Fosse forged an uncompromising modern style, characterized byfinger-snapping, tiltedbowler hats,fishnet stockings, splayed gloved fingers, turned-in knees and toes, shoulder rolls andjazz hands. Fosse's third wife was the actor–dancerGwen Verdon, with whom he collaborated on a number of theater and film projects.
Fosse was born inUptown, Chicago,Illinois, on June 23, 1927, to a Norwegian-American father, Cyril Kingsley Fosse, a traveling salesman forHershey,[2] and an Irish-American mother, Sarah Alice "Sadie" (née Stanton) Fosse.[3] He was the fifth of six children.[4][5][6]
He was drawn to dance and took lessons. When he was 13 years old, Fosse performed professionally in Chicago with Charles Grass, as "The Riff Brothers".[7] They touredvaudeville and movie houses in Chicago, as well asUSO theaters and Eagles Clubs.[8] Many of these performances included shows atburlesque clubs, such as the Silver Cloud and Cave of Winds. Fosse himself is quoted with saying "I was sixteen years old, and I played the whole burlesque wheel." However, many of the women and promoters did not care that Fosse was underage working in adult clubs or that he would be exposed to sexual harassment from the burlesque women. Much of the erotica he saw would inspire his future work. In 1943, at the age of 15, Fosse would come to choreograph his first dance number and earn his first full credit as a choreographer in a film,Hold Evry'thing! A Streamlined Extravaganza in Two Parts, which featured showgirls wearing strapless dresses and performing a fan dance, inspired by his time in burlesque houses.[9]
After his discharge, Fosse moved to New York City in 1947 with the ambition of being the newFred Astaire. He began to study acting at the American Theatre Wing, where he met his first wife and dance partner, Mary Ann Niles (1923–1987).[13] His first stage role was inCall Me Mister, along with Niles.[14] Fosse and Niles were regular performers onYour Hit Parade in its 1950–1951 season.Dean Martin andJerry Lewis saw their act in New York'sPierre Hotel and scheduled the couple to appear onThe Colgate Comedy Hour in 1951.[15]
During the late 1940s and early 1950s, Fosse transitioned from film totheatre. In 1948,Tony Charmoli danced inMake Mine Manhattan, but gave the part to Fosse when the show toured nationally. Charmoli also found Fosse work as a dancer on the TV shows he was working on when Fosse returned from the tour.[16] Fosse told an interviewer, "Jerry [Jerome Robbins] started me doing choreography. He gave me my first job as a choreographer and I'm grateful for that."[17]
In 1954, Fosse choreographed his first musical,The Pajama Game, followed byMy Sister Eileen andGeorge Abbott'sDamn Yankees in 1955. It was while working onDamn Yankees that he first met rising starGwen Verdon, whom he married in 1960. For her work inDamn Yankees, Verdon won her firstTony Award for Best Actress in a Musical in 1956.[21] She had previously won a Tony for Best Performance by a Featured Actress in a Musical forCan-Can (1954). In 1957, Fosse choreographedNew Girl in Town, also directed by Abbott, and Verdon won her second Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical in 1958.[21]
In 1957, Fosse choreographed the film version ofThe Pajama Game starringDoris Day. The next year, Fosse appeared in and choreographed the film version ofDamn Yankees, in which Verdon reprised her stage triumph as the character Lola. Fosse and Verdon were partners in the mambo number "Who's Got the Pain".[22] In 1959, Fosse directed and choreographed the musicalRedhead.[23] For his work onRedhead, Fosse won the Tony Award for Best Choreography while Verdon won her third Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical.Redhead won the Tony Award for best musical.[24] Fosse's next feature was supposed to be the musicalThe Conquering Hero based on a book byLarry Gelbart, but he was replaced as director/choreographer.
In 1961, Fosse choreographed the satirical Broadway musicalHow to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying starringRobert Morse. The story revolves around an ambitious man, J. Pierrepont Finch (Morse), who, with the help of the bookHow to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, rises from window washer to chairman of the board of the World Wide Wicket Company. The musical was an instant hit.[25][26] In 1963, Fosse was nominated for two Tony Awards for Best Choreography and Best Direction of a Musical for the musicalLittle Me, winning the former.[13] He choreographed and directed Verdon inSweet Charity in 1966.[27]
Fosse directed five feature films. His first,Sweet Charity (1969) starringShirley MacLaine, is an adaptation of the Broadway musical he had directed and choreographed. In 1972, Fosse directed his second theatrical film,Cabaret, starringLiza Minnelli,Michael York andJoel Grey. The film is based on the1966 musical of the same name. In the traditional manner of musical theater, called an "integrated musical", every significant character in the stage version sings to express his or her own emotion and to advance the plot. In the film version, the musical numbers are entirelydiegetic. The film focuses on a romance between Sally Bowles (Minnelli), who performs at the Kit Kat Klub, and a young British idealist, Brian Roberts, played by York. The story is set during the final decline ofWeimar Germany. The film was an immediate success among audiences and critics alike. The film won eightAcademy Awards, including Best Director.Liza Minnelli andJoel Grey both won Oscars for their roles inCabaret.[28] That same year they collaborated on theconcert filmLiza with a Z, earning Fosse anEmmy Award for both direction and choreography.[13]
In 1979, Fosse co-wrote and directed a semi-autobiographical filmAll That Jazz (1979), starringRoy Scheider, which portrayed the life of a womanizing, drug-addicted choreographer and director in the midst of triumph and failure.Ann Reinking appears in the film as the protagonist's lover, protégée and domestic partner.All That Jazz won fourAcademy Awards, earning Fosse his third Oscar nomination for Best Director.[33] It also won thePalme d'Or at the1980 Cannes Film Festival.[34]Vincent Canby ofThe New York Times described the film as "Mr. Fosse's answer to8½ in whichFederico Fellini wittily examined his own life at a point when he feared his creativity was at an end".[35]
Fosse's final film,Star 80 (1983), was a biographical movie aboutDorothy Stratten, aPlayboyPlaymate who was murdered. The film is based on aPulitzer Prize-winning article. The film was screened out of competition at the34th Berlin International Film Festival.[36] CriticRoger Ebert in his four star review of the film, wrote, "Although his Broadway musicals have been upbeat entertainments, he seems to see the movie camera as a device for peering into our shames and secrets...This is an important movie. Devastating, violent, hopeless, and important, because it holds a mirror up to a part of the world we live in, and helps us see it more clearly."[37]
Notable distinctions of Fosse's style included the use of turned-in knees, the "Fosse Amoeba", sideways shuffling, rolled shoulders andjazz hands.[39] With Astaire as an influence, Fosse used props such as bowler hats, canes and chairs. His trademark use of hats was influenced by his own self-consciousness, according to Martin Gottfried in his biography of Fosse, "His baldness was the reason that he wore hats, and was doubtless why he put hats on his dancers."[25] Fosse used gloves in his performances because he did not like his hands. Some of his most popular numbers include "Steam Heat" (The Pajama Game) and "Big Spender" (Sweet Charity). The "Rich Man's Frug" scene (starring a youngBen Vereen) inSweet Charity is another example of his signature style.
ForDamn Yankees, Fosse was inspired by the "father of theatrical jazz dance",Jack Cole.[25] In 1957, Verdon and Fosse studied withSanford Meisner to develop a better acting technique. According to Michael Joosten, Fosse once said: "The time to sing is when your emotional level is too high to just speak anymore, and the time to dance is when your emotions are just too strong to only sing about how you 'feel.'"[40]
InRedhead, Fosse used one of the first ballet sequences in a show that contained five different styles of dance: Fosse's jazz, acancan, a gypsy dance, amarch and an old-fashioned English music hall number. DuringPippin, Fosse made the first television commercial for a Broadway show.[19]
Fosse married and collaborated with dancerGwen Verdon.
Fosse married dance partner Mary Ann Niles (1923–1987) on May 3, 1947, in Detroit.[41] In 1952, a year after he divorced Niles, he married dancerJoan McCracken in New York City;[42] they divorced in 1959.[43]
His third wife was dancer and actressGwen Verdon, whom he met choreographingDamn Yankees, in which she starred.[44] In 1963, they had a daughter,Nicole Fosse, who later became a dancer and actress. Fosse's extramarital affairs put a strain on the marriage and by 1971 they were separated, although they remained legally married until his death in 1987. Verdon never re-partnered.[25][45][46] During their joint career, Fosse would continually take blame from critics while Gwen Verdon would get praise, no matter how much influence Verdon had on a production. However, Verdon always looked out for him and the Fosse family image, hosting grandiose cast parties and being Fosse's personal press secretary throughout their marriage.[9]
Fosse met dancerAnn Reinking during the run ofPippin in 1972. According to Reinking, their romantic relationship ended "toward the end of the run ofDancin'" (1978).[47] Reinking acted in his musical drama filmAll That Jazz, which was loosely based on Fosse's life.[48]
In 1961, Fosse'sepilepsy was revealed when he had a seizure onstage during rehearsals forThe Conquering Hero.[25]Fosse's time outside of the rehearsal studio or theater was seldom spent alone. As stated in the biographyFosse bySam Wasson, "nights alone were murder on Fosse". To alleviate loneliness and insomnia brought on by his prescribed amphetamines, Fosse would often contact dancers he would work with and try to date them, making it hard for many to refuse his advances, but also giving him the affirmation of success he sought.[9]
Fosse died of a heart attack on September 23, 1987, atGeorge Washington University Hospital while the revival ofSweet Charity was opening at the nearbyNational Theatre.[4] He had collapsed in Verdon's arms near the Willard Hotel.[49] As he had requested, Verdon and Nicole Fosse scattered his ashes in the Atlantic Ocean offQuogue, Long Island, where Fosse had been living with his girlfriend of four years.[50] A month after his death, Verdon fulfilled Fosse's request for his friends to "go out and have dinner on me" by hosting a star-studded, celebrity-filled evening atTavern on the Green with Verdon, Reinking,Roy Scheider,Ben Vereen, andE. L. Doctorow attending.[51]
Reinking and Verdon kept Fosse's unique choreography alive after his death. Reinking played the role of Roxie Hart in the New York revival ofChicago, which opened in 1996. She choreographed the dances in Fosse style for that revival. In 1999, Verdon served as artistic consultant on a Broadway musical designed to showcase examples of classic Fosse choreography. Called simplyFosse, the three-act musical revue was conceived and choreographed by Chet Walker, directed and co-conceived by Richard Maltby, Jr., and co-directed, co-choreographed by co-conceived by Ann Reinking. Verdon and Fosse's daughter, Nicole, received a special thanks credit. The show won a Tony for best musical.[73]
Fosse/Verdon is an eight-part Americanminiseries starringSam Rockwell as Fosse andMichelle Williams as Verdon. The series, which tells the story of the couple's troubled personal and professional relationship, is based on the biographyFosse bySam Wasson.[74] It premiered in eight parts on April 9, 2019, onFX. At the71st Primetime Emmy Awards,Fosse/Verdon received seventeen nominations, includingOutstanding Limited Series and acting nominations for Rockwell, Williams, and Qualley. Williams won the Emmy for Outstanding Actress in a Limited Series.
^abMcQuiston, John T. (September 24, 1987)."Bob Fosse, Director and Choreographer, Dies".The New York Times.Robert Louis Fosse was born in Chicago on June 23, 1927, the son of a vaudeville entertainer. He began performing on the vaudeville circuit as a child, and by the age of 13 he was a seasoned veteran of many burlesque shows. ...
^"Bob Fosse and Gwen Verdon Collection".Guide to the Collection. United States Library of Congress, Music Division. 1996.Archived from the original on December 2, 2009. RetrievedDecember 31, 2009.Bob Fosse Personal Papers and Career Miscellany: Box 86E Front page of the Amundsen Log, 10/5/44 (Amundsen High School, Chicago), with banner: "Bob Fosse President"
^"Bob Fosse".biographic sketch. Chicago Public Schools. Archived fromthe original on December 24, 2010.
^Gottfried, Martin (1990),All his jazz: the life & death of Bob Fosse, New York City: Da Capo Press,ISBN0-306-81284-3,(p. 34) At dance school, he was already a heartthrob ... and it was the same way at Amundsen High ... He seemed to go out with every girl in the class ...
^Sagolla, Lisa Jo.The girl who fell down: a biography ofJoan McCracken (2003), UPNE;ISBN1-55553-573-9, p. 204: "They were wed in a simple civil ceremony by New York's deputy chief clerk at 3:30 pm on December 30, 1952."
^Suskin, Steven."Frank Loesser"Show Tunes : The Songs, Shows, and Careers of Broadway's Major Composers (2010), (books.google.com), Oxford University Press,ISBN0-19-988615-6, p.242