Current:Home > MarketsChita Rivera, Broadway's 'First Great Triple Threat,' dies at 91 -WealthRise Academy
Chita Rivera, Broadway's 'First Great Triple Threat,' dies at 91
View
Date:2025-04-14 02:02:21
Chita Rivera, who appeared in more than 20 Broadway musicals over six decades has died, according to her daughter, Lisa Mordente. The three-time Tony Award-winning Broadway legend created indelible roles — Anita in West Side Story, Rose in Bye Bye Birdie, Velma Kelly in Chicago, and Aurora in Kiss of the Spiderwoman. She was 91.
Rivera "was everything Broadway was meant to be," says Laurence Maslon, co-producer of the 2004 PBS series, Broadway: The American Musical. "She was spontaneous and compelling and talented as hell for decades and decades on Broadway. Once you saw her, you never forgot her."
You might think Chita Rivera was a Broadway baby from childhood – but she wasn't. Born Dolores Conchita Figueroa del Rivero in Washington, D.C., she told an audience at a Screen Actors Guild Foundation interview that she was a tomboy and drove her mother crazy: "She said, 'I'm putting you in ballet class so that we can rein in some of that energy.' So I am very grateful."
Rivera took to ballet so completely that she got a full scholarship to the School of American Ballet in New York. But when she went with a friend to an audition for the tour of the Broadway show Call Me Madam, Rivera got the job. Goodbye ballet, hello Broadway. In 1957, she landed her breakout role, Anita in West Side Story, with a score by Leonard Bernstein and Stephen Sondheim.
"Hearing 'America' was just mind-boggling, with that rhythm," Rivera told NPR in 2007 for the musical's 50th anniversary. "I just couldn't wait to do it. It was such a challenge. And, being Latin, you know, it was a welcoming sound."
West Side Story allowed Rivera to reveal not only her athletic dancing chops, but her acting and singing chops. She recalls Leonard Bernstein teaching her the score himself: "I remember sitting next to Lenny and his starting with 'A Boy Like That,' teaching it to me and me saying, 'I'll never do this, I can't hit those notes, I don't know how to hit those notes.' "
But she did hit them, and being able to sing, act and dance made her a valuable Broadway commodity, said Maslon. "She was the first great triple threat. Broadway directors like Jerome Robbins and Bob Fosse saw the need to have performers who could do all three things and do them really well."
And, from 1960 to 2013, she headlined some big hits — as well as some major flops. In 1986, Rivera was in a serious taxi accident. Her left leg was shattered, and the doctors said she'd never dance again, but she did – just differently.
"We all have to be realistic," she told NPR in 2005. "I don't do flying splits anymore. I don't do back flips and all the stuff that I used to do. You want to know something? I don't want to."
But her stardom never diminished. And the accolades flowed: she won several Tony Awards, including one for lifetime achievement, a Kennedy Center honor, and a Presidential Medal of Freedom. Rivera didn't do much television or film – she was completely devoted to the stage, says Maslon.
"That's why they're called Broadway legends," he says. "Hopefully you get to see them live because you'll never get to see them in another form in quite the same way."
veryGood! (355)
Related
- $73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
- Padres' Dylan Cease pitches no-hitter vs. Nationals, second in franchise history
- Chicago Bears wish Simone Biles good luck at 2024 Paris Olympics
- Martin Indyk, former U.S. diplomat and author who devoted career to Middle East peace, dies at 73
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Taco Bell is celebrating Baja Blast's 20th anniversary with freebies and Stanley Cups
- Video shows fish falling from the sky, smashing Tesla car windshield on Jersey Shore
- Arkansas abortion measure’s signatures from volunteers alone would fall short, filing shows
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- NORAD intercepts Russian and Chinese bombers off coast of Alaska
Ranking
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- 'Transformers One': Chris Hemsworth embraces nostalgia as Optimus Prime
- Rebuilding Rome, the upstate New York city that is looking forward after a destructive tornado
- 'Transformers One': Chris Hemsworth embraces nostalgia as Optimus Prime
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- Forensic review finds improprieties in Delaware gubernatorial candidate’s campaign finances
- Judge strikes down one North Carolina abortion restriction but upholds another
- In the Developing Field of Climate Psychology, ‘Eco-Anxiety’ Is a Rational Response
Recommendation
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
2024 Olympics: Serena Williams' Daughter Olympia Is All of Us Cheering on Team USA
Two former FBI officials settle lawsuits with Justice Department over leaked text messages
Everyone's obsessed with Olympians' sex lives. Why?
Sam Taylor
Panama City Beach cracks down on risky swimming after deadly rip current drownings
Kamala Harris urges viewers to vote in 'RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars' appearance: Watch
Watch a shark's perspective as boat cuts across her back, damaging skin, scraping fin