|
Register Now!
|
|
Register now for vtap for the fastest and easiest way to watch web video on your mobile device!
|
|
Ben Vereen (born October 10, 1946) in Miami, Florida, is a Tony Award-winning, Golden Globe and Emmy Award-nominated American actor, dancer, and singer who has appeared in numerous Broadway theatre shows. Vereen graduated from Manhattan's High School of Performing Arts. He was nominated for a Tony Award for Jesus Christ Superstar in 1972 and won a Tony for his appearance in Pippin in 1973. Vereen starred in the Broadway musical Wicked as the Wizard of Oz (and was originally considered for the role of the Scarecrow in The Wiz), replacing former Wizard George Hearn on May 31, 2005. He was replaced by tour Wizard David Garrison on April 4, 2006.
In addition to his work in the theatre, he toured with people across the country such as Tony Ventura, son of Charlie Ventura. He has also starred in numerous television programs and films. Notable film roles include song-and-dance men in Funny Lady and All That Jazz. He appeared on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air episode "Papa's Got a Brand New Excuse", in which he played Will Smith's biological father. He starred in the television series Tenspeed and Brown Shoe but is probably best known for his role as "Chicken" George Moore in Roots and possibly as Commander Edward M. La Forge, father of Geordi La Forge, on Star Trek: The Next Generation in 1993. Other TV appearances include:
Vereen has also performed in one-man shows and actively lectures on black history and inspirational topics.
In 1992, he was accidentally struck while walking on the Pacific Coast Highway by a car driven by producer/composer David Foster.
A glitzy, indefatigable showman if ever there was one, Ben Vereen's career as a preeminent song-and-dance man has enjoyed international attention. Brooklyn-born (on October 10, 1946) and raised, inspiration came while growing up in the Bedford-Stuyvesant area where he sang in churches and choirs that toured throughout the borough. During his formative years, he was intrigued by dance so his mother found a way to enroll him in classes at a studio. Taking to it all like a duck to water, he went on to attend New York's High School of the Performing Arts and Emerson College. He was only 18 when he made his New York stage bow off-off Broadway in "The Prodigal Son." Following an understudy role to Sammy Davis Jr. in "Golden Boy,", he was cast in a 1967 touring company of "Sweet Charity" and found his true, expressionistic dance style in the form of Bob Fosse, going on to make a minor film debut as one of the "frug dancers" in the film version of Sweet Charity (1969). He served as a replacement in the Broadway rock musical cast of "Hair" in 1969 and played both the lead roles of Claude and Berger during his run. The early 1970s movement of "peace and love" proved to be his star-making era on Broadway. His soulful, captivating portrayal of Judas in Andrew Lloyd Webber's "Jesus Christ Superstar" earned him the promising Theatre World Award and a Tony nomination. After a season with the National Shakespeare Company, Vereen was cast as "The Leading Player" in the 1972 Broadway musical "Pippin" and electrified audiences in a performance of almost mythic proportions. He finally grabbed the Tony and Drama Desk awards that year. TV risked to capture this amazing new and exciting energy by making him host/performer of the limited summer variety series entitled "Ben Vereen... Comin' at Ya" (1975). As talented as the man indeed was, critics deemed the show slick, artificial and self-indulgent for a "star" that nobody knew outside of New York's Great White Way. While the feel of a live audience would always be Vereen's preferred domain, the indomitable performer did not give up on TV. He went on to earn a critical nod playing the great "Satchmo" in Louis Armstrong - Chicago Style (1976) (TV), and garnered an Emmy nomination for his superb portrayal of "Chicken George" in the ground-breaking mini-series "Roots" (1977) (mini). He showcased again on TV, this time as a true star, in the 1978 musical special "Ben Vereen...His Roots", and won the Emmy statuette. A couple of seasons later he co-starred with Jeff Goldblum in the Stephen J. Cannell private eye show "Tenspeed and Brown Shoe" (1980) and enjoyed a recurring role on "Webster" (1983). As for film work, it seemed that small, energetic doses was all that was in the offering. While he enjoyed his brief dazzling moment in a Funny Lady (1975) musical sequence, which earned him a Golden Globe nomination, and a flashy cameo in the musical finale of the surreal Bob Fosse semi-autobiographical All That Jazz (1979), he proved far too big for the large screen. Vereen has commanded stages and showrooms all over the world: in Vegas, Atlantic City, Lake Tahoe, and throughout the United States, Europe, Asia and the Caribbean. He has also had his share of personal sorrow. Vereen's 16-year-old child died in a car accident in 1987, and Vereen himself was seriously injured after being struck by a van while walking away from his own car accident and suffering a stroke on Pacific Coast Highway, a couple of miles from his home in Malibu in 1992. Vereen had to undergo a lengthy rehabilitation process, sustaining head and internal injuries and a broken leg. But the show has gone on. Although he has returned to performing, he has slowed down the pace but the sparkle is still there. He has enjoyed fine reviews in top supporting roles (mostly musical) in such productions as "Jelly's Last Jam," "Chicago," "I'm Not Rappaport," "Fosse," "Wicked" and "A Christmas Carol" (as the Ghost of Christmas Present). TV guest spots have included yeoman work on "Touched by an Angel," "The Fresh Prince of Bel Air," "Star Trek-The Next Generation," "The Promised Land," "Oz" and an Emmy nominated guest role on "The Intruders." A self-proclaimed spiritually-guided individual, he is also a noted motivational speaker and humanitarian. In January of 2006 he became an ordained minister.



