- Bob Fosse - Wikipedia
Fosse started his career acting in the musical productions of Call Me Mister (1947), Billion Dollar Baby (1951), and Pal Joey (1952)
- Bob Fosse | Biography, Style, Musicals, Movies, Awards . . .
Bob Fosse, American dancer, choreographer, and director who revolutionized musicals with his distinct style of dance—including his frequent use of props, signature moves, and provocative steps—and was well known for eschewing light comedic story lines for darker and more-introspective plots
- Who Was Bob Fosse? - Denver Center for the Performing Arts
Fosse died in 1987 of a heart attack in Gwen Verdon’s arms His legacy continues to live on in the revivals of his musicals, works inspired by his distinctive choreography, and a Tony Award-winning musical designed to showcase him, simply called Fosse
- Bob Fosse - IMDb
In 1973, he received an Academy Award for directing Cabaret (1972), a Tony Award for directing "Pippin", and an Emmy Award for directing Liza with a Z (1972) He's the only director to win all three major industry prizes in a single year I thank God that I wasn't born perfect
- Bob Fosse - Choreographer, Age, Married, Children, and Divorce
Discover Bob Fosse's career as a choreographer and director, his age, marriages, children, and lasting impact on musicals
- FOSSE Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of FOSSE is ditch, moat
- Bob Fosse - Death, Dance Style Gwen Verdon - Biography
Fosse wrote three additional stage musicals before his death He survived a heart attack, suffered during rehearsals for Chicago, to write and choreograph the autobiographical film All That Jazz
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