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R.I.P. Gregory Hines



 
 
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Old August 10th 03, 07:56 PM
JHNJB
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Default R.I.P. Gregory Hines

Dancer-Actor Gregory Hines Dies at 57

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Gregory Hines, the Tony Award-winning tap-dancing actor
who starred on Broadway as well as in many films, including "The Cotton Club,"
has died at the age of 57, his publicist said on Sunday.

Hines, considered one of the top dancers of his generation, died Saturday night
in Los Angeles of cancer, said Allen Eichhorn, a spokesman for Hines.

The native New Yorker, who won a 1992 Tony for the musical "Jelly's Last Jam,"
first found fame performing jazz tap with his brother Maurice, working together
in the musical revue "Eubie!" in 1978 and in "Sophisticated Ladies."

Born on Feb. 14, 1946, in New York City, Hines had said his mother steered her
sons toward tap dancing as a way to escape the ghetto.

By the time he was five, Hine was already performing, and the two brothers
danced at the famed Apollo theater for two weeks when he was just six. In his
teens, the brothers also performed with their father, Maurice Sr., who played
drums.

Later he earned Tony nominations on Broadway in "Eubie!," "Comin' Uptown" and
"Sophisticated Ladies."

Hines had a falling out with his older brother in the late 1960s when he wanted
to perform to rock music and write his own songs. In 1973, the family act
disbanded and Hines moved to Venice Beach, California.

But they reconciled a few years later and began performing in various Broadway
shows together.

Hines landed his first film role in the 1981 Mel Brooks comedy "History of the
World Part I," in which he played a Roman slave as a last-minute replacement
for Richard Pryor.

Landing a leading role in Francis Ford Coppola's hit "The Cotton Club" in the
mid-1980s cleared the way for more film work, including "White Nights," in
which he starred with Mikhail Baryshnikov and with Billy Crystal in 1986's
"Running Scared."

Hines also appeared with Whitney Houston and Angela Bassett in 1995's "Waiting
to Exhale," among other movies.

Hines nabbed several Emmy Award nominations, most recently in 2001 for his lead
role in the mini-series "Bojangles."

His PBS special "Gregory Hines: Tap Dance in America" was nominated in 1989.

On television, he had his own sitcom in 1997 called "The Gregory Hines Show,"
and a recurring role on "Will and Grace."

This spring, he appeared in the spring television series "Lost at Home."

Hines is survived by his fiance, Negrita Jayde, his daughter, Daria, his son,
Zach, his stepdaughter, Jessica Koslow and his grandson, Lucian, Eichhorn said.
Hines had been married twice. He is also survived by his older brother Maurice
and father Maurice Sr., who he had performed with. A private funeral will be
held in Los Angeles this week.



08/10/03 14:22 ET
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