The canonical story is that Dean Jones was going through his own difficult divorce in the run-up to the show opening on Broadway, and his performance as Bobby was suffering as a result. Jones went to Hal Prince to ask be let out of his commitment. Prince is said to have told Jones that if he gave him the opening night performance he knew he was capable of, Prince would replace him soon thereafter. It appears both men seemed to have kept their word.
I was sort of depressed for a good portion of the afternoon yesterday once I heard about his passing. I remember him fondly in Disney movies like, The Love Bug, That Darn Cat, and The Ugly Dachshund (which just so happens to be one of my favorites)
I thought he left because he was uncomfortable with the homosexual overtones of the character and he had some sort of breakdown. Maybe I have gotten so old that I am thinking of someone else.
A adored him as a kid too. He was right up their with Robert Conrad, Bill Bixby and John Davidson.
SmoothLover said: "I thought he left because he was uncomfortable with the homosexual overtones of the character and he had some sort of breakdown. Maybe I have gotten so old that I am thinking of someone else.
I am not sure that this is it. Company, like any great work of art, has the ability to derive intense conversation around it. I have felt that, among fans, there were always so many theories as to why Bobby was alone. I don't think that the show had homosexual overtones, but that that was one theory that came into play. Another one was indecisiveness on the part of Bobby wanting to be with someone.
A adored him as a kid too. He was right up their with Robert Conrad, Bill Bixby and John Davidson.
Also I believe it was not only his divorce, but he had two kids in Calif and he didn't want to be in NY at the time when they needed him. So yes, he was promised if he opened the show and did the cast album, then he could go. I think he was very grateful for the early release.. so of course gave it his all when he was here. I also remember reading he fought depression for much of his early life so this was probably a good choice for all.
It was the soulless, godless, decadence of the business. I put those quotes of his in here because I wanted to mock them (because, you know, he wasn't what you'd call a supporter of any progressive agenda). Then I binge watched "Mr Robot" and thought, "This is what Dean Jones meant."
People including one of the producers read Bobby as a veiled gay character, though Sondheim claims he has no idea what they are talking about.
Apparently Dean Jones was going through a divorce at the time of the original show and was a mess, I think his "replacement" is the only time someone who didn't open the show got an exemption to be eligible to be nominated for the Tony.
"when I’m on stage I see the abyss and have to overcome it by telling myself it’s only a play." - Helen Mirren
Dean Jones was a troubled guy and I couldn't care one bit about his politics. He left behind some amazing performances and made many people happy during his time on earth.
I read in one of his obituaries that he became a Christian some where along the way and that Company was hard for him to do because he felt it had such a bleak outlook on marriage. And of course I am paraphrasing.
I believe the story is that he did not anticipate the rigors of being the lead in a musical 8 shows a week. That, coupled with a very difficult divorce, prompted him to leave the show.
If he was putting as much into each performance as he did in the recording of Being Alive, I can certainly understand the strain.
He had a hard time of it, and later found solace in being a Christian. Not the route most of us have taken, but that was his business. As far as I know he never made any anti-gay or bigoted statements.