Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Posted: 2024-09-30T20:13:40Z | Updated: 2024-09-30T20:13:40Z Gavin Creel, Star Of Broadway's 'Hello, Dolly!' And 'Book Of Mormon,' Dead At 48 | HuffPost

Gavin Creel, Star Of Broadway's 'Hello, Dolly!' And 'Book Of Mormon,' Dead At 48

News of Creels passing drew an outpouring of condolences from the New York theater community, including tributes from Ben Platt, Bette Midler and more.
Open Image Modal
Broadway actor Gavin Creel died Monday in New York. He was 48.
Variety via Getty Images

Gavin Creel , a Tony-winning Broadway actor who starred in Thoroughly Modern Millie, Hello, Dolly! and Into The Woods, among other hit musicals, died Monday at the age of 48. 

Creels death was first confirmed to The New York Times by his partner, Alex Temple Ward, via theater publicist Matt Polk. The cause was metastatic melanotic peripheral nerve sheath sarcoma, a rare form of cancer, which the actor had been diagnosed with in July. 

News of Creels passing drew an outpouring of condolences from fellow stage and screen actors, including several of his former co-stars. 

Gavin was my first role model, idol and hero, Ben Platt wrote on his Instagram stories. He showed me around backstage after I saw my first Broadway show. I couldnt believe someone that supernaturally talented could also be every single persons favorite human being. I wanted to sing just like him and be just like him. 

Bette Midler shared similar sentiments on X, formerly Twitter.

He played Cornelius Hackl to my Dolly in Hello Dolly and I looked forward to working with him every single night. He was fantastic, she wrote . I cant believe hes gone. What a loss. 

Open Image Modal
In 2017, Creel won a Tony Award for his portrayal of Cornelius Hackl in the revival of "Hello, Dolly!" starring Bette Midler.
CBS Photo Archive via Getty Images

A native of Findlay, Ohio, Creel graduated from the University of Michigans School of Music, Theater & Dance in 1998. Four years later, he made his Broadway debut opposite Sutton Foster in Thoroughly Modern Millie, earning him the first of three Tony nominations. He went on to showcase his talents in musicals like Hair, She Loves Me and Waitress. 

He received an Olivier Award the British equivalent of a Tony Award in 2014 for his portrayal of Elder Price in the London production of The Book of Mormon, a role he later reprised on Broadway. In 2017, he won a Tony for his sterling performance in Hello, Dolly! starring Midler. 

Though Creel was primarily known as a stage actor, he appeared on television several times, mostly notably in the family films Eloise at the Plaza and its holiday-themed sequel, Eloise at Christmastime. In 2021, he had a supporting role in Hulus American Horror Story spinoff series, American Horror Stories

Behind the scenes, Creel was known as a staunch LGBTQ+ rights advocate. In 2009, he co-founded Broadway Impact , an advocacy group aimed at promoting same-sex marriage, with producer Jenny Kanelos and fellow actor Rory OMalley. That same year, he persuaded the producers of Hair to cancel a performance so that he and his cast mates could participate in a LGBTQ+ rights march in Washington, D.C. 

Creels final Broadway role came in 2022 when he portrayed Cinderellas Prince and the Wolf in the Tony-nominated revival of Into the Woods. His last appearance on the New York stage was in Walk on Through: Confessions of a Museum Novice , a semi-autobiographical musical he wrote that had been commissioned by New Yorks Metropolitan Museum of Art. 

Open Image Modal
Creel made his final Broadway appearance in the 2022 revival of "Into the Woods."
Bruce Glikas via Getty Images

The show, which enjoyed a successful off-Broadway run last December at MCC Theater, found Creel using some of the Mets best-known works as conduits for deeper revelations about his relationships, Christianity and sexuality.

Speaking to HuffPost last year shortly after Walk on Through opened, Creel said he envisioned bringing the show to Broadway and, later, adapting it as both a documentary film and a podcast. 

I was raised Midwestern, and we dont talk about our feelings, politics, sex or religion, he said. Im talking about all of those things in a play. Im trying to energetically embody myself, and thats hard because all that Ive done is tried to make characters that Im not as real as possible. 

My parents saw the show for the first time, and my dad, quite beautifully, said to my director: I wish Id known the pain he was in when he was younger. I didnt know he needed that help, he continued . And I thought, How wonderful is it that I can share a little window into my experience. Ill get up there and tell you the truth and try to open myself up to you, so that you feel empowered to open up to someone else.

Support Free Journalism

Consider supporting HuffPost starting at $2 to help us provide free, quality journalism that puts people first.

Support HuffPost