Santa Fe New Mexican

Heartthrob starred on ‘Partridge Family’

- By Jacey Fortin

David Cassidy, the actor, singer and teen heartthrob best known for his role as the band member with the green eyes and the feathered haircut on the 1970s television sitcom The Partridge Family, died Tuesday. He was 67.

His death was confirmed by his publicist, Jo-Ann Geffen, who said he had been suffering organ failure.

Cassidy rose to fame on The Partridge Family playing Keith Partridge, the eldest of five children in a family that forms a band and goes on tour in a multicolor­ed bus. His character, a high school student, was periodical­ly swooned over by young women as he learned to navigate his newfound fame.

It was 1970, with the turbulent late 1960s of the Vietnam War, race riots, psychedeli­a, Woodstock and Altamont barely past, when Cassidy got the lead role on the show, overseen by the same producers as The Monkees. He had a face youthful enough to portray a teenager, a shy smile and friendly eyes, and he could sing well enough to portray Keith Partridge without having to lipsync someone else’s voice.

Even in the FM-radio heyday of Black Sabbath, the Allman Brothers and Emerson, Lake and Palmer, there was a place for a well-groomed, unthreaten­ing young pop singer. Cassidy became one of the teen idols of the early 1970s, arriving between Bobby Sherman and Donny Osmond and aggressive­ly marketed through Top 40 radio and fan magazines as a wholesome fantasy figure for young girls. Soon after The Partridge Family began airing, he had a 5-millionsel­ling, No. 1 hit, “I Think I Love You.”

The Partridge Family lasted from 1970-74, a respectabl­e run for a teen idol. In 1972, in what he later recalled as a career peak, Cassidy headlined Madison Square Garden, wearing the kind of white jumpsuit Elvis Presley also favored in the 1970s. By then, Cassidy was also already weary of incessant career demands and squealing mobs.

“Oh, they’re cute. They get flustered and I get flustered, and it’s all kind of fun,” Cassidy said of his devotees in 1972, when he was 21. “But it’s no fun when they rip your clothes and take rooms next door in hotels and keep pounding on the door and slipping notes under it.”

In an attempt to spice up his squeaky-clean image, Cassidy posed provocativ­ely in a photo shoot for Rolling Stone in 1972. In the cover article, he said he was already dreaming about the end of his acting career.

“I’ll feel really good when it’s over,” he said. “I have an image of myself in five years. I’m living on an island. The sky is blue, the sun is shining. And I’m smiling, I’m healthy, I’m a family man.”

Cassidy was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best New Artist in 1970, and his 1972 solo album Cherish went gold. The Partridge Family, meanwhile, had six albums achieve that certificat­ion from 1970 to 1972.

According to an online biography of The Partridge Family by Ed Hogan, Cassidy and his co-star and real-life stepmother, the Academy Award-winning actress Shirley Jones, were the only cast members on the television show heard on the group’s records, with Cassidy a lead vocalist and Jones on background vocals.

After The Partridge Family ended, Cassidy pursued an adult career, in and out of acting and music for the next decades. And like Presley, he had his own stints in Las Vegas, Nev., notably a mid-1990s arena spectacle titled “EFX.” He never equaled his early popularity, but he stayed in show business.

In later years, Cassidy wrote books about the toll stardom had taken on him, and about his own struggles with substance abuse. He revealed this year that he had dementia.

Cassidy was married and divorced three times.

 ??  ?? David Cassidy
David Cassidy

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