Anita in original production of ‘West Side Story’

- BY ROBERT D. MCFADDEN

Chita Rivera, the fire-and-ice dancer, singer and actress who leapt to stardom in the original Broadway production of “West Side Story” and dazzled audiences for nearly seven decades as a Puerto Rican lodestar of the American musical theater, died on Tuesday in New York. She was 91.

The death was announced in a statement by her daughter, Lisa Mordente. It gave no other details.

To generation­s of musical aficionado­s, Rivera was a whirling, bounding, high-kicking elemental force of the dance; a seductive singer of smoky ballads and sizzling jazz; and a propulsive actress of vaudevilli­an energy. She appeared in scores of stage production­s in New York and London, logged 100,000 miles on cabaret tours and performed in dozens of films and television programs.

On Broadway, she created a string of memorably hard-edged women — Anita in “West Side Story” (1957), Rosie in “Bye Bye Birdie” (1960), the murderous floozy Velma Kelly in “Chicago” (1975) and the title role in “Kiss of the Spider Woman” (1993). She sang enduring numbers in those roles: “America” in “West Side Story,” “One Boy” and “Spanish Rose” in “Bye Bye Birdie,” and “All That Jazz” in “Chicago.”

Critics thumbed thesauruse­s for hyperboles to rhapsodize about her pyrotechni­cs. In 2005, Newsweek called her “only the greatest musical-theater dancer ever.” Reviewing her performanc­e in “Bye Bye Birdie” in The New York Times, Brooks Atkinson called her “a f lammable singer and gyroscopic dancer.” Of her Tony Award-winning romp as Anna in “The Rink” (1984), Richard Corliss in Time magazine wrote: “Packing 30 years of Broadway savvy into the frame of a vivacious teenager, the 51year-old entertaine­r could by now sell a song to the deaf.”

Rivera was a hardworkin­g perfection­ist who rarely missed a beat, let alone a performanc­e. Trained in classical ballet before joining the musical stage, she was beloved on Broadway, where she began performing in the early 1950s. With her showstoppi­ng voice and eloquent body

language, she radiated a charisma rooted in solid song and dance techniques and in the pleasures she derived from them.

As a singer and actress, Rivera was largely selftaught, though she received an on-the-job education from some of the foremost pedagogues in the pantheon: choreograp­hers Bob Fosse and Jerome Robbins, composer Leonard Bernstein, the songwritin­g team of John Kander and Fred Ebb, and playwright Terrence McNally.

In 1986, Rivera had to suspend her dancing life when a taxi collided with her car in Manhattan, shattering her left leg in a dozen places. She underwent two surgeries, with screws and plates used to reconnect her bones, followed by months of rehabilita­tion. For many dancers, the injuries might have been career-ending, but almost a year after the accident she began dancing again, easing her way back with cabaret acts that sustained her for years.

She never fully recovered. “You’ll never see me in ballet slippers again because I don’t have my Achilles’ tendon,” she said in 1993, when she returned to Broadway after a seven-year absence to star in “Kiss of the Spider Woman.” She added: “I can’t do the full stretch. But I don’t have any pain anymore. The only problem is that my leg sets off metal detectors at airports.”

In “Chita Rivera: The Dancer’s Life,” an autobiogra­phical retrospect­ive presented on Broadway in 2005, she delivered a tango about the men in her past, a dance sequence for Fosse, Robbins and other choreograp­hers, and a medley of her musical highlights, including “A Boy Like That” from “West Side Story” and “All That Jazz” from “Chicago.”

A decade later, Rivera was still a headliner, starring in a 2015 musical adaptation of “The Visit,” the KanderEbb-McNally musical based on Friedrich Dürrenmatt’s satirical play about greed and revenge.

The production ran on Broadway for 11 weeks, including previews, grossed $2 million and received five Tony nomination­s.

Rivera was showered with honors during her long career. She won two Tony Awards for best actress in a musical, for “The Rink” and “Kiss of the Spider Woman”; was nominated for eight others; and in 2018 received a special Tony for lifetime achievemen­t. In 2002, she became the first Hispanic American woman to receive Kennedy Center Honors, the capital’s version of the Oscars, in a group that included Elizabeth Taylor, James Earl Jones and Paul Simon.

In 2009, she received the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, from President Barack Obama in a White House ceremony.

It was the culminatio­n of an odyssey that began a few miles away in Washington on Jan. 23, 1933, with the birth of Dolores Conchita Figueroa del Rivero, the third of five children of Pedro Julio and Katherine (Anderson) del Rivero.

Her father, who was born in Puerto Rico, played the clarinet and saxophone with the U.S. Navy Band and the Harry James Orchestra. He died when Conchita was 7. Her mother, who was of Scottish, Irish and Puerto Rican descent and also had African American ancestors, which she discovered late in life, became a clerk at the Pentagon and enrolled Conchita in singing, dance and piano lessons. Dancing became her passion. On the advice of her teacher, she auditioned for George Balanchine and won a scholarshi­p to his School of American Ballet in New York City.

Living with an uncle’s family in the Bronx, she graduated from William Howard Taft High School in 1951. At an open call for dancers, she won a part with a national touring company of Irving Berlin’s “Call Me Madam.” After 10 months on the road, she replaced Onna White as a principal dancer in “Guys and Dolls” in New York. Over the next few years, she danced in “Seventh Heaven,” “Shoestring Revue” and “Mr. Wonderful.” Her career moved up. She shortened her name to a catchy Chita Rivera.

In 1953, she landed a Broadway gig as a chorus dancer in “Can-Can,” the Cole Porter-Abe Burrows musical starring Gwen Verdon, who encouraged Rivera to shoot for the marquee. She won a part in “Mr. Wonderful” and had a romantic fling with its star, Sammy Davis Jr.

Rivera shot to stardom in 1957 as Anita in “West Side Story,” the Romeo-and-Juliet tale set in postwar Manhattan, where star-crossed lovers, Maria and Tony, are caught in a deadly war of street gangs. As Anita, she sang a poignant duet with Carol Lawrence as Maria, “A Boy Like That/I Have a Love,” and a magical “Tonight,” as well as leading a rousing ensemble in “America.”

With music by Leonard Bernstein, lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, choreograp­hy by Robbins and a book by Arthur Laurents, the musical won ecstatic reviews and ran for 732 performanc­es before going on tour, and it had an even longer run in London.

In 1957, Rivera married Anthony Mordente, a dancer in “West Side Story.” They divorced in 1966. In addition to her daughter, Lisa, she is survived by two brothers and a sister.

 ?? EVAN AGOSTINI INVISION/AP ?? Chita Rivera, shown at the Tony Awards in 2018, received 10 Tony nomination­s, winning twice, during her long career.
EVAN AGOSTINI INVISION/AP Chita Rivera, shown at the Tony Awards in 2018, received 10 Tony nomination­s, winning twice, during her long career.

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