View Full Version : David Cassidy embraces his place in pop culture as a Partridge


Brian Damage
03-01-2010, 02:13 AM
He's starred on Broadway and London's West End – with Laurence Olivier, no less. He co-starred, with both his brothers, on Ruby & the Rockits , the most expensive television show ever produced by ABC Family. He received an Emmy nomination for "A Chance to Live," the highest-rated episode of Police Story that ever aired. He revamped and starred in the Las Vegas extravaganza EFX.

But with all that, David Cassidy understands – and appreciates – that when people hear his name, the first thing that still comes to mind is The Partridge Family, a television show that appeared in 1970, ran for four seasons and garnered not one Emmy nomination. It was seen as fluff, but its fans were, and remain, fervently loyal.

"It'll never bother me that I'm best-known for that," Cassidy says with a laugh during a phone interview from Los Angeles. "When you know you've had such an impact on people as we did with that show, it's just great. When people meet me, they always have this 'Wow!' look on their faces. They light up. It's a great gift to me, how people remember that show, and I'm really proud of the way my career has evolved since then."

With that in mind, expect Cassidy, 59, to sing a lot of songs from the Partridge Family catalog at his concert Saturday at Nokia Theatre. He's on a solo tour, but Dallas-area audiences will get a special treat: Davy Jones, who starred in the late 1960s show The Monkees, will open for Cassidy, and Cassidy hints that they may do a song or two together at the end of the night.

Cassidy loves the spirit of Dallas, he says. "There's something about Texas and Dallas in particular that's so special. Houston – well, it's more corporate or something. With Dallas audiences, it's like, 'Let's go have fun! Let's celebrate!' " It's been about 15 years since he last played here, he says.

On The Partridge Family, Cassidy portrayed the eldest son of a musical family headed by Shirley Jones, his real-life stepmother. Cassidy and Jones were the only members of the TV cast who actually sang on the Partridge Family records. They had several chart-topping singles, including 1971's No. 1 single, "I Think I Love You." Cassidy's solo career included the hits "Cherish," "Rock Me Baby" and the 2004 platinum album Then and Now.

Having come from a family of actors – his father, the late Jack Cassidy, was a debonair leading man – Cassidy says he always considered himself an actor first, then a musician. He moved to New York after high school, worked in a mailroom and got his first professional job in a Broadway show, 1969's The Fig Leaves Are Falling. When he got the Partridge Family gig, though, he suddenly had a recording career that he'd never expected, but which has endured for nearly four decades.

His last major project was Ruby & the Rockits for ABC Family, which he calls the best experience he's had as an actor. In April, he'll start filming a movie that he says he "can't really talk about, except to say that it's a little like Mamma Mia! but more edgy and more rock-y, about a period of serious rock 'n' roll.

"We've got the choreographer from Mamma Mia!, it's got a great pedigree, and it has the potential to be something really special."

http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/ent/stories/DN-cassidy_0204gd.ART0.State.Edition1.4b91d15.html

catlover79
03-01-2010, 02:16 AM
Sorry, David - I'm not buying it.

MickeyMac
03-01-2010, 12:13 PM
When David Cassidy talks be sure to be wearing boots.

catlover79
03-01-2010, 12:50 PM
When David Cassidy talks be sure to be wearing boots.
:lol:

Cori aka ChrisSCrush
06-25-2011, 04:09 AM
Sorry, David - I'm not buying it.

He does seem to blow hot and cold, to say the very least. I've only just managed to start playing my albums again, and I wasn't even at the infamous show, just read about it.

70s show watcher
08-07-2011, 06:24 AM
Sorry, David - I'm not buying it.me ether

80sTrivia
08-07-2011, 09:05 AM
David always sounds so glib and insincere in interviews, that's for certain...

Retro4Life
08-07-2011, 11:21 AM
Hmm. Not much love for "Keith", huh?

Well, whatever. He's had a pretty tumultuous life, really. I'd be surprised if he DIDN'T have periods that he'd just as soon forget. I'm willing to give him the benefit of the doubt, since I don't know him personally.

Just curious...as this point, what COULD he say that would make everyone think he was being sincere?

I'd love to see the show with Davy Jones, though there's no chance in hell of that happening. Two pop icons of the 60s and 70's...sad to say, but there aren't a lot of those left, let alone still performing.

1960'sTVfan
08-11-2011, 08:15 PM
I think it was about 15 years ago or thereabouts when David Cassidy decided to embrace the Partridge Family and the music that went along with the show. Before that, he wanted to distance himself from it. From a business point of view, embracing the PF was a smart move for him. His post partridge music career has never really taken off, I like the three albums he made for RCA but none of them were a commercial success. Then he had a couple CD's in the early 1990's but again those weren't a commercial success. David will always be connected with the Partridge Family, that is what he is most remembered for so I guess he finally decided to accept it.