Windsor Star

‘THE NINTH WONDER OF THE WORLD’

Messages of love pour in for Carol Channing

- MARK KENNEDY

Stage star remembered for famous Hello, Dolly! role

Carol Channing, the lanky, ebullient musical comedy star who delighted audiences over almost 5,000 performanc­es as the scheming Dolly Levi in Hello, Dolly! on Broadway and beyond, has died. She was 97. Publicist B. Harlan Boll said Channing died of natural causes at 12:31 a.m. Tuesday in Rancho Mirage, Calif. Boll says she had twice suffered strokes in the last year. Besides Hello, Dolly!, Channing starred in other Broadway shows, but none with equal magnetism. She often appeared on television and in nightclubs, for a time partnering with George Burns in Las Vegas and a national tour.

Her outsized personalit­y seemed too much for the screen, and she made only a few movies, notably The First Traveling Saleslady with Ginger Rogers and Thoroughly Modern Millie with Julie Andrews. She also later appeared on such TV shows as The Love Boat, Password and Hollywood Squares. Over the years, Channing continued as Dolly in national tours, the last in 1996, when she was in her 70s. Tom Shales of The Washington Post called her “the ninth wonder of the world.” Messages of love and appreciati­on lit up Twitter early Tuesday, with the League of Profession­al Theatre Women saying Channing “was a gift of inspiratio­n to so many.” Fans who saw her work also took to social media, calling her a “firecracke­r” and saying she was “matchmakin­g for the angels now.”

Channing was not the immediate choice to play Dolly, a matchmaker who receives her toughest challenge yet when a rich grump seeks a suitable wife. The show, which features a rousing score by Jerry Herman that’s bursting with joy and tunes like Put On Your Sunday Clothes, Before the Parade Passes By and It Only Takes a Moment, is a musical version of Thornton Wilder’s play The Matchmaker. Theatre producer David Merrick told her: “I don’t want that silly grin with all those teeth that go back to your ears.”

But she wowed them in an audition and was hired on the spot. At opening night on Jan. 16, 1964, when Channing appeared at the top of the stairs in a red gown with feathers in her hair and walked down the red carpet to the Harmonia Gardens restaurant, the New York audience went crazy. The critics followed suit. Hello, Dolly! collected 10 Tony Awards, including one for Channing as best actress in a musical. Channing was born Jan. 31, 1921, in Seattle, where her father, George Channing, was a newspaper editor. At age seven, Channing decided she wanted to become an entertaine­r. She credited her father with encouragin­g her: “He told me you can dedicate your life at seven or 97. And the people who do that are happier people.”

While majoring in drama and dance at Bennington College in Vermont, she was sent off to get experience in her chosen field. She found a job in a New York revue. The show lasted only two weeks, but a New Yorker magazine critic commented, “You will hear more about a satiric chanteuse named Carol Channing.”

For several years she worked as an understudy, bit player and nightclub impression­ist, taking jobs as a model, receptioni­st and sales clerk during lean times. Landing in Los Angeles, she auditioned for Marge Champion, wife and dance partner of Gower Champion, who was putting together a revue, Lend an Ear. Marge Champion recalled: “She certainly was awkward and odd-looking, but her warmth and wholesomen­ess came through.”

Channing was the hit of Lend an Ear in a small Hollywood theatre, and she captivated audiences and critics when the show moved to New York.

As the innocent gold digger in the musical Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, her stardom was assured. The show ’s hit song, Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend, became her signature number.

Over and over again she returned to the surefire Dolly, which earned her $5 million on one tour. Channing had two early marriages that ended in divorce — to novelist Theodore Naidish and pro footballer Alexander Carson, father of her only child, a son. In 1956 she married a TV producer, Charles Lowe, who seemed like the perfect mate for a major star. He adopted Channing ’s son and supervised every aspect of her business affairs and appearance­s. He reportedly viewed every one of her performanc­es from out front, leading the applause.

After 41 years of marriage, she sued for divorce in 1998, alleging that he had misappropr­iated her funds and humiliated her in public. She remarked that they only had sex twice in four decades. “The only thing about controlfre­ak victims is that they don’t know who they are,” she told The Washington Post. “It’s taken me 77 years to figure that out. I was miserable. I was unhappy. And I didn’t realize it wasn’t my fault. But I’m going to survive. I’m going to live. I’m free.”

Lowe died after a stroke in 1999. Channing moved to Rancho Mirage near Palm Springs, Calif., in 2000 to write her memoirs. She called the book Just Lucky, I Guess. Channing remarried in 2003 to Harry Kullijian, her childhood sweetheart from 70 years before. He died in 2011.

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 ??  ?? Carol Channing’s performanc­e as Dolly Levi in Hello, Dolly! made her famous and she returned often to the role.
Carol Channing’s performanc­e as Dolly Levi in Hello, Dolly! made her famous and she returned often to the role.
 ?? PHOTOS: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Broadway star Carol Channing’s one-woman show was called The First 80 Years Are the Hardest.
PHOTOS: THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Broadway star Carol Channing’s one-woman show was called The First 80 Years Are the Hardest.

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