Alfred Drake
b. Alfredo Capurro, 7 October, 1914, New York City, New York, USA, d. 25 July 1992, New York, USA. An actor, singer, director, and author, Drake will always be associated with that magical moment when the curtain rose on Oklahoma!at the St. James Theatre in New York on 31 March 1943, and he made his entrance singing Oh, What A Beautiful Mornin’. The show marked a new and exciting beginning for the American musical theatre, and Drake reigned as its leading male star for more than a decade. After singing in the Glee Club at Brooklyn College, he made his stage debut in July 1935 at the Adelphi Theatre in New York in the chorus of THE MIKADO. A year later, he was in the chorus again, and also understudied one of the leading roles, in a City Centre revival of the WHITE HORSE INN. In 1937 he introduced the title song in Babes In Arms, and was also featured in TWO BOUQUETS (1938) with Patricia Morison, an actress who would later share in one of his greatest successes. From 1939-40 Drake also appeared in three Broadway revues, ONE FOR THE MONEY, the STRAW HAT REVUE (with Danny Kaye), and TWO FOR THE SHOW, in which, together with Frances Comstock, he introduced the future standard, How High The Moon. After his magnetic performance in OKLAHOMA!, Drake co-starred with Burl Ives in Walter Kerr's folk music tribute SING OUT, SWEET LAND (1944), played Macheath in John Latouche and Duke Ellington's contemporary version of THE BEGGAR'S HOLIDAY (1946), and took the role of Larry Foreman, the union organiser, in a revival of The Cradle Will Rock(1947). In 1948 he enjoyed what is often considered to be his greatest personal success in Kiss, Me Kate. Drake gave a marvellously witty and stylish performance in the role of Fred Graham, the egocentric thespian who is tormented on and off stage by his leading lady (Patricia Morison), who also happens to be his ex-wife, Lilli. His glorious lyric tenor voice delighted audiences on numbers such as ‘Where Is the Life That Late I Led?’, I've Come To Wive It Wealthily In Padua, and Were Thine That Special Face. In 1951 he turned down the leading role in The King And I, but played it for a time in 1953 while Yul Brynner was on holiday. Two years later he completed a hat-trick of great roles when he played Hajj, the public poet in the musical version of Kismet (1955), for which he won New York Drama Critics, Donaldson, and Tony Awards. He reprised his role in the London production and for subsequent revivals. Along with the triumphs, Drake had his flop musicals too, as a performer, director and author. They included THE LIAR (1950), COURTIN’ TIME (1951), Lock Up Your Daughters (1960), KEAN (1961), and ZENDA (1963). He made his final appearance in a Broadway musical in Gigi (1973), a lacklustre adaptation of the classic film which closed after three months. For most of his career he remained active in the straight, non-musical theatre, and was especially applauded for his Shakespearean roles which included Claudius to Richard Burton's Hamlet in John Gielgud's 1964 Broadway production. He bade farewell to the Broadway stage in THE SKIN OF OUR TEETH in 1975. Ironically, as is often the case with Hollywood, he was not required to recreate his major stage performances for the screen; Gordon MacRaeand Howard Keel took care of those. Drake made only one film, a routine musical called TARS AND SPARS (1946). He appeared on plenty of television, though, and there still exists a 90-minute telecast of KISS, ME KATE from 1958, in which he is said to be awesome. In 1990 Drake received his second Tony, a special award for lifetime achievement as perhaps ‘the greatest singing actor the American musical theatre has ever produced’.