The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Broadway giant James Nederlande­r dies at 94

- By Mark Kennedy

James Nederlande­r, who built a national theater chain that includes nine Broadway houses, has died.

NEW YORK >> James M. Nederlande­r, who took over the fledgling Nederlande­r Organizati­on from his father and built it into one of the largest producers of live entertainm­ent and a dominant national theater chain that includes nine Broadway houses, has died. He was 94.

“The world has lost one of its great impresario­s,” said his son, James L. Nederlande­r, who confirmed his father died on Monday. A cause was not disclosed.

Known as Jimmy, the elder Nederlande­r produced or co-produced more than 100 shows including “Annie,” “Copenhagen,” “The Will Rogers Follies,” “Les Liaisons Dangereuse­s,” “La Cage aux Folles,” “Nine,” “Noises Off” and “The Life and Adventures of Nicholas Nickleby.”

Nederlande­r famously rejected anyone who claimed to have a rational way to predict which shows would be hits as opposed to flops. “Nobody can,” he would say. “I trust my gut.”

He won a dozen Tony Awards as a producer or coproducer — including a Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievemen­t in 2004 — and has presented operas, ballets, concerts and artists ranging from Rudolf Nureyev to Frank Sinatra to U2.

Condolence­s were quick to arrive. Theater icon Andrew Lloyd Webber tweeted: “Farewell Jimmy, truly the end of a great theatrical era.” Kate Shindle, the president of the Actors Equity Associatio­n union wrote: “RIP to a true titan.”

The Nederlande­r Organizati­on is one of three big theater chains on Broadway. The Shubert Organizati­on owns 16 theaters outright, and Jujamcyn Theaters owns five. Nederlande­r’s stable is bigger than its rivals once its theaters nationwide and in London are added to the mix.

One of Nederlande­r’s most lucrative business collaborat­ions is with the Walt Disney Co., which started in 1994 when Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast” opened at the Palace Theatre. Since then, “Aida,” “Tarzan,” “The Little Mermaid” and “Newsies” all found a home at a Nederlande­r house. Nederlande­r’s Minskoff Theatre is the home of Disney’s “The Lion King.”

Founded by David T. Nederlande­r, the Nederlande­r Organizati­on began in 1912 with the purchase of a 99year lease on the old Detroit Opera House. In 1939, the then-17-year-old Jimmy left school to join the family business — sweeping the lobby, working as an usher and a stagehand and selling tickets in the box office.

By 1943, Jimmy Nederlande­r was in New York City as a serviceman in the Army Air Forces and worked as box-office treasurer for a production of Moss Hart’s “Winged Victory.” In 1964, his father bought the Palace Theatre, a historic vaudeville house that had gone into decline. After a two-year renovation, Nederlande­r’s reopened the Palace with Bob Fosse’s production of “Sweet Charity,” starring Gwen Verdon. After his father died in 1967, Nederlande­r took over running the family business.

In addition to the Palace, Nederlande­r’s eight other Broadway venues in New York are the Brooks Atkinson, Gershwin, Lunt-Fontanne, Marquis, Minskoff, Nederlande­r, Richard Rodgers and Neil Simon theaters.

Outside New York, its venues include the Auditorium and Bank of America theatres, the Broadway Playhouse, Cadillac Palace and Oriental theatres, all in Chicago; the Pantages Theatre in Los Angeles; and the Adelphi, Aldwych and Dominion theatres in London.

Innovative ways to get people into those arenas prompted changes to the industry that continue to be felt. In 1992, Nederlande­r’s and Ticketmast­er were the first to give Broadway theatergoe­rs the ability to select their own seat location.

The concept of the student lottery ticket was reimagined at the David T. Nederlande­r Theatre when young fans of “Rent” could get seats in the first two rows of the theatre for just $20.

With Nederlande­r’s son Jimmy Jr. currently overseeing the organizati­on’s daily operation, the Nederlande­r Organizati­on has passed the baton to a third generation. His nephew, Robert Nederlande­r Jr., is president of Nederlande­r Worldwide Entertainm­ent, which manages theaters and presents Broadway production­s in internatio­nal markets.

Nederlande­r is also survived by his wife, Charlene S. Nederlande­r; daughterin-law Margo M. Nederlande­r; his grandchild­ren, James M. Nederlande­r II and Kathleen M. Nederlande­r; his stepdaught­er, Kristina Gustafson; and her children, Gunnar and Krisanna Gustafson. Funeral services will be Thursday.

One of Jimmy Nederlande­r’s legacies was his backing of the next generation of Broadway stars, through sponsoring The National High School Musical Theater Awards. The annual competitio­n culminates each June with a trip to New York, mentoring from veterans and then a night of performanc­es from dozens of hopefuls from across the country. They are called The Jimmy Awards.

 ?? PHOTO BY SCOTT ROTH — INVISION — AP, FILE ?? In this file photo, from left, Margo MacNabb Nederlande­r, James L. Nederlande­r, James M. Nederlande­r and Charlene Nederlande­r attend the 8th Annual Exploring The Arts Gala benefit in New York. James M. Nederlande­r, who took over the fledgling...
PHOTO BY SCOTT ROTH — INVISION — AP, FILE In this file photo, from left, Margo MacNabb Nederlande­r, James L. Nederlande­r, James M. Nederlande­r and Charlene Nederlande­r attend the 8th Annual Exploring The Arts Gala benefit in New York. James M. Nederlande­r, who took over the fledgling...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States