Even before its
highly anticipated opening, the glitz-and-glam celluloid
fest known as Dreamgirls was already blasting
headlines left, right, and center. Feverish reports
escalated daily: Is there a catfight between
Beyonce and Jennifer Hudson? Will the Oscar buzz
for Eddie Murphy last? Is Dreamgirls really
based on Berry Gordy, Diana Ross, and the Supremes?
But with all this
whirl of Motown costume and camp, let us not forget who
created this project--a dancer-choreographer-director
born in 1943 in Buffalo, N.Y., the son of a
Russian-Jewish mother and a Sicilian-Catholic
father--Michael "Mickey" Difiglia, a.k.a. Michael
Bennett.
He was dancing by
the age of 2. Young Michael worked on his choreographic
skills by plotting out stage patterns for dancers using his
brother Frank's marbles. By 18, he was a dancer on
Broadway; five years later he was a fully credited
choreographer. In 1971, with Stephen Sondheim, Hal
Prince and James Goldman, he cocreated Follies. In
1975, he gave us the legendary A Chorus Line,
followed by the 1981 groundbreaking hit Dreamgirls.
He learned his
craft firsthand from the theatrical gods, from dancer and
choreographer legends Jerome Robbins, Michael Kidd, Marge
and Gower Champion, Agnes DeMille, and Bob Fosse. He
worked with Hal Prince and Stephen Sondheim. But
unlike his idols who reigned over the Broadway theater
for decades, with plenty of time to create their lasting
legacies, Bennett died of AIDS-related cancer at 44.
In 1983, Bennett
said, "The Actors Fund wanted to give me their award
for lifetime achievement, and I said don't give it to
me--I don't want it. I'm only 40! This isn't my
life's work yet."
Given his
constant exploration of mortality--the death of a
career equaling death itself--perhaps he heard
the whispering of his own ghosts; perhaps he saw
something else in his mirror other than a youthful twin
waving back at him. That mirror was a recurring theme in
Bennett's work. Not merely a theatrical device that he
frequently incorporated into his stagings, Bennett's
mirror reflected memory, longing, denial, and
distortion, particularly in his three seminal works of
Follies, A Chorus Line, and Dreamgirls.
Set on a
mirrored, multi-angled raked stage, the legendary number of
"Who's That Woman" from Follies became a high
point in Bennett's then-rising career: Older women sing the
tangled duet with younger counterparts, who wear mirrors
embedded in their costumes. From a plain opening solo,
the song escalates into a nightmarish whirl of
discordance as age and realization come bearing down
on the elderly actress who was once a "somebody."
The character of
Cassie in A Chorus Line begs back into the chorus
after her solo performance career has failed. Cassie's big
number is a tour de force performed in front of
whirling mirrors that incorporate the audience. The
irony is that with this stellar performance of "The
Music and the Mirror," Cassie is pleading to return to the
fold as a faceless chorine. Though the audience can
obviously see that she's a star, they also know that
any chance at true fame has already eluded her.
And then there's
the stage production of Dreamgirls. In the act 1
closer, as Effie White bellows out her declaration of "And I
Am Telling You I'm Not Going," she is
vanquished by a wall of mirrors as the
Dreamgirls overtake the stage. In an echo
of what happened to Supremes singer Florence
Ballard, Effie is cut from the act by her
manager/lover because she is physically and vocally too
overbearing; Effie, again reflecting Ballard's life,
dies nearly destitute in her early 30s. But
actress Jennifer Holliday, who played Effie in the
original Broadway production, refused to go along
with her character's death in the script. Since Bennett
couldn't find a satisfactory replacement for Holliday,
he relented and gave Effie a second chance. With 11
Tony nominations resulting in six Tony awards,
including Best Choreography for Bennett, Best Actress for
Holiday and Best Book for writer Tom Eyen, the
musical's happy ending paralleled an even happier
ending for the production itself.
Flash-forward to
2006 and the excited hype-hype-hooray of the film
Dreamgirls. Written and directed by openly gay Bill
Condon, who was in the last row of the top balcony on
the opening night of Dreamgirls in December
1981, he has dedicated the film to Bennett. As he
should. Not only is it important to remember Bennett, but to
be reminded that nearly 20 years after his death, the
disease that ended his life continues to take
countless others.
- Like Effie in
Dreamgirls screaming her guts out as she refuses
to give up her dreams;
- Like the
beautiful young ghosts in Follies haunting the
Broadway theater;
- Like those
hopeful dancers in A Chorus Line kicking endlessly as
the lights fade out;
May our
reflection of the legacy of Michael Bennett go on and on. No
fade out, if you please.