Carol Channing
Carol Channing (born on
January 31,
1921 in
Seattle, Washington) is an
American actress whose career was built largely on two roles, Lorelei Lee in
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes and Dolly Gallagher Levi in
Hello Dolly!. She is easily recognized by her distinctive voice and wide eyes.
Channing was born, an only child on
January 31,
1921 in
Seattle, Washington. Her father's newspaper career took the family to
San Francisco when Channing was only two weeks old. She went to school at Aptos Junior High School, where she met an
Armenian-American man named Harry Kullijian with whom she fell in love. They lost touch when she went to
Lowell High School in
San Francisco. When she left home to attend
Bennington College in
Vermont, her mother informed her that her father, a journalist who she had believed was born in
Rhode Island, was actually a light-skinned man of half
German American and half
African American descent, born in
Augusta, Georgia, who had passed for white, saying that the only reason she was telling her was so she wouldn't be surprised "if she had a black baby". She kept her heritage secret so she would not be typecast on
Broadway and in
Hollywood, ultimately revealing it only in her autobiography,
Just Lucky I Guess, which was published in
2002, when she was more than 80 years old.
Channing was introduced to the stage while doing church work for her mother. In a 2005 interview with the Austin Chronicle, Channing recounted this experience:
"My mother said, 'Carol, would you like to help me distribute
Christian Science Monitors backstage at the live theatres in
San Francisco?' And I said, 'All right, I'll help you.' I don't know how old I was. I must have been little. We went through the stage door alley [for the Curran Theatre], and I couldn't get the stage door open. My mother came and opened it very easily. Anyway, my mother went to put the Monitors where they were supposed to go for the actors and the crew and the musicians, and she left me alone. And I stood there and realized â€" I'll never forget it because it came over me so strongly â€" that this is a temple. This is a cathedral. It's a mosque. It's a mother church. This is for people who have gotten a glimpse of creation and all they do is recreate it. I stood there and wanted to kiss the floorboards."
Channing was also introduced to the stage as a debater and monologue performer in high school as a member of the
Lowell Forensic Society, the nation's longing running high school debate program.
Channing's first Broadway play was
Let's Face It, where she was an understudy for
Eve Arden. She had a featured role in a review,
Lend an Ear, where she was spotted by
Anita Loos and cast in the role of Lorelei Lee, which was to bring her to prominence. (Her signature song from the production was "Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend.") Channing's persona and that of the character were strikingly alike: simultaneously smart yet scattered, naïve but worldly.
Channing came to national prominence as the star of
Jerry Herman's
Hello, Dolly! She never missed a performance during her run, attributing her good health to her
Christian Science faith. Her performance won her the
Tony Award for Best Actress in a Musical, in a year when her chief competition was
Barbra Streisand for
Funny Girl. She was deeply disappointed when Streisand, who many believed to be far too young for the role, successfully campaigned to play the role of Dolly Levi in the film, which also starred
Walter Matthau and
Michael Crawford. (Channing was probably comforted to know that few who had seen her on stage were impressed by Streisand's interpretation of the role, a combination of Jewish yenta and
Mae West.)
She reprised the role of Lorelei Lee in the musical
Lorelei, and appeared in two New York revivals of
Hello, Dolly!, in addition to touring with it extensively throughout the
United States.
In 1966 she won the
Sarah Siddons Award for her work in
Chicago theatre. She was nominated for the
Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance in
Thoroughly Modern Millie, opposite
Julie Andrews and
Mary Tyler Moore.
She married four times. Her first husband, Theodore Naidish, was a writer; her second, Alexander Carson, was center for the
Ottawa Rough Riders Canadian football team (they had one son, Channing Lowe, who is a cartoonist and who took his step-father's surname). In
1956 she married her manager and publicist Charles Lowe. They remained married for 42 years, but she abruptly filed for divorce in
1998, alleging that she and Lowe had not had marital relations in many years and only twice in that timespan; she also alleged that Lowe was gay, a fact she evidently did not realize when they wed, but he denied her allegations. He died before the divorce was finalized.
On
May 10,
2003, she married Harry Kullijian, her fourth husband and her old junior high school sweetheart, who reunited with her after she mentioned him fondly in her memoir.The two performed at their old junior high school, which had become
Aptos Middle School, in a benefit for the school. At
Lowell High School, they renamed the school's auditorium "The Carol Channing Theatre" in honor of her. On
February 25,
2002, the City of
San Francisco, California proclaimed it was
Carol Channing Day, possibly for her advocacy of gay rights and her appearance one year as the celebrity host of the Gay Pride Day festivities in Hollywood.
Her autobiography entitled "Just Lucky I Guess" was released on
October 8,
2002. In her memoirs, Channing reveals her "long kept secret" that she has
African American ancestry, through her father, George Channing, who she claims was a light-skinned African-American who kept his racial identity a secret, understandably considering the treatment of that community in those days, even in a state like Washington. In a 2002 interview with
CNN's
Larry King, when asked about her parents faith, she said that they were Christian Scientists and that she, herself, "believed in it." although she did not always practice it.
Channing has a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame at 6233
Hollywood Boulevard.
The
New York Times reported on
June 27, 1973 that Channing had been included on
Nixon's Enemies List.
Her voice and mannerisms have been parodied a number of times on the improv comedy show
Whose Line Is It Anyway?, especially by
Ryan Stiles, and on
Family Guy, where she is portrayed boxing
Mike Tyson and eventually defeating him.
Channing was parodied by the cast of the Off-Broadway cast
Forbidden Broadway on repeated occasions, and appeared on the cast's third album,
Forbidden Broadway, Vol. 3, asking the cast for instructions on how to properly do a Channing impression.
Let's Face It! (
1941)
Proof Through the Night (
1942)
Lend an Ear (
1948)
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes (
1949)
Wonderful Town (
1953) (replaced
Rosalind Russell for a few months)
The Vamp (
1955)
Show Girl (
1961)
Hello, Dolly! (
1964)
Four on a Garden (
1971)
Lorelei (a reworking of
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes) (
1974)
Jule's Friends at the Palace (benefit) (
1974)
Hello, Dolly! (revival) (
1978)
Hello, Dolly! (revival) (
1995)
Singular Sensations with Carol ChanningPaid in Full (
1950)
The First Traveling Saleslady (
1956)
All About People (
1967) (short subject) (narrator)
Thoroughly Modern Millie (
1967)
Skidoo (
1968)
Shinbone Alley (
1971) (voice)
Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band (
1978) (cameo)
Alice in Wonderland (
1985)
Happily Ever After (
1993) (voice)
Thumbelina (
1994) (voice)
Edie & Pen (
1997)
Homo Heights (
1998) (cameo)
Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There (
2003) (documentary)
The Wizard Of Oz (2005)
*
Carol Channing's Official Web site*
A list of some of Carol's father's lectures - See Channing