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Biography

Cy Feuer

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Overview

  • Born
    January 15, 1911 · Brooklyn, New York City, New York, USA
  • Died
    May 17, 2006 · New York City, New York, USA (bladder cancer)
  • Birth name
    Seymour Arnold Feuer

Biography

    • Cy Feuer, the Tony Award-winning theatrical impresario who was also an Oscar-nominated producer and music director, made his debut on the world stage on January 15, 1911 in Brooklyn, New York as Seymour Arnold Feuerman. A talented musician, he began earning a living as a professional trumpeter at the age of fifteen, while still attending high school. The teenage musician first met Abe Burrows at this time. Many years later, as a Broadway producer, he'd hire Burrows to write the book for the legendary classic Blanches colombes et vilains messieurs (1955), his first Broadway.

      He dropped out of high school but later studied at the Juilliard School. As a professional message, he was employed by the Roxy Theater and Radio City Music Hall orchestras before being hired in 1938 to tour with Leon Belasco and His Society Orchestra. After the band played Burbank, California, he remained behind in the Golden State and was hired by the Poverty Row studio Republic Pictures to work in their music department.

      He served as an arranger, composer and music director, racking up over 125 credits that brought him five Oscar nominations for his film scores. He did a three-year hitch in the service during World War II. After returning to Hollywood after the war, he grew disenchanted with the life of a movie musical director, quitting Tinsel Town in 1947 to have a go on the Great White Way.

      He became partners with CBS Radio's comedy programing chieftain Ernest H. Martin, and produced the musical comedy La marraine de Charley (1952) in 1947, an adaptation of Charley's Aunt (1941) featuring the talents of Ray Bolger. It was a hit, toured the country, and then returned to Broadway for another long run.

      The musical comedy production team of Feuer & Martin had an even greater success in 1950 with Blanches colombes et vilains messieurs (1955), the classic, often-revived musical based on the tales of Damon Runyon that brought them their first Tony Award. They were also Tony recipients (for Best Musical and Best Producer of a Musical, a separate award) for the 1964 musical Comment réussir dans les affaires sans vraiment essayer (1967), which also won the Pulitzer Prize. Other shows they produced were Can-Can (1960), The Boy Friend (1971), La belle de Moscou (1957), and Neil Simon's "Little Me." Feuer also was a director, helming "Little Me" and the 1979 musical adaptation of Tendresse (1948), which was not a success despite music by Richard Rodgers.

      Feuer scored a major triumph when he produced the 1972 film version of the Broadway hit Cabaret (1972). The movie won eight Oscars and garnered Feuer an Academy Award nomination (his sixth) as Best Producer (though "Cabaret" was upset in the Best Picture category, losing out to Le Parrain (1972)). With Martin, he produced the 1985 screen adaptation of Chorus Line (1985), which proved to be one of their biggest flops.

      He served as president and then chairman of the League of American Theatres and Producers from 1989-2003. In 2003, he was the recipient of a Special Tony Award for Lifetime Achievement.

      Cy Feuer died on May 17, 2006 from bladder cancer in New York City. He was 95 years old.
      - IMDb mini biography by: Jon C. Hopwood

Family

  • Spouse
      Posy Lee Greenberg(January 20, 1946 - February 5, 2005) (her death, 2 children)

Trivia

  • Has won four Tony Awards: in 1951, shared with co-producer Ernest H. Martin, as Best Producers (Musical) for "Guys and Dolls;" in 1962, two Tonys, both again shared with Martin, as Best Producer (Musical) and as co-producer of Best Musical winner "How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying;" and in 2003, a Special Lifetime Achievement Tony Award. He was also Tony-nominated six other times: three times in 1963, twice again shared with Martin, as Best Producer (Musical) and co-producer of Best Musical nominee, and once shared with Bob Fosse as Best Director (Musical), for "Little Me;" two times in 1966, again sharing co-producer credit with Martin of Best Musical nominee, as well as on his own as Best Director (Musical), for "Skyscraper;" and one time in 1967, yet again shared with Martin, as co-producer of Best Musical nominee "Walking Happy."
  • Served in the Army Air Corps during WWII - he spent the war making training films and rose to Captain.
  • Worked as a trumpet player at Radio City Music Hall, among other theaters, and later became head of the music department at Republic Pictures in the 1930s and into the '40s.
  • Member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Producers Branch)
  • One of the many musicals he and partner Ernest H. Martin produced on Broadway was the British show, "The Boy Friend".

Quotes

  • I worked harder than everyone else.
  • You can apply faultless logic, work with geometric precision, allow for every single pitfall, have the perfect cast and the perfect story, and still turn out a dud. There are so many complicating intangibles. It's like the chaos theory. The miracle is that it sometimes works.
  • [on Liza Minnelli] She's the greatest musical actress and performer we have.

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