|
The actress and playwright June Havoc once told the story of when ticket sales for her show "Marathon '33" plunged after the assassination of President John F. Kennedy in 1963. "Business was at a standstill, so Shirley would take me out at night in her car filled with show posters, and we would glue them on telephone booths, bus stops and storefronts from 125th Street down to the Bowery. I had lived through vaudeville, Broadway and Hollywood, but until that night, vandalism had not entered my life," Havoc told The New York Times in 1996. Herz's career highlights include representing the original productions of "La Cage aux Folles," "The Goat, or Who Is Sylvia?" and "Dancing at Lughnasa," the 1989 revival of "Gypsy," and the 2005 revival of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" She said she had planned on being a doctor until seeing Katharine Hepburn onstage in "The Philadelphia Story" and getting hooked by the theater bug. "She came out and made a curtain speech. And it was such magic that I was transfixed and I thought, 'I have to be part of her world. I have to be in that world.' I had always thought I was going to be a doctor and that went out the window when I saw her," she told the Association of Theatrical Press Agents and Managers in 2000. Herz is survived by her husband, Herbert Boley, whom she married in 1948.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.