Broadway dance legend Bob Avian, co-choreographer of ‘A Chorus Line,’ dead at 83

Bob Avian, the Tony-winning dance legend who co-choreographed “A Chorus Line” and was a lead producer on “Dreamgirls,” is dead at 83.

Avian died Thursday at Holy Cross Hospital in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla. after suffering cardiac arrest, spokesman Matt Polk said.

His death was not related to the COVID-19 crisis.

Choreographer Baayork Lee and director Bob Avian pose for a photograph in front of the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre,  home of their production of the revival of " A Chorus Line, on Sept. 29, 2006.
Choreographer Baayork Lee and director Bob Avian pose for a photograph in front of the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre, home of their production of the revival of " A Chorus Line, on Sept. 29, 2006.


Choreographer Baayork Lee and director Bob Avian pose for a photograph in front of the Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre, home of their production of the revival of " A Chorus Line, on Sept. 29, 2006. (Shiho Fukada/)

Born in New York City, Avian made his Broadway debut in the original stage production of “West Side Story” and later got a job in “Funny Girl,” where he danced each night with Barbra Streisand.

He met “A Chorus Line” co-choreographer Michael Bennett when they both performed on the international tour of “West Side Story,” and the two formed a decades-long partnership, collaborating on hits including “Promises, Promises,” “Coco,” “Follies” and “Dreamgirls.”

Avian won his two Tony Awards for his work with Bennett on “A Chorus Line” and “Ballroom.”

After Bennett’s death in 1987, Avian went on to choreograph the London and Broadway premieres of “Miss Saigon” and the original West End and Broadway productions of Andrew Lloyd Webber’s “Sunset Boulevard,” for which he received his sixth Tony nomination.

His musical staging for “Martin Guerre” in London landed him a prestigious Oliver Award for best choreography.

His other credits include choreography for the 1993 off-Broadway production of Stephen Sondheim’s “Putting It Together,” starring Julie Andrews, which later moved to Broadway starring Carol Burnett.

Avian is survived by his husband Peter Pileski, sister Laura Nabedian and five nieces and nephews, Polk said.

Advertisement