David Cassidy
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David Bruce Cassidy<ref name=TCM /> (April 12, 1950 – November 21, 2017) was an American actor and musician. He was best known for his role as Keith Partridge, the son of Shirley Partridge (played by his real-life stepmother, actress Shirley Jones), in the 1970s musical-sitcom The Partridge Family. This role catapulted Cassidy to teen idol status as a superstar pop singer of the 1970s.
Raised primarily by his maternal grandparents Frederick and Ethel Ward in West Orange, New Jersey, Cassidy was later informed of his parents Jack Cassidy and Evelyn Ward's divorce, which had happened two years prior without his knowledge. After completing high school, Cassidy pursued acting and music, moving into his father and stepmother's home in Irvington, New York. His career took off after signing with Universal Studios in 1969, leading to roles in several TV series. His major breakthrough came in 1970 as Keith Partridge on The Partridge Family, which propelled him to teen idol status. Despite the show's success, Cassidy sought to break free from his idol image, leading to a diverse solo music career with hits in the UK and Australia, and a tumultuous life marked by public and personal challenges.
Cassidy's personal life was complex, with multiple marriages, children from relationships, and struggles with alcohol. He became an advocate for Alzheimer's disease research, inspired by his family's history with the condition. Despite facing health and legal issues later in life, Cassidy continued performing until announcing his retirement in 2017, before his death later that year.
Early life
[edit]David Cassidy was born at Flower Fifth Avenue Hospital in New York City, the son of singer and actor Jack Cassidy and actress Evelyn Ward.<ref name=TCM>Template:Cite web</ref><ref name="biography.com">Template:Cite web</ref> His father was of half Irish and half German ancestry, and his mother was descended mostly from Colonial Americans, along with having some Irish and Swiss roots.<ref name="hdugdp">Template:Cite news</ref> His mother's ancestors were among the founders of Newark, New Jersey.<ref name=hdugdp/>
As his parents were frequently touring on the road, he spent his early years being raised by his maternal grandparents Frederick and Ethel Ward in a middle-class neighborhood in West Orange, New Jersey.<ref name="Get Happy">Template:Cite book</ref> In 1958, he found out from neighbors' children that his parents had been divorced for more than two years and had not told him.<ref>C'mon, Get Happy, p. 4</ref>
In 1956, Cassidy's father married singer and actress Shirley Jones. They had three children, David's half-brothers Shaun (b. 1958), Patrick (b. 1962), and Ryan (b. 1966). In 1968, after completing one final session of summer school to obtain credits necessary to get a high school diploma, David moved into the rental home of Jack Cassidy and Shirley Jones in Irvington, New York, where his half-brothers also lived.<ref>C'mon, Get Happy, p. 35</ref> Cassidy remained there, seeking fame as an actor/musician, while simultaneously working half-days in the mailroom of a textile firm.<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> He moved out when his career began to flourish.
Cassidy's father, Jack, is credited with setting his son up with his first manager. After David Cassidy signed with Universal Studios in 1969, Jack introduced him to former table tennis champion and close friend Ruth Aarons, who later found her niche as a talent manager, given her theater background.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Aarons had represented Jack and Shirley Jones for several years and later represented Cassidy's half-brother Shaun. Aarons became an authority figure and close friend to Cassidy and was the driving force behind his on-screen success. After Cassidy made small wages from Screen Gems for his work on The Partridge Family during season one, Aarons discovered that he had been underage when he signed his contract; she then renegotiated the contract with far superior provisions and a rare four-year term.<ref name="Cassidy 2007">Template:Cite book</ref>
Career
[edit]1960s
[edit]On January 2, 1969, Cassidy made his professional debut in the Broadway musical The Fig Leaves Are Falling. It closed after four performances,<ref name=happy43>C'mon, Get Happy, p. 43</ref> but a casting director saw the show and asked Cassidy to make a screen test. In 1969, he moved to Los Angeles.<ref name="happy43" /> After signing with Universal Studios in 1969, Cassidy was featured in episodes of the television series Ironside, Marcus Welby, M.D., Adam-12, Medical Center, and Bonanza.<ref name="TVGuide">Template:Cite magazine</ref>
1970s
[edit]In 1970, Cassidy took the role of Keith Partridge on the musical television show The Partridge Family produced by Screen Gems. After demonstrating his singing talent, Cassidy was allowed to join the studio ensemble as the lead singer. (He and his stepmother Shirley Jones who portrayed his on-screen mother Shirley Partridge were the only TV cast members to appear on any Partridge Family recordings.)<ref name="Cmon">Template:Cite book</ref>
The show proved popular, but the fame took its toll on Cassidy. In the midst of his rise to fame, Cassidy felt stifled by the show and trapped by the mass hysteria surrounding his every move.<ref name="Cmon" />Template:Rp In May 1972, to alter his public image, he appeared nude on the cover of Rolling Stone in a cropped Annie Leibovitz photo;<ref name="Cmon" />Template:Rp among other things, the accompanying Rolling Stone article mentioned that Cassidy was riding around New York in the back of a car "stoned and drunk."<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Once "I Think I Love You"—the first single released by The Partridge Family pop group—became a hit, Cassidy began work on solo albums, including Cherish and Rock Me Baby, both released in 1972. Within the first year, he had produced his own single, a cover of The Association's "Cherish" (from the album of the same title); the song reached number nine on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States, number two in the United Kingdom (a double A-side with "Could It Be Forever"), and number one in Australia and New Zealand. He began tours that featured The Partridge Family tunes and his own hits.
Cassidy achieved far greater solo chart success in the UK than in his native America, including a cover of The Young Rascals' "How Can I Be Sure" and the double A-side single "Daydreamer" / "The Puppy Song" – a UK number one which failed to chart in the States. In Britain, Cassidy the solo star remains best known for "Daydreamer", "How Can I Be Sure" and "Could It Be Forever" (UK number 2/US number 37), all released during his 1972–73 solo chart peak.
After launching his solo musical career, he was for a short time the highest paid entertainer in the world. At the peak of his career, Cassidy's fan club was larger than that of any other musical group or pop star, including The Beatles or Elvis Presley.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> A fictionalized version of him starred in the fan magazine David Cassidy. Many of its issues were signed by Turkish comics creator Su Gumen.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In a 1993 interview, Cassidy said that he was frustrated by his portrayal in the magazines, which sanitized his image. His fan club nicknamed a star after him in the International Star Registry in 1983.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In his autobiography, Cassidy said that he felt overwhelmed by his fanbase, and said that "it became impossible for me to go in a store or even walk down the street without being stopped by people."<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Though he wanted to become a respected rock musician along the lines of Mick Jagger, his channel to stardom launched him into the ranks of teen idol, a brand he loathed until much later in life, when he managed to come to terms with his pop idol beginnings. Ten albums by The Partridge Family and five solo albums by Cassidy were produced during the series, with most selling more than a million copies each.
Internationally, Cassidy's solo career eclipsed the already phenomenal success of The Partridge Family. He became an instant drawing card, with sellout concert successes in major arenas around the world. These concerts produced mass hysteria, resulting in the media coining the term "Cassidymania". For example, he played to two sellout crowds of 56,000 each at the Houston Astrodome in Texas over one weekend in 1972.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref> His concert in New York's Madison Square Garden sold out in one day and resulted in riots after the show.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> His concert tours of the United Kingdom included sellout concerts at Wembley Arena in 1973.<ref name="Cassidy 2007"/> In Australia in 1974, the mass hysteria was such that calls were made to have him deported from the country, especially after the madness at his 33,000-person audience concert at Melbourne Cricket Ground.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref><ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref>
A turning point in Cassidy's live concerts (while still filming The Partridge Family) was a gate stampede at the penultimate show on a world tour, in London's White City Stadium on May 26, 1974, when nearly 800 people were injured in a crush at the front of the stage. Thirty were taken to the hospital, and a 14-year-old girl, Bernadette Whelan, died four days later at London's Hammersmith Hospital without regaining consciousness.<ref>C'mon, Get Happy, pp. 188–190</ref>
A deeply affected Cassidy faced the press, trying to make sense of what had happened. Out of respect for the family and to avoid turning Whelan's funeral into a media circus, Cassidy did not attend the service, although he spoke to Whelan's parents and sent flowers. Cassidy stated at the time that this would haunt him until the day he died.<ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref><ref>Template:Cite webTemplate:Dead link</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Template:Quote box By this point, Cassidy had decided to quit both touring and acting in The Partridge Family, concentrating instead on recording and songwriting. International success continued, mostly in Great Britain, Germany, Japan and South Africa, when he released three well-received solo albums and several hit singles on RCA in 1975 and 1976. Cassidy became the first recording artist to have a hit with "I Write the Songs", peaking at No. 11 in the Top 30 in Great Britain before the song became Barry Manilow's signature tune. Cassidy co-produced the recording with the song's author-composer, Bruce Johnston of The Beach Boys. The two artists collaborated on two of Cassidy's mid-70s RCA Records albums The Higher They Climb and Home Is Where the Heart Is.
In 1978, Cassidy starred in an episode of Police Story titled "A Chance to Live", for which he was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series at the 30th Primetime Emmy Awards.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> NBC created a series based on it, called David Cassidy: Man Undercover, but it was cancelled after one season. A decade later, the successful Fox series 21 Jump Street used the same plot, with different youthful-looking police officers infiltrating a high school.Template:Citation needed
1980s
[edit]Cassidy later stated he was broke by the 1980s, despite being successful and highly paid.<ref>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Cbignore</ref> In 1985, music success continued with the Arista release of the single "The Last Kiss" (number six in the United Kingdom), with backing vocals by George Michael, which was included on the album Romance. These went gold in Europe and Australia, and Cassidy supported them with a sellout tour of the United Kingdom, which resulted in the Greatest Hits Live compilation of 1986. Michael cited Cassidy as a major career influence and interviewed Cassidy for David Litchfield's Ritz Newspaper.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Cassidy performed in musical theater. In 1981, he toured in a revival of a pre-Broadway production of Little Johnny Jones, a show originally produced in 1904 with music, lyrics, and book by George M. Cohan. (The show is excerpted in the 1942 biographic film Yankee Doodle Dandy, when James Cagney as Cohan sings "Give My Regards to Broadway" and "The Yankee Doodle Boy".) However, Cassidy received negative reviews, and he was replaced by another former teen idol, Donny Osmond,<ref>C'mon, Get Happy, p. 221</ref> before the show reached Broadway.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Cassidy, in turn, was himself a replacement for Doug Voet as the lead character Joseph in the original 1982 Broadway production of Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Cassidy also appeared in London's West End production of Time and returned to Broadway in Blood Brothers alongside Petula Clark and his half-brother Shaun Cassidy.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Later career
[edit]Cassidy returned to the American top 40 with his 1990 single "Lyin' to Myself", released on Enigma Records, from his 1990 album David Cassidy, followed by the 1992 album Didn't You Used to Be... on Scotti Brothers Records.Template:Citation needed In 1998, he had an adult contemporary music hit with "No Bridge I Wouldn't Cross" from his album Old Trick New Dog on his own Slamajamma Records label.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Along with Cassidy's single "Lyin' to Myself", 1990 was also the year he starred as the lead of the motion picture comedy, The Spirit of '76, where he played Adam-11, a man from the future who arrived in the US in the year 1976 on a mission to find the US Constitution.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> It was also the year he appeared as a main character in the romantic drama Instant Karma.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
From November 1996 to December 1998, Cassidy starred in the Las Vegas show EFX at the MGM Grand Las Vegas.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 2000, Cassidy wrote and appeared in the Las Vegas show At the Copa with Sheena Easton, as both the young and old versions of the lead character, Johnny Flamingo.Template:Citation needed His 2001 album Then and Now went platinum internationally and returned Cassidy to the top five of the UK album charts for the first time since 1974.Template:Citation needed
In 2005, Cassidy played Grant, the manager of Aaron Carter's character J.D. McQueen in the film Popstar.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> He co-starred alongside his half-brother Patrick in a short-lived 2009 ABC Family comedy series titled Ruby & the Rockits, a show created by their brother Shaun.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Cassidy was one of the contestants on the fourth season of The Celebrity Apprentice in 2011.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
As the days of "Cassidymania" subsided, Cassidy regularly addressed fans at his concerts in question-and-answer sessions. In August 2016, Cassidy performed in The Villages, Florida, and brought multiple attendees to the side of the stage, asking and answering questions and engaging with members of the community who had been fans for nearly half a century.<ref name="Villages-News.com">Template:Cite web</ref>
Personal life
[edit]Cassidy's first wife was actress Kay Lenz, whom he married on April 3, 1977,<ref>Nevada, Marriage Index 1956–2005</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and divorced on December 28, 1983.<ref>California, Divorce Index 1966–1984</ref><ref name="people.com">Template:Cite magazine</ref><ref name=biography.com />
Cassidy married his second wife, horse breeder Meryl Tanz, in 1984.<ref name="filmref">Template:Cite web</ref> They met in 1974 at a horse sale in Lexington, Kentucky.<ref name="people.com"/> This marriage ended in divorce in 1988.
Cassidy's daughter, actress Katie Cassidy, was born in 1986 from an extramarital affair with fashion model Sherry Williams.<ref name="tvguide">Template:Cite magazine</ref> After Cassidy and Williams ended their relationship, Katie was raised by her mother and her stepfather, Richard Benedon. Cassidy spoke of his absence from Katie's life: in February 2017, he said, "I've never had a relationship with her. I wasn't her father. I was her biological father but I didn't raise her. She has a completely different life. I'm proud of her. She's very talented. It's hard for me to even accept how old she is now."<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref>
Cassidy married songwriter Sue Shifrin on March 30, 1991. It was Cassidy's third marriage and Shifrin's second marriage. They had one child, Beau,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> in 1991.<ref name="sentinel">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="TMZ">Template:Cite news</ref> In August 2013, Cassidy's Los Angeles publicist confirmed that the couple had separated, with Shifrin filing for divorce in February 2014.<ref name=sentinel/><ref name=TMZ/>
Cassidy moved to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in 2002.<ref name="southfloridasun-sentinel">Template:Cite web</ref> He filed for bankruptcy in 2015.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Activism
[edit]In 2011, Cassidy recorded a public service announcement for Alzheimer's disease research and prevention – because his mother, Evelyn Ward, suffered with the condition<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> – and said that he would campaign for that cause whenever possible.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He planned to address Congress in 2012.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Cassidy was a long-time registered Democrat. During a 2012 guest appearance on The Colbert Report he expressed his views on the leading Republican candidates for president, Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich. Cassidy stated, "I believe both of them are the most embarrassing, sad, pathetic ... I mean, really, this is the best we can do?"<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Alcohol-related driving incidents and criminal charges
[edit]Cassidy was arrested for driving under the influence (DUI) in Florida on November 3, 2010.<ref>Martinez, Edecio. (November 4, 2010) David Cassidy Arrested: "Partridge Family" Star Accused of Drunk Driving in Fla. – Crimesider Template:Webarchive. CBS News. Retrieved on March 27, 2011.</ref>
Cassidy was arrested for DUI in Schodack, New York, in the early hours of August 21, 2013.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He was pulled over after failing to dim his headlights as he passed a police car going in the opposite direction. After performing poorly on a field sobriety test, Cassidy was subjected to an alcohol breath test, returning a blood alcohol level of 0.10%, which was above the New York legal limit of 0.08%.<ref name="Times Union Article"/> The arresting officer, one Tom Jones, reported that Cassidy was polite and courteous; in reference to a 1965 hit song by singer Tom Jones, Cassidy jokingly asked the officer, "What's New, Pussycat?"<ref name="Times Union Article"/> Cassidy was charged, taken to jail, and released several hours later on $2,500 bail. On May 12, 2015, Cassidy was sentenced to community service, a fine, and a six-month license suspension.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Cassidy was arrested on suspicion of DUI in California on January 10, 2014, after he made an illegal right turn against a red light. He was held overnight in jail,<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> ordered to undergo inpatient rehabilitation, and placed on probation for five years.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
On September 9, 2015, Cassidy was cited in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on charges of leaving the scene of a car accident, improper lane change, expired plates and driving on a suspended license.<ref name="southfloridasun-sentinel"/><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Illness and death
[edit]In 2008, Cassidy publicly admitted he had an alcohol problem.<ref name="Times Union Article">Template:Cite web</ref>
On February 20, 2017, following a performance in Agoura Hills, California, in which Cassidy had difficulty remembering the lyrics of songs he had been performing for nearly 50 years, and appeared to fall off the stage, he announced that he was living with dementia and was retiring from all further performing.<ref name=NBCdementia>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> He said that his mother and grandfather had also suffered from dementia at the end of their lives, and that "I was in denial, but a part of me always knew this was coming."<ref name=NBCdementia/>
Later in 2017, Cassidy fell ill at a recording studio and was hospitalized. In a later phone conversation with an A&E producer, he stated that he had just met with his doctor, that he had liver disease, and that his life had "changed dramatically." Cassidy added that he had been unconscious and near death for the first few days after the incident, but that his memory had returned.<ref name=PeopleNever/> Cassidy also acknowledged that there was "no sign of [dementia] at this stage of [his] life," adding that "[it] was complete alcohol poisoning—and the fact is, I lied about my drinking."<ref name=PeopleNever/> Cassidy said, "You know, I did it to myself, man. I did it to myself to cover up the sadness and the emptiness."<ref name=PeopleNever>Template:Cite news</ref> Cassidy had told his family and others that he had given up drinking.<ref name=PeopleNever/>
On November 18, 2017, Cassidy was hospitalized with liver and kidney failure, and was critically ill in a medically induced coma.<ref name="Ill">Template:Cite news</ref> He came out of the coma two days later, remaining in critical but stable condition.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Doctors hoped to keep Cassidy stable until a liver became available for transplant, but he died of liver failure on November 21, 2017, at the age of 67.<ref name=nytobit>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> According to his daughter, Katie Cassidy, his final words were "So much wasted time."<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Memoirs
[edit]In 1994, Cassidy, in collaboration with Chip Deffaa, wrote his autobiography C'mon, Get Happy ... Fear and Loathing on the Partridge Family Bus.<ref name="Get Happy" /> In December 2019, C'mon, Get Happy was published as an E-book (by Open Road Media, Template:ISBN) with a new afterword by Chip Deffaa, covering the rest of Cassidy's life.
Cassidy also wrote a memoir, Could It Be Forever? My Story, published in the United Kingdom in March 2007, which gives further details about his personal life.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Discography
[edit]Filmography
[edit]Year | Title | Role | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
1969 | The Survivors | Mike | Episode: "Chapter Seven" | <ref name="filmreference">Template:Cite web</ref> |
Ironside | Danny Goodson | Episode: "Stolen on Demand" | <ref name="AllMovieFilm">Template:Cite web</ref> | |
1970 | Adam-12 | Tim Richmond | Episode: "Log 24 A Rare Occasion" | <ref name="AllMovieFilm" /> |
Bonanza | Billy Burgess | Episode: "The Law and Billy Burgess" | <ref name="AllMovieFilm" /> | |
Marcus Welby, M.D. | Michael Ambrose | Episode: "Fun and Games and Michael Ambrose" | <ref name="filmreference" /> | |
Medical Center | Rick Lambert | Episode: "His Brother's Keeper" | <ref name="filmreference" /> | |
The Mod Squad | Brad Johnson | Episode: "The Loser" | <ref name="filmreference" /> | |
The F.B.I. | Larry Wentworth | Episode: "Fatal Impostor" | <ref name="AllMovieFilm" /> | |
1970–74 | The Partridge Family | Keith Partridge | 96 episodes | <ref name="AllMovieFilm" /> |
1978 | Police Story | Officer Dan Shay | Episode: "A Chance to Live" | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
1978–79 | David Cassidy: Man Undercover | Officer Dan Shay | 10 episodes; also composer of theme music | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
1980 | The Love Boat | Ted Harmes | 1 episode | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
The Night the City Screamed | David Greeley | TV movie | <ref name="AllMovieFilm" /> | |
1980/83 | Fantasy Island | Jeremy Todd / Danny Collier | 2 episodes | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
1982 | Matt Houston | John Gordon Boyd | Episode: "Joey's Here" | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
1983 | Parade of Stars | George M. Cohan | TV movie | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
Tales of the Unexpected | Donald / David | Episode: "Heir Presumptuous" | <ref name="filmreference" /> | |
1988 | Alfred Hitchcock Presents | Joey Mitchell | Episode: "Career Move" | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
1990 | Instant Karma | Reno | <ref name="AllMovieFilm" /> | |
The Spirit of '76 | Adam-11 | <ref name="AllMovieFilm" /> | ||
1991 | Blossom | Himself | Episode: "A Rockumentary" | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
The Flash | Sam Scudder/Mirror Master | Episode: "Done with Mirrors" | <ref name="filmreference" /> | |
1992 | The Ben Stiller Show | David Cassidy | Episode: "With Flea" | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
1993 | Ein Schloß am Wörthersee | Patrick Riley | Episode: "Falsches Spiel mit Patrick" | <ref name="IMDB">Template:Cite web</ref> |
1995 | The John Larroquette Show | Jefferson Kelly | Episode: "Wrestling Matches"; also composer of theme music | <ref name="filmreference" /> |
2003 | Malcolm in the Middle | Boone Vincent | Episode: "Vegas" | <ref name="RottenTomatoes" /> |
The Agency | Everett Price | Episode: "War, Inc." | <ref name="TVGuide" /> | |
I Love the '70s | Himself | |||
2004 | Kim Possible | Roland Pond (voice) | Episode: "Oh Boyz" | <ref name="TVGuide" /> |
2005 | Less than Perfect | Vince | Episode: "Playhouse" | <ref name="TVGuide" /> |
Popstar | Grant | <ref name="RottenTomatoes" /> | ||
2009 | Ruby & The Rockits | David Gallagher | 10 episodes | <ref name="RottenTomatoes" /> |
2011 | Celebrity Apprentice | Himself/contestant | 2 episodes | <ref name="RottenTomatoes">Template:Cite web</ref> |
2013 | CSI: Crime Scene Investigation | Peter Coe | Episode: "Last Woman Standing" | <ref name="AllMovieFilm" /> |
2018 | David Cassidy: The Last Session | Himself | TV special; posthumous release |
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- David Cassidy's official web site
- Template:AllMusic
- Template:IMDb name
- Template:Tcmdb name
- Template:IBDB name
- The David Cassidy Collection is held by the Victoria and Albert Museum Theatre and Performance Department.
Template:David Cassidy Template:The Partridge Family Template:Authority control
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