Broadway Star Rebecca Luker Dies At Age 59
- Oops!Something went wrong.Please try again later.
Three-time Tony nominee Rebecca Luker died Wednesday after decades of starring in some of Broadway’s best-known musicals, her agent told The New York Times. She was 59.
Luker tweeted in February that she had amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, also known as A.L.S. and Lou Gehrig’s disease, vowing “to fight and go forward.” Luker’s husband, fellow stage actor Danny Burstein, revealed in the summer that both he and Luker contracted COVID-19, leaving him hospitalized for several days and then ultimately left to care for Luker alone.
Luker “embodied the essence of the Broadway musical ingénue,” The Times wrote.
“Rebecca Luker was one of the most beautiful voices on Broadway and a lovely person,” actor Bernadette Peters wrote on Twitter.
Rebecca Luker was one of the most beautiful voices on Broadway and a lovely person ,,We are all devastated for Danny and for ourselves,,we will never get to witness her talents on stage again 💔💔💔💔RIP Dear Dear Girl🕊 pic.twitter.com/6qSKhEZZ2c
— Bernadette Peters (@OfficialBPeters) December 23, 2020
The Alabama native made her Broadway debut as Christine in “The Phantom of the Opera” serving first as an understudy for Sarah Brightman before eventually assuming the lead. Luker left the show in 1991.
In 1995, she received her first Tony nod as Magnolia Hawks in a revival of “Show Boat” and followed that with a 2000 nomination for playing Marian Paroo in a revival of “The Music Man” and one in 2007 as Winifred Banks in the original cast of the “Mary Poppins” musical.
Luker also appeared on TV’s “Law & Order: Special Victims Unit,” “The Good Wife” and “Boardwalk Empire,” according to IMDb.
“The Sound of Music” star’s last stage appearance was 2019 playing the preacher’s wife in “Footloose” at the Kennedy Center, Vulture noted.
Tributes poured in.
Love HuffPost? Become a founding member of HuffPost Plus today.
I hope her entrance in the next chapter was as glorious as this 💔 #RebeccaLuker pic.twitter.com/7dyQjtmZdW
— Schyler Conaway (@schylerconaway) December 23, 2020
RIP to Broadway legend, and the most angelic of sopranos #RebeccaLuker 💕 pic.twitter.com/FexgGhg8FA
— Make the yuletide GAY 🏳️🌈 (@ZacaryWITHnoH) December 23, 2020
I’ll never forget the impact #rebeccaluker had on me as a baby actor. We lost a true icon pic.twitter.com/OUcEjO50J1
— jake (@jak3ofalltrade) December 23, 2020
Rebecca Luker was one of the most beautiful voices on Broadway and a lovely person ,,We are all devastated for Danny and for ourselves,,we will never get to witness her talents on stage again 💔💔💔💔RIP Dear Dear Girl🕊 pic.twitter.com/6qSKhEZZ2c
— Bernadette Peters (@OfficialBPeters) December 23, 2020
This was a gut punch.
Her album Anything Goes was how I discovered that wonderful voice.
It appears that the year of the endless suck hasn't finished with us yet.
RIP.— Steve. (@steverino1234) December 24, 2020
She had a stunning voice.
— Julianne Ravely (@jravely) December 24, 2020
This article originally appeared on HuffPost and has been updated.