Plié Your Respects: Ann Reinking, Angels and All That Jazz

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The dancer, actress and choreographer, Ann Reinking had a professional, and throughout most of the ’70s, a personal relationship with choreographer, Bob Fosse. In his semi-autobiographical film fantasy, All That Jazz, Reinking was perhaps at her most inspiring. As Kate Jagger (essentially playing herself), she delivered convincingly (perhaps pulling from an all-too-familiar reality) an exhausted, heartfelt plea to Roy Scheider’s philandering Joe (Bob Fosse) Gideon: “I don’t wanna go out with Michael Graham, I don’t wanna date, I have no more small talk left. I don’t wanna fool around, I don’t wanna play games, and I don’t wanna fight, I just… want… to love you.”

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Although Joe is callous about casual sex, wound up about work and lousy at love, Kate remains ever-supportive, even continuing to serve as surrogate older sister/guardian (angel) to Joe’s daughter, Michelle (Erzsébet Földi, playing Nicole Fosse, daughter of Bob Fosse and fellow dance legend, Gwen Verdon). After Joe receives less-than-stellar early reviews on his new film, The Standup, Kate and Michelle as “those two dancing sensations, Jagger and Gideon” express through “an unrehearsed tribute” how much they love Joe, regardless of the “el stink-o, el flop-o” critiques.

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It’s here where Kate is the angelic light, displaying exuberance and elegance, even providing nurturing notes to Michelle mid-routine. And as Peter Allen’s “Everything Old is New Again” comes to a close, a stressed-out Joe forgets his troubles, and gets happy, well, displays a rare smile. It’s a fleeting moment of joy for him—and the audience—as Fosse quickly cuts the scene and puts Joe back in his familiar morning-hangover routine of Visine and Dexedrine, starting another dark day that’s sure to be filled with issues of self-worth, the futile pursuit of perfection, and self-destruction.

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Later however, in one of Joe’s “hospital hallucinations,” Kate is as an angel of death of sorts, but one bedazzled in a black sequined bowler hat, high-cut leotard and tights nonetheless (a seductive Odile [the black swan] to her previous innocent Odette [the white swan] in a razzle-dazzle rendition of Tchaikovsky’s Swan Lake). In “There’ll Be Some Changes Made,” Kate warns Joe that the proverbial final curtain is about to come down if he keeps singing and dancing to the same ol’ tune. The light, in more ways than one, is about to go out.

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As only Fosse (and Gideon) could do—as a director controlling how things should appear and move about—Joe imagines his death as one sparkly, soulful, acid-rock finale to life; in the audience are people from his past, including Kate, sitting next to who we can assume is Michael Graham, the dancer she references earlier in the film. Fosse respected Reinking and her talent so much that she is also cast here as one of the “anatomy angels” who dances alongside Joe and “death emcee,” O’Connor Flood (Ben Vereen). Joe takes his final bow, and in a dolly shot floats toward another light throughout the movie, Angelique, the film’s true angel of death (played by Jessica Lange, Fosse’s romantic interest at the time); leave it to Fosse to fantasize that death is a flirty female.

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After the end credits, it wasn’t the end for Reinking, who appeared in the film version of the Broadway musical, Annie, and as Micki in the comedy, Micki & Maude. In the late ‘90s, she starred in and choreographed the revival of Chicago on Broadway, which earned her a Tony Award for Best Choreography, and later co-created, -directed and -choreographed the musical retrospective, Fosse. With Gwen Verdon’s passing in 2000, Reinking became one of the major torchbearers of Fosse’s artistic legacy, until December 12, 2020 when she passed away in her sleep, a graceful exit to join the angels.

All That Jazz cinematographer: Guiseppe Rotunno.

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