Cris Alexander
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Cris Alexander | |
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Born | Alan Smith 1920 (age 87–88) Tulsa, Oklahoma U.S. |
Occupation | Film, stage actor, photographer |
Cris Alexander (born Alan Smith, c. 1920) is an American actor, singer, dancer, designer, and photographer.
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[edit] Acting career
As an actor he co-starred as Chip in the original Broadway cast of On the Town. Subsequent Broadway appearances included Present Laughter opposite Clifton Webb, Wonderful Town, and Auntie Mame. Mr. Alexander also appeared in the film version of Auntie Mame as the department store supervisor of actress Rosalind Russell.
[edit] Photography career
Prior to retiring, Alexander was a successful photographer, noted for his celebrity portraits. For many years he was the official photographer for the New York City Ballet.
Alexander contributed hundreds of original and altered photographs to two of Patrick Dennis's best selling books. Little Me, a mock biography documenting the life of the world's worst actress Belle Poitrine, features more than 150 of Alexander's photographs. Alexander also wrote the novel's preface. Dennis' First Lady: My Thirty Days at the White House told of Martha Dinwiddie Butterfield (Peggy Cass), wife of a robber baron who literally stole the presidency at the turn of the century. Using friends and professional models and actors, Alexander's zany photographs were essential to the novels' success.
He is a long time resident of Saratoga Springs, New York, and he is also the life-partner of former New York City Ballet dancer Shaun O'Brien. In the 1940s, Alexander was romantically involved with the dancer and choreographer John Butler.
[edit] Film roles
- The Littlest Angel (1969) - Raphael
- Auntie Mame (1958) - Mr. Loomis
- Wonderful Town (1958) TV - Frank Lippencott