Florence Henderson’s recent appearance at Feinstein’s at Loews Regency was all to the good and all too brief. The actress-singer called her show All the Lives of Me…A Musical Journey, and it was outstanding in more than one way.
There was, first, the heartening fact that age could not stale talent and appeal such as hers. Henderson’s accomplished renderings were as youthfully vibrant yet subtly shaded as they were in the various musicals she starred in on Broadway and elsewhere. She sang only one of the hit songs from her stage roles, the idea being rather to convey in song her roles in life. This took her from the poverty-stricken Midwestern farm where it began to becoming an idol of stage and TV.
Her rise began at 19, when Rodgers and Hammerstein saw her in a bit part in Wish You Were Here and asked her to take on the role of Laurey in the last touring company of Oklahoma! “Sure,” she said, “but what is it?” It progressed to her being the first female guest host on The Tonight Show and induction in the Smithsonian Institute as part of the first permanent Entertainment History Exhibit. A steady, sedulous rise; if just a little short of meteoric, no less than stellar.
The autobiographical show included such faded favorites of her parents’ as “You Are My Sunshine” and “My Old Kentucky Home,” delivered with unprecedented, revivifying delicacy. What show tunes she performed, such as “Oh, What a Beautiful Morning” and Kander and Ebb’s “Me and My Baby,” were there to illustrate her feelings at becoming famous or a mother, or, as in the case of The Brady Bunch, participating in unparalleled backstage camaraderie.
She talked frankly about her two marriages and more recent widowed state, about her four childbirths that always came at a time most in conflict with her work, but resulted in wonderful offspring. You could almost see waves of joyous energy radiating from her.
Two of her wittiest songs—“Have I Been Lifted?” and “Eight Shows a Week”—were by her musical director, Glen Roven, who, besides steadfast piano accompaniments, also gave her a spirited introduction. No less fine was the work of Julie Ferrara on reeds, Laura Bontrager on cello, and Cynthia Leigh Heim in vocal support.
If you had the misfortune of missing Florence Henderson this time round, be confident that such an indestructible and indispensable artist will show up again somewhere on your horizon. When she does, avoid committing the same mistake twice.