THEATRE PREVIEW
DENNIS KELLY in “DAMN
YANKEES”
Published in KPBS On Air
Magazine November 1996
Dennis Kelly was born to be Joe Boyd. Both the real and the fictional characters grew up loving loser
baseball teams. Boyd, the middle-aged
fan of the fictional Washington Senators, sells his soul to the Devil to become
the world's greatest ballplayer and defeat those “Damn Yankees”.
Kelly, a Cubs fan who still lives in Chicago, says "I could
really identify, at the sports level -- loving a team in the gutter -- and at
the desire level -- wanting your team to win and wanting to be young
again." He stops for a hearty
laugh. "I think that's why I got
the job."
Not only did he get the job, but he kept it. He played Joe Boyd in Jack O'Brien's
acclaimed 1994 Old Globe revival of the 1955 Adler-Ross-Abbott musical
smash-hit, “Damn Yankees”. Then, he
went to Broadway with the show, and stayed on through the national tour, which,
after 46 weeks and 38 cities, makes its first hometown return (November 5-10 at
the Civic Theatre).
It's a homecoming for Kelly, too.
He played his first Little League game in San Diego. He saw his first movie here (a John Wayne
double bill at the Rio Theatre in North Park).
He attended Garfield Elementary School, and lived here for about four
years in the early 1950s.
"I have very fond memories of San Diego," Kelly says
wistfully. When he spent four months
here with the premiere of “Damn Yankees”, he re-visited the cliffs of Point
Loma, and the schoolyard at Garfield, where the grass was replaced by blacktop
but the same old merry-go-round was still there.
Both his parents were ordained ministers; Kelly, Sr., had his
first church on El Cajon Boulevard.
"He had a gorgeous voice," recalls Kelly, who dedicates all
his performances on tour to his late father.
"My parents used to do a Sunday night radio program for the
church."
Immediately after high school, Dennis went into show
business. "There's very little
difference between the two," he says, comparing his parents' work with
his. "It's amazing how many PK's
-- Preacher's Kids -- there are in this business."
After 33 years in the business, he made his Broadway debut in
“Damn Yankees” -- at age 52. That's a
lot younger than Jerry Lewis, the current star of the show, who had to wait
till he was 70 to make it to the Great White Way. "It was a dream for him," says Kelly of Lewis. "His father, a vaudevillian, had always
told him, 'You ain't done it all till you've done Broadway.' He was like a kid in a toy shop."
According to Kelly, he still is.
Even after a year, Lewis "keeps it fun. When the curtain comes down every night -- and we get a standing
ovation every single performance -- everyone feels so good. We all hug each other and go home
happy. You don't see that that
often. There are often glum faces,
people shuffle off, thinking, 'Oh boy, I gotta do this again tomorrow.' That's one of the reasons I stayed so long
[with this show]. It's fun and it's
funny."
It was funny before, too, when it first opened in San Diego, with
the Devil played by Victor Garber (who recently returned to the Old Globe to
play Macbeth). Funny, but different.
"Victor is a consummate actor. His energy was very high, but his focus, rhythm and pace were
different. Victor's pace was much
faster, and his focus was on acting.
Jerry's like a genius with rhythm.
He won't allow the same pace or rhythm [for any stretch of time]. He starts off slow, so everyone gets all the
information about the deal and the escape clause and everything, and in the
second act he really cuts loose. When
he sings "Those Were the Good Old Days," he does a little step-out in
the middle. And that's perfect; the
Devil would like to be a vaudeville performer... Things were probably a bit more serious with Victor. They're probably more fun now.
"The difference between Victor and Jerry is one's a comedian,
who says funny things, and the others a comic, who thinks and acts funny. Jerry is a very physical comic. Sometimes it's hard to do a scene with
him. I'll start laughing. If I let him see me enjoy it, he'll start to
laugh.... How lucky I am, being paid well for doing something I adore
doing. It puts breath in my
lungs."
The show's dramatic premise has become a reality for Kelly. "Going to Broadway gave me a chance to
realize a dream I'd given up on. It's
given me a younger feeling. Sometimes I
forget I'm not 25... When I was in New
York, I wanted to play in the Theatre [softball] League. But I was so out of shape, I was afraid of
pulling a muscle and having to stay out of the show."
Now he plans to spend another year with the tour (there's talk of
Europe and/or Australia), and then try to get back to Broadway. But he'd definitely stay on if the proposed
HBO movie of the show comes to fruition. "[Actor] George Hearn told me the
only way to make money in this business is to stay with a show as long as you
can. I think it was good advice."
©1996 Patté Productions Inc.