An American writer whose work dates back to radio and whose films
and Broadway productions--many of which he has also directed--have
included classic works such as "West Side Story" and "Gypsy" and
such highly entertaining fare as "The Way We Were" and "The Turning
Point". Arthur Laurents was barely 21 when he wrote his first radio
play "Now Playing Tomorrow" in 1939. He went on to write episodes
of "Dr. Christian", "The Thin Man" and numerous originals. During
WWII, he wrote "Armed Service Forces Present" as well as "This Is
Your FBI".
Laurents' first play, "Home of the Brave", was a hard-hitting look
at the plight of a Jewish GI during the War and opened on Broadway
in 1945 and in London (as "The Way Back") in 1946. "The Bird Cage"
followed in 1950, then "The Time of the Cuckoo" (1952) and "A
Clearing in the Woods" (1957). In 1957 also came "West Side Story",
with music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim.
Originally conceived by Jerome Robbins (who directed and
choreographed) as a twist on "Romeo and Juliet" using Jews and
Catholics (and called "East Side Story"), it was transformed by
Laurents and Bernstein into the tale of Polish-American Romeo and
Puerto Rican Juliet, while their respective gangs fight a street
war. Laurents followed this with the book for "Gypsy" (1959), based
on the memoirs by Gypsy Rose Lee. The show reteamed Laurents,
Robbins and Sondheim (Jule Styne wrote the bouncy score) and gave
Ethel Merman what was arguably her greatest stage triumph.
Laurents began his directing career with his play "Invitation to a
March" (1960), that featured incidental music by Sondheim. In 1962,
Laurents directed (but did not write) the musical "I Can Get It For
You Wholesale", about the garment district. The cast included
Lillian Roth, Elliot Gould and a newcomer, Barbra Streisand, who
played the secretary Yetta Marmelstein and nightly stopped the show
with her one number. Laurents wrote the book for and directed the
Sondheim musical "Anyone Can Whistle" (1964), which has developed a
cult following. It also marked the musical theater debut of Lee
Remick and Angela Lansbury. He turned his own play "The Time of the
Cuckoo" into the musical "Do I Hear A Waltz?" (1965), which set
Sondheim's lyrics to Rodgers' music. Although he was nominated for
Tony Awards for "West Side Story" and "Gypsy", Laurents did not win
until "Hallelujah, Baby!" in 1967.
His ongoing work in the theater tapered off slightly in the 70s
while he concentrated on features. He directed Lansbury in the 1974
London premiere of "Gypsy" (and its subsequent Broadway incarnation
the following year) and, in 1979, he directed and co-wrote Phyllis
Newman's one-woman show, "The Madwoman of Central Park West".
Laurents did not direct again until he helmed the musical version
of "La Cage aux Folles" (1983), which, unlike the film on which it
was based, expressed the outrage of the Albin character when his
lover's son tries to cast him aside. (This development may be a
reflection of the influence of Laurents, book writer Harvey
Fierstein and others involved in the production who are openly
gay.) Laurents won a Tony Award for his direction of the musical.
In 1989, Laurents again oversaw a revival of "Gypsy", headed by
Tyne Daly. Two years later, he wrote the book and directed the
ill-advised stage musical "Nick and Nora", inspired by the
characters featured in "The Thin Man".
Laurents' career in Hollywood as a screenwriter has almost been
separate from his career in the theatre, although he has sometimes
been involved in the adaptation of his plays and musicals. His
first screen credit was a shared one on "The Snake Pit" (1948), a
harrowing study of mental illness starring Olivia de Havilland.
Laurents then adapted Patrick Hamilton's play "Rope" (also 1948)
for Alfred Hitchcock, which was loosely based on the Leopold-Loeb
case. Other adaptations include "Anna Lucasta" (1949, with Philip
Yordan), "Anastasia" (1956), based on the play about a woman who
may or may not be the surviving daughter of the executed Russian
Czar, and "Bonjour Tristesse" (1958).
Laurents co-wrote most of the feature adaptations of his stage
work, beginning with 1949's "Home of the Brave", which altered his
original story that centered on a Jewish soldier to that of a Black
soldier. With Ernest Lehman, he adapted "West Side Story" (1961),
with Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer, and with Leonard Spigelgass,
he wrote "Gypsy" (1962), that featured a non-singing Rosalind
Russell and Wood. He also worked on the screen version of "The Time
of the Cuckoo" which became David Lean's "Summertime" (1965). In
1973, Laurents adapted his own novel, "The Way We Were", the story
of the romance between a Jewish woman and a WASP gent broken apart
by cultural and political differences. The result, starring
Streisand and Robert Redford, was a throw-back to the classic
"women's pictures" and was a huge box-office success. Laurents
followed with "The Turning Point" (1977), which he also produced
with its director Herbert Ross. Also a critical and commercial
success, the film told the tale of two fortyish women, one an aging
ballet star (Anne Bancroft), the other (Shirley MacLaine) who gave
up dancing to raise a family and have a life of regrets.
Laurents has merely dabbled in TV. He wrote the 1967 NBC special
"The Light Fantastic; Or, How to Tell Your Past, Present and Maybe
Future through Social Dancing" and he oversaw the adaptation of
"Gypsy" (CBS, 1993) for Bette Midler.
Arthur Laurents died on Thursday, May 5 in Manhattan from pneumonia
complications.
Arthur Laurents (1917-2011)
May 06, 2011
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