How Fosse/Verdon Uncovered the Traumatic Secret of Gwen Verdons First Marriage

Celebrities

Spoilers ahead for those who have not seen Tuesdays Fosse/Verdon episode “Me and My Baby.”

For nearly 80 years, the details of Gwen Verdons first marriage have remained hazy. As a teenager living in Los Angeles, the future Tony-winning entertainer wed a much-older journalist, quit her dancing career, and had a son. The marriage did not last—Verdon would later blame her ex-husbands alcohol problem—and, after meeting famed choreographer Jack Cole, Verdon resumed dancing, eventually making the heart-wrenching decision to leave her son in her parents care. Over a decade later, when Verdon married Bob Fosse, their relationship proved to be such a Broadway sensation and revolutionary creative force that Verdons starter marriage faded from public consciousness. Until now, that is.

FXs Fosse/Verdon splits open Fosse and Verdons complicated relationship—spotlighting, for the first time, the contributions and personal sacrifices Verdon (and other women in Fosses life) made that went unnoticed. But why did Verdon stay so loyal to Fosse—through the affairs, addictions, and depression spirals—even going so far as to protect his legacy after the Tony-, Oscar-, and Emmy-winning filmmaker died? To give the relationship better context, Fosse/Verdons latest episode flashes back to Verdons first marriage—a traumatic and formative experience the dancer guarded so closely that it even escaped the attention of her biographers.

“There are these offhand mentions of her marriage when she was young,” said Debora Cahn, a Fosse/Verdon consulting producer who wrote Tuesdays episode, “Me and My Baby.” Explaining what her research turned up, Cahn said, “The accounts are a little bit sanitized, but they have these odd turns of phrase that make you think, What exactly happened there?”

We know, for example, that, as a teenager, Verdon danced at Florentine Gardens—“a place where gorgeous and talented young showgirls came to make a name for themselves,” according to Burlesque in a Nutshell. She was underage, but Verdons mother—who had been a dance teacher—helped her secure the gig by lying about her daughters birthday. “At sixteen Verdon was the specialty act Girl in Gold,”wrote Verdon biographer Peter Shelley. The act required her “wearing a rubber bra and panties and with her entire body painted by [her mother] in shimmering gold powder and glycerine, presented before a house of loud and angry men.”

“Her mother taught her to dance,” explained Cahn. “She quickly became this young woman with an incredible talent. And her mother created opportunities for her to dance wherever she could—and that included burlesque clubs when she was 14 or 15 years old. . . Yes, her mother was supportive of her career, but that is a double-edged sword when you are a little kid—and learning, at a very young age, to put allure and sensuality into your work.”

Verdon and Fosse biographers offer different timelines of Verdons first marriage, but do not go into detail about how the young dancer met her twice-older husband. Fortunately, Nicole Fosse, who is a co-executive producer on Fosse/Verdon, was available to answer some hard questions about her parents. (Vanity Fair reached out to Fosse, but she was not available for comment.)

“Nicole filled in a little of this [backstory] for us,” said Cahn. “Kind of starting with the basic story that, when Gwen was about 16 years old, one of her parents friends got her pregnant and then her parents told her to marry him.” This account is depicted in flashback, presenting, for the first time, the circumstances in which Verdon met her first husband. “She met him at her parents home,” continued Cahn. “He was a personal friend of the family. He was a theater critic and a little bit of a talent manager and then, shortly after, he was a married man with a serious drinking problem who couldnt do his job. His very young wife, who had stopped dancing and literally threw away her dancing shoes to be a mother and a wife, was writing his columns for him.”

When Verdon did later speak about that first marriage, she did so obliquely. “I thought being married meant doing the laundry,” she told The New York Times in 1981. “I mean, what do you know when youre that age?” She added of her husband: “He was a drinker. [S]o he would wind up in Kansas City and not remember how he got there . . . My son was born in March and on New Years Eve, I said Thats it, and I went home to Mama. I took my child, my dog and my cats and left.”

Verdon may have kept details of the marriage secret to protect her son, but that doesnt make them any less infuriating. The idea of Verdons parents forcing their teenage daughter to marry the family friend who impregnated her? “That is just a jaw-dropper,” said Cahn, still incredulous over the revelation. “Its like, What?! Why hasnt there been a feature film about [Verdon] every 10 years? That story is crazy. He was her parents friend!”

When asked how Nicole came to this realization about her mothers first marriage, Cahn said, “Its tricky talking to someone about their life and their parents life, and how she kind of put pieces together as she grew older. I have actually had a similar experience—my parents both passed away, and in the last few years, I have kind of been putting stories together that I heard as a child. Looking at them from the perspective of an adult, thinking, Oh, thats what that meant. Thats what that was a euphemism for . . .”

“I think there were a lot of pieces that she started to piece together as she looked back at this as an adult, and as a parent,” explained Cahn. “Little scraps that she heard from her parents or their friends over the years and kind of put together into a more complete picture of what happened in her mothers young life.”

Before returning to dance, Verdon picked up a few jobs reviewing movies and nightclub acts (under a pseudonym, because she was underage) through friends of her ex-husband. On one assignment, to review the opening of a nightclub show starring Jack Coles dance troupe, Verdon sneaked backstage and introduced herself to the choreographer. “I had never heard of Jack Cole in my life,” Verdon later told The New York Times. “I was absolutely floored. I did not write a review. I went backstage and I was not even dancing at the time and I said, If I get back in condition can I audition for you? and he said, Yes.”

Within a year of giving birth, Verdon Read More – Source

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