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Carol Channings unique voice and talent for
outrageous and madcap comic performances have made her one of the most
popular Broadway performers of the twentieth century. In her most famous
rolesLorelei Lee in Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and Dolly
Gallagher Levi in Hello, Dolly!Channings spectacular
performances are legendary. Wildly popular touring productions of both
shows helped to launch Carol Channing to stardom.
A California native, Channing came east to attend Bennington College
in Vermont. In 1940, she spent her winter semester break in New York,
performing in her first major show, Marc Blitzsteins No For
An Answer. Though the show was a failure and closed quickly, Channings
performance was briefly praised in a review; this was enough to convince
her to stay on in New York and pursue a career in the theater.
After a series of minor successes, Channing won the role of Lorelei
Lee in a stage adaptation of Anita Looss novel, Gentlemen Prefer
Blondes. The show and Channings portrayal of the gold-digging
party girl were tremendously successful. Thanks to the musical
version of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes we have a new star on Broadway,
Brooks Atkinson wrote. Although the management has not given her
celestial billing, it probably realizes, as everyone else does, that
Carol Channing is the chief attraction of the production.1
Ever after, Diamonds are a Girls Best Friend has been
a signature song for Channing. In 1974, Channing played Lorelei again
in Lorelei, or Gentlemen Still Prefer Blonds. Her performance
won her a Tony Award nomination.
In 1964, Channing played Dolly Gallagher Levi in Hello, Dolly!,
the Jerry Herman and Michael Stewart musical based on The Matchmaker
by Thorton Wilder. The show won the New York Drama Critics Circle Award
for best musical and ten Tony awards, including a best actress award
for Channing. The original cast album was so popular that upon its release
it beat out the Beatles for top sales.
Channing revived the role of Dolly in 1995, when she was seventy four
years old. Though some were skeptical about the project, Channing was
in top form, pitch-perfect and a mistress of timing.2
In her red, green and orange turn-of-century outfits, Jack
Kroll wrote, Channing rekindles a straight-to-the-heart, popular
theater thats as gone as the shows horse drawn trolley.3
In all her Broadway and touring productions of Hello, Dolly!,
Channing, who is said to travel with a separate suitcase for her fake
eyelashes, has performed Dolly more than 4,500 times and has never missed
a single performance.
Channing has received Tony nominations or awards for every one of her
Broadway shows. And though shes made few films, in 1968 she was
nominated for an Oscar for her performance in Thoroughly Modern Millie.
Her television appearances on shows like Hollywood Squares and
The Muppet Show have earned her new fans from a younger generation.
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