David Winters (April 5, 1939 – April 23, 2019) was an English-born American actor, dancer, choreographer, producer, distributor, director and screenwriter. At a young age, he acted in film and television projects such as Lux Video Theatre,Naked City; Mister Peepers,Rock, Rock, Rock, and Roogie's Bump. He received some attention in Broadway musicals for his roles in West Side Story (1957) and Gypsy (1959). In the film adaptation of West Side Story (1961) he was one of the few to be re-cast. It became the highest grossing motion picture of that year, and won 10 Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
Winters became a dance choreographer. On films, he choreographed several projects with Elvis Presley and Ann-Margret starting with Viva Las Vegas (1964). Other dance choreography credits include T.A.M.I. Show (1964), Send Me No Flowers (1964), Billie (1965), A Star Is Born (1976), etc. On television, he was frequently seen with his troupe on a variety of shows choreographing popular dances of the 1960s. At the Emmy Awards, for the television specialMovin' with Nancy (1967), his choreography was nominated in the category Special Classification of Individual Achievements.
Winters was born David Weizer in London, England, the son of Jewish parents Sadie and Samuel Weizer. His family relocated to the United States in 1953. He became a naturalized United States citizen in 1956.[1] Winters was interested in dancing at an early age.[2]
Career
Early 1950s-1967: Early roles, stage musicals, and dance choreography
At age 12, Winters was shining shoes to pay for dance classes afraid his mother would not approve. She eventually caught him and made a deal to make him stop: if he did his bar mitzvah, she would bring him to dance classes.[2] That same year, Winters was spotted by a talent agent while dancing in a Manhattan restaurant. From this point he began acting and dancing on television. By the age of 14 he had worked with Jackie Gleason, Martha Raye, Mindy Carson, Sarah Churchill, Wally Cox, George Jessel, Ella Raines, Paul Douglas, and Perry Como. He also was heard on radio plays with Donald Cook and Joseph Cotten. It led him to act in over 15 television shows during a span of 10 years, including Lux Video Theatre, Naked City, The Red Buttons Show, Mister Peepers, etc.[3]
On November 23 of that year he acted in another Broadway play called Sandhog.[6] In the musical, Winters alongside Yuriko, Eliot Feld, Muriel Mannings, and Betty Ageloff played a group of kids. Paul Affelder of The Brooklyn Eagle praised all the performances, and found the kids talented.[7]
In 1957, he acted in Shinbone Alley. The Broadway production opened on April 13, 1957, at The Broadway Theatre and closed on May 25, 1957, after 49 performances.[9] Later that year, he played the role of Baby John in the original Broadway production of West Side Story.[10] Conceived, directed and choreographed by Jerome Robbins, it ran for 732 performances before going on tour. The production was nominated for six Tony Awards including Best Musical.[11]
On May 21, 1959, he starred as Yonkers in the original production of Gypsy.[12] The show was produced by David Merrick and directed and choreographed by Jerome Robbins Critic Frank Rich has referred to it as one of the more influential stagings of a musical in American theatrical history.[13] The original production received eight Tony Award nominations, including Best Musical. It closed on March 25, 1961, after 702 performances and two previews.[14]
In 1960, he acted in the Broadway musical One More River.[15]
In 1961, he appeared as A-Rab in the movie version of West Side Story directed by Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins.[16] He and Carole D'Andrea, Jay Norman, Tommy Abbott, William Bramley and Tony Mordente were the only actors to have been cast in both the original Broadway show and the motion picture. The film was the highest grossing motion picture of that year, going on to win 10 Academy Awards, including Best Picture.[17]
On January 30, 1963, the play Billy Liar made its American premiere with Winters in the title role.[19] Margaret Harford of the Los Angeles Times liked the acting and said that Winters played the role with "coltish swagger".[20]
In 1966, he co-produced and choreographed the Lucille Ball television special Lucy in London.[36][37] Also that year he acted in The Crazy-Quilt by John Korty,[38] and The David Winters Dancers also appeared in the television special MJ's.[39] Finally he choreographed two more Ann-Margret films Boris Sagal's Made in Paris,[40] and George Sidney's The Swinger.[41]
In 1967, Winters directed two episodes of the television show The Monkees.[42] He choreographed Elvis Presley in Easy Come, Easy Go.[43] With the David Winters Dancers, he appeared on the television special Go.[44] That year, he was an associate director for the Broadway play Of Love Remembered, directed by Burgess Meredith.[45] Also in 1967, for his choreography on the Nancy Sinatratelevision specialMovin' with Nancy,[46] he received an Emmy nomination in the category Special Classification of Individual Achievements.[47]
1968 to 1986: Subsequent choreography, producing and directing
In 1968, he co-founded the production company Winters/Rosen which specialized in television specials.[48][49] He choreographed and directed The Ann-Margret Show.[50] That year, separately from Winters/Rosen, he choreographed and performed with his troupe on the television special Monte Carlo: C'est La Rose, hosted by Princess Grace Kelly.[51]
In 1969, Winters directed and choreographed Ann-Margret: From Hollywood With Love (for which Winters received an Emmy nomination for dance choreography).[52] Also that year, he produced and choreographed The Spring Thing.[53]
On April 26, 1970 CBS released Raquel Welch's first television special Raquel!, Winters produced, directed and choreographed.[54] On the day of the premiere, the show received a 51% share on the National ARB Ratings and an overnight New York Nielsen Rating of 58% share.[55]
In 1971, he produced and directed Once Upon a Wheel, a documentary on auto racing.[56] It is hosted and narrated by actor Paul Newman.[57] Winters said that at the time Newman had publicly stated he didn't want to do television and turned it down for this reason until he pitched his vision to him.[58] The project marked Newman's return to television after a decade long absence,[59] and his first time as the lead of a program.[60] During post-production, Winters said that Newman, who liked what he saw, gave him the idea to add some footage to sell it as a theatrical film worldwide.[61] Upon its release, the documentary generally received good reviews for its directing, pace, photography, music, and human interest stories.[62][63][64][65][66][67][68][69][70][71]
That same year, he was an executive producer for The 5th Dimension's television special The 5th Dimension Traveling Sunshine Show.[72][73]
In 1973, he directed, choreographed and produced the television movie Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, starring Kirk Douglas.[76] At the Emmy Awards it was nominated for outstanding achievement in makeup, costume design, and music direction.[77]
In 1979 Winters directed the tennis sport comedy Racquet, starring Bert Convy.[82] That same year, he choreographed Mark L. Lester's Roller Boogie.[83] Also in 1979, Diana Ross In Concert premiered on television, Winters conceived and directed the stage production.[84]
In 1980. Winters directed and choreographed the stage show Goosebumps.[85]
In 1981, he choreographed and was creative consultant for the Diana Ross television special Diana.[86]
In 1982, he produced, directed, wrote, and co-starred in the horror comedy The Last Horror Film, starring Joe Spinell and Caroline Munro.[87][88] It played in film festivals.[89] At the Sitges Film Festival it was part of their official selection, and won best cinematography.[90] At the Saturn Awards the film was nominated for Best International film and Mary Spinell was nominated for best supporting actress.[91]
In 1986, Winters directed the sports filmThrashin', starring Josh Brolin, and Pamela Gidley. Set in Los Angeles, it's about Cory (Brolin), a teenage competitive skateboarder, and his romance with Chrissy (Gidley).[96] With a notable soundtrack, the film maintains a following.[citation needed] Prior to the casting of Brolin, Winters wanted Johnny Depp to play Cory.[97][98] That same year, directed the action film Mission Kill, with Robert Ginty.[99]
In 1988, he directed the action film Rage to Kill starring James Ryan.[103] That year also saw the release of the space operascience fiction filmSpace Mutiny.[104] While being the credited director, Winters disowned the film. According to him, upon the first shooting day, he was informed that his father had passed. Being emotionally troubled and with a funeral to attend, Winters was unable to perform his duties and passed it on to his assistant director Neal Sundstorm. However, he was informed that the investors had agreed to the film only with Winters as its director, and could face litigation if he withdrew, hence the credit.[105] The film has the reputation of being an amusing ,unintentionally funny, and campy B-movie.[106][107][108] That year, Winters produced Dead End City,[109]Death Chase,[110]Night Wars,[111] and Phoenix The Warrior.[112]
In 1989, the action film Code Name Vengeance was released, with Winters directing and producing.[113] Robert Ginty played the lead.[114] Winters would go on to produce The Bounty Hunter (1989),[115]Order of Eagle (1989),[116]Future Force (1989),[117]Time Burst - The Final Alliance (1989),[118]Deadly Reactor (1989),[119]Hell on the Battleground (1989),[120]Jungle Assault (1989),[121]The Revenger (1990),[122]Fatal Skies (1990),[123]Future Zone (1990),[124]Deadly Dancer (1990),[125]Operation Warzone (1990),[126]Rapid Fire (1990),[127] The Shooters (1990),[128] The Final Sanction (1990),[129] Lock 'n' Load (1990),[130] Born Killer (1990),[131]Invasion Force (1990),[132]Firehead (1991),[133]Dark Rider (1991),[134]Raw Nerve (1991),[135]Maximum Breakout (1991),[136]Cop-Out (1991),[137]Presumed Guilty (1991),[138]The Last Ride (1991),[139]White Fury (1991),[140]Center of the Web (1992),[141]Armed for Action (1992),[142]Blood on the Badge (1992),[143] and Double Threat (1993).[144]
In 1993, AIP was re-branded as West Side Studios with the intent to take a mainstream direction. Under that banner, he produced Night Trap (1993),[145][146]Raw Justice (1994),[147]The Dangerous (1995),[148] and Codename: Silencer (1995).[149]
Winters lived with Linda Lovelace as her boyfriend following her divorce from her first husband. Their relationship lasted until 1976. She credited him for bringing culture in her life.[162]
Winters was married at least three times. He had a brother, a daughter, two sons, a stepson, and a granddaughter.[163]
^Winters, David (1982). That Was Rock (VHS). Musik Media. M 434.
^The Steadfast Tin Soldier (VHS). Video Treasures. 1988. ISBN1-55529-315-8. 013132907802.
^"AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved April 29, 2019.
^Winters, David (1985). Girls of Rock & Roll (VHS). Playboy. 0-1313-29370-3-8.
^"AFI|Catalog". catalog.afi.com. Retrieved April 20, 2019.
^Winters, David (1986). "Audio Commentary Track", Thrashin, DVD, MGM Home Video
^Tyner, Adam (August 5, 1993). "Thrashin'". Retrieved September 29, 2008. ... something [which the cast] found so astonishing that they apparently called Depp's girlfriend in the middle of the commentary to find out if it's actually true.