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Tucker Smith

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Occupation
  
Actor, dancer, singer

Name
  
Tucker Smith

Role
  
Actor


Tucker Smith Tucker Smith painter of western nature landscapes and

Full Name
  
Thomas William Smith

Born
  
April 24, 1936 (
1936-04-24
)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Died
  
December 22, 1988, Los Angeles, California, United States

Movies
  
West Side Story, To Be or Not to Be

Similar People
  
Russ Tamblyn, Tony Mordente, George Chakiris, Richard Beymer, Eliot Feld

"How to Succedd in Business ..." - A Secretary Is Not a Toy 1967


Tucker Smith, born Thomas William Smith (April 24, 1936, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – December 22, 1988, Los Angeles, California), was an American actor/dancer/singer best known for his role as Ice in the movie musical West Side Story.

Contents

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Tucker Smith was an American Theatre Wing scholarship winner and he first moved to New York City from his native Philadelphia in September 1955. Shortly afterward, he joined the national tour of Damn Yankees. In 1958 he joined the cast of the original Broadway production of West Side Story, as a replacement for the role of Big Deal, then going on to play the roles of Diesel and Snowboy. He understudied for the character of Riff and had played that role many times. The musical went on a national tour in the United States from June 14, 1959‚ to April 23, 1960‚ and Smith went along with it.

Tucker Smith Tucker Smith Contemporary Art from Greenwich Workshop

Smith was one of the several cast members from the Broadway production that were chosen to appear in the movie version of West Side Story. He was contracted to play Ice, a role newly created for the movie. In the film, Smith was the singer and central performer of the pivotal song “Cool‚” originally sung by the character of Riff in the Broadway musical. Besides performing “Cool‚” Smith would also dub some of Russ Tamblyn’s singing in “Jet Song.”

Tucker Smith Tucker Smith Wikipedia

After the film, Smith continued his association with West Side Story. He played Riff in both the 1962 Los Angeles and 1963 Sacramento productions of the musical, the latter with Sylvia Lewis in the role of Anita. He reprised the role again in 1964, when West Side Story went on tour in Tokyo, Japan. Right before West Side Story's tour in Japan, Smith had performed at the 1964 New York World's Fair at the DuPont Pavilion in the musical The Wonderful World of Chemistry. That same year, Smith was in the cast for the Broadway musical Anyone Can Whistle. After a pre-Broadway run in Philadelphia, the show closed after a week and only nine performances.

Despite his impressive screen debut on West Side Story, Smith would subsequently appear on films and television usually in small roles and walk-on parts; sometimes as a dancer (To Be or Not to Be, How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, Hello, Dolly!, Hearts of the West, At Long Last Love), and often uncredited (Police Squad!). Some of his more notable television appearances include the series Surfside Six‚ and 87th Precinct.

Smith went on to perform at other venues, including Las Vegas shows, nightclubs, cabarets, and stage productions both in the United States and abroad. His stage work includes Parade with Carole Cook and Michele Lee, Vintage '60, also with Michele Lee and Sylvia Lewis, the San Francisco production of Half a Sixpence" with Anne Rogers and Roger C. Carmel, and the 1973 musical version of Gone With the Wind, which was choreographed by Joe Layton. Smith had toured with Carol Channing in her 1970 revue "Carol Channing with Her 10 Stout-Hearted Men‚" which was also choreographed by Joe Layton. Finally, Smith had also toured internationally with his own nightclub act.

Tucker Smith Pictures of Tucker Smith Pictures Of Celebrities

David Ehrenstein, author of the book Open Secret: Gay Hollywood, 1928–2000, said that Smith was openly gay and, as a result, did not pursue a Hollywood career.

In the 1970s Smith owned and operated a bar named “Tucker’s Turf” in North Hollywood.

Tucker Smith died of cancer on December 22, 1988‚ at the age of 52 at the UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles, California. His cancer has been attributed by various sources as to be throat, neck and/or jaw cancer, and was diagnosed in late 1986. At the time of his death, Smith was survived by three sisters. Some newspapers erroneously printed that he was survived by three daughters. After his death, Smith was laid to rest in his hometown of Philadelphia.

In her autobiography It's Always Something, written shortly before her own death from cancer, comedian Gilda Radner expressed her excitement at having Tucker Smith being in her cancer support group as she was a fan of his from his performance in West Side Story.

Filmography

Actor
1985
The A-Team (TV Series) as
Mayor
- The Heart of Rock N' Roll (1985) - Mayor (uncredited)
1984
The Paper Chase (TV Series)
- The Source (1985)
- Laura's Struggle (1985)
- The Advocates (1984)
1983
To Be or Not to Be as
Klotski's Klown
1979
Buck Rogers in the 25th Century as
Ballroom Dancer (uncredited)
1979
Dallas (TV Series) as
Restaurant Patron
- The Outsiders (1979) - Restaurant Patron (uncredited)
1979
Battlestar Galactica (TV Series) as
Council Member
- Greetings from Earth (1979) - Council Member (uncredited)
1977
Charlie's Angels (TV Series) as
Restaurant Patron / Casino Patron
- Angels in the Stretch (1978) - Restaurant Patron (uncredited)
- The Vegas Connection (1977) - Casino Patron (uncredited)
1978
Barnaby Jones (TV Series) as
Cast Member
- Stages of Fear (1978) - Cast Member (uncredited)
1977
The Love Boat (TV Series) as
Passenger
- Memories of You/Computerman/Parlez Vous? (1978) - Passenger (uncredited)
- Captain & the Lady/Centerfold/One if by Land- (1977) - Passenger (uncredited)
1978
Starsky and Hutch (TV Series) as
Gambler
- The Action (1978) - Gambler (uncredited)
1976
Gus as
Football Player (uncredited)
1976
The Big Bus as
Commuter At Terminal (uncredited)
1975
Hearts of the West as
Noodle in Pith Helmet
1975
At Long Last Love as
The Primitive Man Dancer
1972
The Poseidon Adventure as
Passenger (uncredited)
1969
Hello, Dolly! as
Dancer (uncredited)
1969
They Shoot Horses, Don't They? as
Marathon Dancer (uncredited)
1967
The Producers as
Lead Dancer
1967
How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying as
Passerby / Dancing Executive (uncredited)
1962
87th Precinct (TV Series) as
Ralph Dale
- Feel of the Trigger (1962) - Ralph Dale
1962
Surfside 6 (TV Series) as
Turk Williams
- The Quarterback (1962) - Turk Williams
1961
West Side Story as
Ice
Miscellaneous
1985
The Paper Chase (TV Series) (stand-in - 1 episode)
- The Day Kingsfield Missed Class (1985) - (stand-in: John Houseman - uncredited)
1980
The Incredible Hulk (TV Series) (stand-in - 4 episodes)
- Danny (1981) - (stand-in - uncredited)
- Half Nelson (1981) - (stand-in - uncredited)
- Bring Me the Head of the Hulk (1981) - (stand-in - uncredited)
- The Psychic (1980) - (stand-in - uncredited)
Soundtrack
2002
The West Wing (TV Series) (performer - 1 episode)
- H. Con-172 (2002) - (performer: "Cool" - uncredited)
1961
West Side Story (performer: "Jet Song" (1957), "Quintet" (1957), "Cool" (1957) - uncredited)
Self
1985
That's Dancing! (Documentary) as
'West Side Story' dancer
Archive Footage
2019
Blood & Flesh: The Reel Life & Ghastly Death of Al Adamson (Documentary)

References

Tucker Smith Wikipedia


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