The Broadway at Birdland concert series was proud to host the return of pianist/singer
Steve Ross in "An Evening With
Steve Ross" on Monday, May 25 at 7pm. In this special evening, Ross performed pieces from shows he's sung over his long career. There were songs of and stories about many of the songwriters he's saluted:
Rodgers & Hart ("With a Song In My Heart"),
Irving Berlin ("Let Yourself Go"),
Jacques Brel ("Fanette"), Lerner & Loewe ("If Ever I Would Leave You"),
Stephen Sondheim ("Too Many Mornings"), Kander & Ebb ("Life of the Party") and
Fred Astaire ("Cheek to Cheek"). He was accompanied by bassist Jesse Bielenberg. Scroll down for photos from
the concert!
Steve Ross was raised in Washington, DC, and heard a lot of music at home, some from his mother who played piano. In due course, he studied piano himself and by the time he had attended Georgetown University, spent a little time in a seminary, and served in the US Army, he had become an accomplished pianist, drawing his repertoire not from contemporary pop but from the Great American Songbook. In the early 70s he settled in New York City where he soon became well known on the city''s cabaret scene. At first a background pianist, he was urged by club owners to sing and gradually began to do this, eventually training as a singer. As his personal style developed, so his reputation spread. Ted Hook, owner of Backstage, a piano bar in the midtown theatre district, hired him. The association was hugely successful and in 1979 Hook opened a new club, Onstage, especially to showcase Ross'' talents. In 1981, Ross was booked into the Oak Room at the Algonquin Hotel where he played a considerable part in establishing the room as a perennial favorite of artists and customers. At some venues he would find himself accompanying leading entertainers who happened to be in the audience, among them
Liza Minnelli and
Ginger Rogers. Ross toured Australia in 1986, one of his shows there being recorded at Don Burrows' Supper Club, and he returned to that country in the late 90s. He has played many festivals, including Perth in Australia, Spoleto in Italy, and Hong Kong. Other international venues include seasons at London''s Ritz Hotel and Pizza On The Park. In 1989, he hosted a live cabaret series for BBC Television, and back in America was host of New York Cabaret Nights, a series for National Public Radio.
Ross maintained his popularity and high standards through the 90s and into the early 00s. In the winter of 1996/7, he appeared in a revival of
Noël Coward's Present Laughter at the
Walter Kerr Theatre; the show, which starred
Frank Langella, ran for 175 performances. At New York's Stanhope Park Hyatt Hotel in the winter of 2003/4 he presented a new cabaret show, My Manhattan, an elegant portrait of a hundred years of the city''s life seen through song. Ross'' repertoire draws from the work of songwriters past and present, such as
George Gershwin,
Cole Porter, with whose work he has a special affinity,
Richard Rodgers and
Lorenz Hart, and
Stephen Sondheim. He has appeared with stride pianist Judy Carmichael, performing a show entitled Style Meets Stride that featured the music of Porter and Fats Waller. Ross sings in a light baritone voice, playing the piano with verve. For several years, he has been referred to as "The Crown Prince of New York Cabaret," an unofficial but merited title.
The Broadway at Birdland concert series runs every Monday at the historic music room, located at 315 West 44 Street, in the heart of the Theater District.