Once Around the Island with Gay Talese
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New York Times - Found 22 hours ago Since he resembled the actor Jerry Orbach, having large dark eyes, a long face and a sloped posture while walking, Mr. Keatts sometimes served... |
Barack Obama Gives Queen Elizabeth The Gift Of Jerry Orbach ...
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Idolator - Found Apr. 2, 2009 ... s Coming up Roses," Ethel Merman, "Gypsy" "The Sound of Music" "Try to Remember," Jerry Orbach , "The Fantasticks" "Camelot," Richard... |
Elaine Cancilla Orbach, Actor Jerry Orbach's Widow, Dies at 69
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Playbill via - Found Apr. 2, 2009 ... a legal battle with Jerry Orbach's son from his first marriage to Marta Curro. Chris Orbach claimed Elaine Orbach has manipulated Orbach into... |
TV viewing over the July 4th holiday weekend
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Raleigh News & Observer - Found Jul. 3, 2009 Tags: Happiness is a warm TV | holiday tv | Jerry Orbach | Law & Order | marathons | News 14 Carolina | UNC-TV You can't be at the pool/beach/park/ |
Law & Order: across the pond
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CBC - Found Jul. 2, 2009 Lenny Briscoe (Jerry Orbach), Det. |
Chris Durang: Remembrance of Sublets Past
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Huffington Post - Found Jun. 22, 2009 I got to see Chicago this way with Gwen Verdon, Chita Rivera and Jerry Orbach - just hopped on the subway at 7:20 and got this $10 ticket. |
Tip-Of-The-Tongue Torment
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Post Chronicle - Found Jun. 16, 2009 ... our very survival is at stake and shuts down any non-necessary functions, such as remembering Jerry Orbach played Jennifer Grey's father in... |
Tip-of-the-tongue torment
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Asheville Citizen-Times - Found Jun. 29, 2009 ... our very survival is at stake and shuts down any non-necessary functions, such as remembering Jerry Orbach played Jennifer Grey's father in... |
Chicago losing its legs
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Ottawa Sun - Found Jun. 24, 2009 Let?s not forget Ron Orbach (any relation to Jerry Orbach?) in the thankless role of Roxy?s feckless husband Amos. |
Ebersole to Host 6th Annual Theater Hall of Fame Fellowship ...
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Playbill - Found Jun. 10, 2009 ... artistic director Jim Morgan will accept the Elaine and Jerry Orbach Musical Theatre grant on behalf of the York Theatre Company; |
Jerry Orbach Biography
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Jerry Orbach
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| Jerry Orbach | |
![]() Orbach in April 2002 |
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| Born | Jerome Bernard Orbach October 20, 1935 The Bronx, New York |
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| Died | December 28, 2004 (aged 69) Manhattan, New York, NY, U.S. |
| Occupation | actor |
| Years active | 1955–2004 |
| Spouse(s) | Marta Curro (1958–1975) Elaine Cancilla (1979–2004) |
Jerome Bernard "Jerry" Orbach (October 20, 1935 - December 28, 2004) was an American actor, well known for his starring role as Detective Lennie Briscoe in the Law & Order television series and as the voice of Lumière in Disney's Beauty and the Beast, as well as for being a noted musical theater star; most notably El Gallo in The Fantasticks, Julian Marsh in 42nd Street, and Billy Flynn in the original production of Chicago.
Contents |
Biography
Early life
Orbach was born in the Bronx, the only child of Emily (née Olexy), a greeting card manufacturer and radio singer, and Leon Orbach, a restaurant manager and vaudeville performer.1 His father was from Hamburg, Germany (of Sephardic Jewish ancestry) and his mother was a Pennsylvania-born Polish American Catholic, and Orbach was raised Catholic.23 Throughout his childhood, the Orbach family moved frequently, living in Mount Vernon, New York; Wilkes-Barre, Nanticoke, and Scranton, Pennsylvania; Springfield, Massachusetts; and Waukegan, Illinois. He studied drama at University of Illinois and Northwestern University and then went to New York, where he studied with Lee Strasberg at the Actors Studio.
Career
Orbach was an accomplished Broadway and off-Broadway actor. His first major role was of El Gallo in the original cast of the decades-running hit The Fantasticks. He also starred in The Threepenny Opera, Carnival, the musical version of the movie Lili, in a revival of Guys and Dolls (Tony Award nomination for Best Featured Actor in a Musical), Promises, Promises (Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical), the original productions of Chicago (Tony Award nomination for Best Actor in a Musical), 42nd Street, and a revival of The Cradle Will Rock. In 1955 he played an uncredited bit part in the movie version of Guys and Dolls4 - he plays a barber shop customer during the musical number, "The Oldest Established," and is given a solo during one of the song's "Nathan, Nathan Detroit!!" choruses. Orbach made occasional film and TV appearances into the 1970s.
In the 1980s, he shifted to film and TV work on a more full-time basis. Prominent roles included a corrupt police detective in Sidney Lumet's Prince of the City; Jennifer Grey's father in Dirty Dancing; and a gangster who hires an assassin in the Woody Allen drama Crimes and Misdemeanors He starred in the short-lived 1987 crime drama The Law and Harry McGraw, in a role he later reprised as a regular guest star on Murder, She Wrote. He also appeared as a celebrity panelist on both What's My Line? and Super Password.
In 1991, Orbach starred in the Academy Award-winning animated musical Beauty and the Beast, as the voice of the candelabrum Lumière, a role he would reprise in the film's direct-to-video sequels. That same year, Orbach appeared as a defense attorney in the Law & Order episode "The Wages of Love" and, a year later, he joined the main cast of Law & Order as wisecracking police detective (and recovering alcoholic) Lennie Briscoe. He remained with the show for 12 years (1992-2004) and became one of its most popular characters. TV Guide named Briscoe as one of their top 50 television detectives of all-time. He also voice acted the character for the video game spin-offs of the series. Orbach was signed to continue in the role on Law & Order: Trial by Jury, but appeared in only the first two episodes of the series. Both episodes aired in March 2005, after his death. The fifth episode of the series, "Baby Boom," was dedicated to his memory.
Personal life
Orbach was married in 1958 to Marta Curro, with whom he had two sons, Anthony Nicholas and Christopher Benjamin; they divorced in 1975. In 1979, he married Broadway dancer Elaine Cancilla, whom he met while starring in Chicago.
Orbach lived in a high-rise off Eighth Avenue in Hell's Kitchen and was a fixture in that Manhattan neighborhood's restaurants and shops. His glossy publicity photo hangs in Ms. Buffy's French Cleaners, and he was a regular at some of the Italian restaurants nearby. As of 2007, the intersection of 8th Avenue and 53rd Street was renamed in honor of Orbach. The plans had been met with some resistance by local planning boards, but these were overcome due to his popularity and love of the Big Apple.5
In early December 2004, it was announced that Orbach had been receiving treatment for prostate cancer since spring 2004; he died at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York on December 28, 2004. His agent, Robert Malcolm, announced at the time of his death that Orbach's prostate cancer had been diagnosed more than 10 years before. The day after his death, the marquees on Broadway were dimmed in mourning, one of the highest honors of the American theatre world.
In addition to his sons and both wives, Orbach was survived by his mother.
One of his wishes while he was alive was to have his eyes donated after his death. His wish was granted when two individuals — one who needed correction for a nearsighted eye and another who needed correction for a farsighted eye — received Orbach's corneas.6 Orbach's likeness has been used in an ad campaign for Eye Bank for Sight Restoration in Manhattan. His interment was at Trinity Church Cemetery.
Author Kurt Vonnegut was a fan of Orbach, and during an Australian radio interview in 2005, he said, "People have asked me, you know, 'Who would you rather be, than yourself?', and Jerry Orbach, without a question...I talked to him one time, and he's adorable."7
Honors
Orbach was named a "Living Landmark", along with fellow Law & Order castmate Sam Waterston, by the New York Landmarks Conservancy in 2002. He quipped that the honor meant "that they can't tear me down". On February 5, 2005, he was posthumously awarded a Screen Actors Guild Award for Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series.
On September 18, 2007, a portion of 53rd Street, near Eighth Avenue, in New York City, was renamed in Orbach's honor as Jerry Orbach Way.8
Also in 2007, the Jerry Orbach Theatre was named for him in the Snapple Theater Center in New York City. The naming occurred as a tribute to him during a revival of The Fantasticks at the theatre.
Work
Stage
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References
- ^ Jerry Orbach Biography (1935-)
- ^ JS Online: Fame finally catches up with 'L&O's' Orbach
- ^ Jerry Orbach; His `Law & Order' Role Fits Him Like a Glove - The Washington Post - HighBeam Research
- ^ Jerry Orbach
- ^ NY Times article 3/7/07
- ^ Eye Bank advertising campaign information, retrieved 2007-01-12.
- ^ October 6, 2005. Kurt Vonnegut interviewed on ABC Radio National Audio by Phillip Adams. Available on the Slaughterhouse-Five Region 4 DVD, released by Umbrella Entertainment Pty Ltd in 2007
- ^ Street renamed in Orbach's honor
External links
- Jerry Orbach at the Internet Movie Database
- Jerry Orbach at the Internet Broadway Database
- Jerry Orbach at the Internet off-Broadway Database
- Jerry Orbach at Find a Grave
- Jerry Orbach obituary (The Washington Post)
- Biography and Interview from "Broadway; The American Musical"
- Jerry Orbach sings "Try to remember"
- Law and Order Star Jerry Orbach Dies MSNBC
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