News38 Vintage Shots Reveal Unseen Moments With Celebrities Backstage on Broadway!There's more to Broadway than what you see in production photos and opening night coverage! Former Broadway press representative David LeShay, currently the director of marketing and public relations at Theatre Development Fund, shares exclusive, never-before-seen photos with 半岛体育.com. Experience what life is like behind the curtain.
By
Matthew Blank, David LeShay
April 22, 2015
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I feel fortunate to be having a really fun career in the New York theatre world. After over thirty years, I like to say that I鈥檓 a small fish in a small pond and that suits me fine. For the past 22 years I have been the Marketing and Public Relations Director at Theatre Development Fund (TDF) 鈥� a position I鈥檝e cherished because I get to be part of a great organization with effective programs that help people gain access to the theatre and support all of New York theatre from Broadway to Off to Off-Off.
Yul Brynner celebrates Halloween with a few of the kids from King and I in 1978!
The first job I had out of college was as a press assistant in the theatre department of the entertainment PR firm, Solters/Roskin/Friedman, Inc. as apprentice to press agent Josh Ellis (who has currently written a show about his experiences titled, 鈥淐all My Publicist鈥� 鈥� there鈥檚 a plug for him). Since apprentice pay is very low and New York City was always expensive, I supplemented my income by working as a photographer for our backstage events. In those days if celebrities came backstage to shows you were working on you鈥檇 hire a photographer to chronicle the event and service the photos to the newspapers and news services. They'd hire me cause I was always a good photographer. (It was my minor in college.) I would do it all 鈥� take the photos, stay up late developing them at home in the tiny bedroom of my 4th floor walk-up apartment and then bring them to the papers. (In those days I actually could stay up past 11 PM and function the next day.)
Lucille Ball pays a visit to Lena Horne: The Lady and Her Music
What you see here are some select photos of celebrities who visited backstage at some of the shows the office represented. I later worked for as a full ATPAM press agent when he was solely a press agent, prior to his current prolific producing career of the past 20 years. Some of the photos are from that time period.
I hope you enjoy them. There are many more in my looseleaf folders of negatives that I鈥檝e just pulled out and started to scan (ergo what you鈥檙e seeing today). People are encouraging me to do a book. I don鈥檛 know about that, but I did come up with a title. It came to me when I saw the photo with Princess backstage at the play The Dresser. I had no memory of meeting Grace Kelly and thought to myself鈥︹漺ell at least I was in the room.鈥� So there鈥檚 the title..with a hashtag, of course: #atleastiwasintheroom
See the full collection here!
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Check Out Rarely-Seen Personal Shots of Backstage Life On Broadway! Barbra Streisand, Diana Ross, Robin Williams, Lucille Ball, Ethel Merman and More!
Check Out Rarely-Seen Personal Shots of Backstage Life On Broadway! Barbra Streisand, Diana Ross, Robin Williams, Lucille Ball, Ethel Merman and More!
There's more to Broadway than what you see in production photos and opening night coverage! Former Broadway press representative David LeShay, currently the director of marketing and public relations at Theatre Development Fund, shares exclusive, never-before-seen photos with 半岛体育.com. Experience what life is like behind the curtain.
38 PHOTOS
Carol Channing, Philip Anglim, Carole Shelley, Burt Reynolds and Kevin Conway at The Elephant Man
David LeShay
Robin Williams with Carole Shelley and Philip Anglim at The Elephant Man
David LeShay
Kevin Conway and Stockard Channing at opening night of The Elephant Man
David LeShay
Lauren Bacall with Lee Roy Reams and Tammy Grimes at 42nd Street
David LeShay
Jerry Orbach, Barry Manilow and Tammy Grimes backstage at 42nd Street, Feb 1981
The piece stars Obie Award winner Jodie Markell as propagandist filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl, whose work in service of the Nazis defined the visual identity of Adolf Hitler's Third Reich.