Chita Rivera, 'West Side Story' Broadway star, dead at 91
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[January 31, 2024]
By Patricia Reaney
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Chita Rivera, the musical theater legend and
multiple Tony winner who created the role of Puerto Rican firebrand
Anita on Broadway in "West Side Story" and other memorable characters,
has died at the age of 91.
The petite, raven-haired dancer, singer and actress made history when
she became the first Hispanic woman to receive a prestigious Kennedy
Center Honor in 2002. She also received the Presidential Medal of
Freedom from President Barack Obama in 2009.
"It is with great sadness that Lisa Mordente, the daughter of Chita
Rivera, announces the death of her beloved mother who died peacefully on
Tuesday, January 30, 2024 in New York after a brief illness," her
daughter Lisa said in a statement.
Rivera was nominated for 10 Tony awards and won twice. She also received
a special Tony for Lifetime Achievement in 2018 for a career that
spanned nearly seven decades.
Celebrated playwright Terrence McNally, who wrote the book for Rivera's
Tony-winning roles in "The Rink" opposite Liza Minnelli in 1984 and
"Kiss of the Spider Woman" a decade later, described her as "a walking
history book of the golden age of American musical theater."
From the chorus in 1950s Broadway musicals "Guys and Dolls" and
"Can-Can," Rivera moved to center stage as murderess Velma Kelly in the
original 1975 Broadway production of "Chicago" and created the role of
Rose in the surprise hit "Bye, Bye Birdie" with Dick Van Dyke in 1960.
But it was her portrayal of the sassy, hip-swaying Anita sashaying
across the stage singing "America" or warning her friend about "A Boy
Like That" in "West Side Story" that made Rivera a star.
"To be there when those geniuses created that show was something that is
a blessing, you know. It's something that you can never, ever forget,"
Rivera once said about the groundbreaking musical by Leonard Bernstein
and Stephen Sondheim.
NOBODY LIKE CHITA
"When she let those limbs loose she was a one-woman showstopper and
every choreographer wanted her," award-winning producer and director
Harold Prince once said. "There is nobody who can dance, sing and act
like Chita Rivera."
Rivera was born Dolores Conchita Figueroa del Rivero on Jan. 23, 1933 in
Washington, D.C. Her father, Puerto Rican musician Pedro Julio Figueroa
del Rivero, died when she was 7.
One of five children, she studied ballet from a young age and won a
scholarship to George Balanchine's School of American Ballet in New
York. She was still a teenager when, on a whim, she auditioned with a
friend for the touring company of the musical "Call Me Madam" and landed
a role.
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72nd Annual Tony Awards - Show - New York, U.S., 10/06/2018 - Chita
Rivera accepts Lifetime Achievement Honors. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
"I always tell kids today never to
look down on the chorus and working there," Rivera said in an
interview with the website thestage.co.uk in 2015. "It's an
extraordinary place to be – you will learn everything you will
eventually have to do."
In 1957 she married Tony Mordente, an actor and dancer in the show.
She was such an integral part of "West Side Story" that its London
production had to be delayed until after she gave birth to her only
child, Lisa, in 1958.
Rivera's career was interrupted in 1986 when she suffered a compound
leg fracture in a car accident in New York while appearing in
"Jerry's Girls." Doctors had to insert many pins to repair her
shattered limb.
"Just like the movies, they told me I would never dance again," she
told Variety in 2005. "And just like the movies, here I am I don't
know how many performances later."
REBOUND
After rigorous physical therapy Rivera not only recovered from the
accident but went on to win her second Tony for "Kiss of the Spider
Woman" in 1993 and scored another nomination for "Nine," opposite
Antonio Banderas, a decade later.
Rivera also appeared regularly on TV entertainment shows and was in
the film version of "Sweet Charity" in 1969 with Shirley MacLaine
and "Chicago" in 2002.
In her mid-70s, when other dancers had slowed down or retired, she
starred in "Chita Rivera: The Dancer's Life," a stage show that
combined music, dance and storytelling.
"This bona fide Broadway icon ... looks as fit as a well-tuned
fiddle," Time Out magazine said in its 2005 review of the show.
A decade later, Rivera appeared in a PBS television retrospective of
her career called "Chita Rivera: A Lot of Livin' To Do." The same
year she earned her 10th Tony nomination as a revenge-seeking
millionaire in the musical "The Visit." It was the last of several
collaborations with the songwriting team of John Kander and Fred
Webb.
"You really never know what the next day brings you," Rivera told
the senior advocacy group AARP in a 2011 interview. "I have a very
young outlook. I don't think you know how much you can do until you
try."
(Reporting by Patricia Reaney; Additional reporting by Jasper Ward;
Editing by Bill Trott and Rosalba O'Brien)
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