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Ally_Kat
12-29-2004, 11:42 PM
Jerry Orbach, star of Law & Order, Broadway musicals, dies of cancer at 69

Wed Dec 29, 1:47 PM ET

FRAZIER MOORE

NEW YORK (AP) - Actor Jerry Orbach, who played a sardonic, seen-it-all cop on TV's Law & Order and scored on Broadway as a song-dance man, has died of prostate cancer at 69, a representative of the show said Wednesday.


Orbach died Tuesday night in Manhattan after several weeks of treatment, Audrey Davis of the public relations agency Lippin Group said. When his illness was diagnosed, he had begun production on NBC's upcoming spinoff Law & Order: Trial By Jury, after 12 seasons playing Det. Lennie Briscoe in the original series. His return to the new show had been expected early next year.


On Broadway, Orbach starred in hit musicals including Carnival, Promises, Promises (for which he won a Tony Award), Chicago and 42nd Street.


Earlier, he was in the original cast of the off-off-Broadway hit The Fantasticks, playing the narrator. The show went on to run for more than 40 years.


Lights on Broadway marquees were expected to be dimmed for one minute at curtain time Wednesday night in Orbach's memory.


Among his film appearances were roles in Dirty Dancing, Prince of the City and Crimes and Misdemeanors. In the animated feature Beauty and the Beast, he voiced the role of the candlestick, and got to sing a key song, Be Our Guest.


Orbach is expected to appear in early episodes of Law & Order: Trial by Jury, for which he continued as Briscoe in a secondary role, when the show premieres later this season, Davis said.


"I'm immensely saddened by the passing of not only a friend and colleague, but a legendary figure of 20th century show business," said Dick Wolf, creator and executive producer of the Law & Order series, in a statement. "He was one of the most honoured performers of his generation. His loss is irreplaceable."


With his hang-dog face and loose-limbed gait, Orbach was adept at playing the street-smart tough guy, but could also hoof and carry a tune. And not only was he a beloved star, he also personified New York's well-worn but implacable edge. A lifelong New Yorker, he inhabited and embodied the Big Apple like few other actors.


Former mayor Rudolph Giuliani called Orbach "a friend to all New Yorkers" and "a devoted ambassador of the city."


Born in the Bronx in 1935, Orbach was the son of a vaudeville-performer father and a radio-singer mother. He started his acting career in school plays, then attended Northwestern University's prestigious drama school, though he couldn't swing the money to finish. In 1955, he returned to New York to hit the stage.


In a 2000 interview with the Associated Press, Orbach remembered those days fondly. Money was tight, even with his early successes: In 1960 he was earning just $45 US a week in The Fantasticks, but "even married, with a son, we lived all right."


He then began an association with producer David Merrick, appearing in three of Merrick's biggest musical successes, starting in 1961 with Carnival!, in which he played an embittered puppeteer opposite Anna Maria Alberghetti's winsome Lili.


Orbach won a Tony for his performance in Merrick's Promises, Promises, the Neil Simon-Burt Bacharach-Hal David musical based on the film The Apartment. In the show, Orbach played Chuck Baxter, the role originated in the movie by Jack Lemmon.


Yet his biggest hit for Merrick was 42nd Street, which opened on Broadway in 1980 and ran for more than 3,400 performances. In the show, which is based on the classic Warner Bros. backstage movie musical, Orbach played hard-boiled producer Julian Marsh, who brings the young hoofer out of the chorus to replace the show's ailing star.


Orbach also was in the original production of Chicago in 1975, which also starred Gwen Verdon and Chita Rivera. He played Billy Flynn, the role Richard Gere inherited in the 2002 film.


"It was gift to work with him," recalled actress Brenda Smiley, who co-starred with Orbach in the off-Broadway stage hit Scuba Duba, a dark comedy by Bruce Jay Friedman, in 1967-68. "He was a master at that kind of performing and he made it so easy for everyone else."



From early, obscure films like Cop Hater and Mad Dog Coll, Orbach rose to appearances in Woody Allen's Crimes and Misdemeanors and the 1981 crime drama Prince of the City, in a cop role that presaged his Law & Order character.

In 1987-88, he starred in the series The Law and Harry McGraw, a spinoff featuring a character he created in Murder, She Wrote. It flopped, but five years later he struck gold, following Paul Sorvino as a detective in Manhattan's 27th Precinct.

In a 2000 Associated Press interview, Orbach said Law & Order brought him "wonderful security," rare in the life of an actor.

"All my life, since I was 16, I've been wondering where that next job was gonna come from," he explained. "Now I take the summer off, relax, and I know that at the end of July we're gonna start another season."

He said he didn't know "where I stop and Lennie starts, really. ... I know he's tougher than me and he carries a gun. And I'm not an alcoholic."

"I know I wouldn't want to be him," Orbach summed up. "I guess THAT'S where I stop and he starts."

Orbach is survived by his second wife, Elaine, whom he met doing Chicago and married in 1979, and grown sons Chris and Tony from his first marriage.

POJO_Risin
12-29-2004, 11:48 PM
Yeah...I saw this...seemed to be a real good guy...

I'm wondering about his show...if they have any in the can...and if we'll get to see them...

I just read something over the past couple of days that it was going to be in the lineup in the next month...so I'm guessing we'll get a few episodes...

I don't watch the show...but was planning to watch his...

Bob_R
12-30-2004, 09:19 AM
R.I.P Jerry :(

guwapo_rocker
12-30-2004, 11:30 AM
Sorry to learn of this yesterday, I really liked his work.

RIP.