In this episode, I interview Kevin Winkler, the author of On Bette Midler: An Opinionated Guide. Kevin chronicles her career from the New York City Continental Baths through her recording, stage and movie careers.
He is also the author of Big Deal: Bob Fosse and Dance in the American Musical and Everything Is Choreography: The Musical Theater of Tommy Tune.
» You can also listen to my last interview with Kevin from November 2022 where we talk about his book Everything is Choreography: The Musical Theater of Tommy Tune.
FROM AMAZON.COM
Bette Midler today is a beloved legacy star, best known for her comic witch in Disney’s Hocus Pocus (1993) and its 2022 sequel. She has also gained prominence for sentimental, anthemic ballads like “Wind Beneath My Wings,” her initiation of green space projects in New York City, and tussling with Donald Trump on Twitter. Her profile is that of an articulate, civic-minded matriarch enjoying thoroughly mainstream stardom. But more than fifty years earlier she emerged from the steam of the subterranean Continental Baths as the Divine Miss M, the bawdy, campy, fearless alter ego she created in front of an audience of towel-clad gay men who came to the baths seeking not just sex, but a sense of community and safety from an often-harrowing outside world. “I was able to take chances on that stage that I could not have taken anywhere else,” she later wrote. “Ironically, I was freed from fear by people who, at the time, were ruled by fear. And for that I will always be grateful.” Overnight, Bette Midler became a much-loved icon of the gay community.
The Divine Miss M coalesced gay, Jewish, feminist, and show business sensibilities into an outrageously funny and emotionally compelling persona that travelled with surprising ease from the cultural margins to the entertainment mainstream. Her embrace by mom-and-pop audiences, rock fans and critics, and the guardians of middle-of-the-road show business demonstrates just how deeply the tastes and sensibilities of her original audience have been absorbed into popular culture. On Bette Midler: An Opinionated Guide traces the early development of Midler’s performing ethos from New York’s downtown experimental theater scene and examines her impact across media, with chapters on the soaring highs (and occasional cringe-worthy lows) of her stage work, movies, recordings, and television appearances, and considers her influence as an environmental activist and social media presence.
On Bette Midler features performance analysis and deeply researched background information, all of it supporting informed–and divinely opinionated–consideration of Midler the artist. It judges her work by the highest standards: those she established for herself.
Kevin Winkler enjoyed a career of more than twenty years as a curator, archivist, and library administrator at the New York Public Library, prior to which he was a professional dancer. His book, Big Deal: Bob Fosse and Dance in the American Musical, won the TLA 2018 George Freedley Memorial Award Special Jury Prize for an exemplary work in the field of theatre or performance, and was a finalist for the Marfield Prize, the National Award for Arts Writing. Kevin has served as a consultant for Lincoln Center Education, curating resources to accompany PBS Lincoln Center Live performances available throughout New York City public libraries. He has blogged for the Huffington Post and is a MacDowell Colony fellow. Kevin is an on-camera commentator in the new documentary Merely Marvelous: The Dancing Genius of Gwen Verdon. His new book is Everything is Choreography: The Musical Theater of Tommy Tune, published by Oxford University Press.