On January 30th,
Lansing lost its queen of local theater. Carmen Decker died at age 97 after years
of lingering bad health.
She was only 5 foot tall,
painfully shy and had a high raspy voice, but when the petite blonde stepped on
the stage she became a powerhouse of the theater.
Carmen Decker was hailed
by both her peers and her fans as the first lady of Lansing theater.
Whether she played in a
classic drama like “The Lion in Winter”, an emotional human story like “The Gin
Game” or a raucous comedy like “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains it All For You”,
Decker won over the audience with applause and awards.
All of us who have loved
Lansing theater over the decades have reveled in Carmen’s heartfelt and
brilliant performances. Beginning with
the Lansing Civic Players in the 1950s, she later became a key member of the
Boarshead Theater and delighted audiences with dozens of plays that paired her
with John Peakes, the theater’s founder.
The chemistry they
displayed on stage was a rare and beautiful thing to behold.
Ian Peakes, John’s son,
now an actor in Philadelphia said “Their relationship on the stage was
incredibly special. They acted together
for over 30 years. They knew each other
inside and out. They were like dance
partners on stage. They made each other
better. Carmen was one of the great
story tellers – she was a goddess of the theater.”
While attending the
University of Iowa, she met and married Lindsey Decker, an artist. They moved
to Lansing in the 1950s. They also lived in New York for a while and Decker
followed Lindsey to Italy where he had a Fulbright. Although they had two sons together, Scott and
Marc, the marriage ended in divorce and Carmen did not remarry.
Roger Rochowiak, local
playwright and actor met Decker in 1959 and began a lifelong friendship. Most people remember her for her wonderful
comedy and dramatic performances, but Rochowiak reminds us, “She also did
musicals while she was at Civic Players.
She did “Annie Get Your Gun”, “Gypsy”, “Mame” and others. She didn’t
have an outstanding voice, but she could sell a song. She never really had formal acting lessons, but
she had raw talent.”
Michelle Raymond, who knew
her for 20 years starting in the Boarshead days, said, “She was a little spitfire
– and so bright. You were drawn to her.
She was queen-like. What a lady!”
Lee Helder, who has been
in the Lansing theater scene for many decades said, “When Carmen was on stage,
she was the one you were watching.”
In fact, Decker had a
magnetism that is difficult to describe.
She created a bond with the audience, and they loved her. Peakes said,
“She had a wonderful bag of tricks on stage.
She would do something early on in her performances that would get the
audience’s attention. And they would
lock into her. Everything was uniquely
Carmen Decker in a wonderful way. She’s not trained, she just does it. She exists in every moment.”
Decker has an
undergraduate degree from Knox College and a masters from the University of
Iowa. Neither degree was in acting.
Ian Peakes grew up at Boarshead
and Decker was always there. “Watching her act was one of the great experiences
in my life. I’ll never forget one time being
backstage and watching her do a scene in a play where she was on the phone with
someone. She didn’t say anything, but
her responses to the person on the other end just captured the audience. Unbelievable
expression and sensitivity. Everything about Carmen was watchable. When she listened, she was worth watching.”
Melissa Kaplan, who now
heads up the theater program at Lansing Community College and was previously marketing
manager at the Boarshead, put it different way. When remembering her greatest performance,
she said. “I’ll never forget when she did the comedy, “Sister Mary Ignatius Explains
it all for You”. She was terrifically funny
and I just couldn’t stop laughing.”
What was interesting about
her memory was that Kaplan couldn’t remember if it was a one woman show or not
– all she remembered was Decker. By the
way, Sister Ignatius is a play with three men and three women.
Ken Beachler local actor
and director first met Decker when he was a student rehearsing for a play at
MSU’s Arena Stage. “I’ll never forget her.
She reminded me of Elaine Stritch - very sharp, looked like a million
dollars. Frank Rutledge, the director,
asked her to give notes on our play and she was razor sharp in her
criticisms.” Decades later, Beachler
appeared with her on the Boarshead stage in “A Man Comes to Dinner”.
He says, “If Carmen Decker
was in a play, you wanted to see her. She was the show’s meal ticket.
“The best shows I saw her in
were ”The Gin Game” and a very dramatic play Boarshead did during their Winter
Festival. Watching her brought tears to
my eyes. I didn’t know she could go that
deep”.
The actress was born on a
farm in northwest Illinois, but she loved Lansing and always lived in an
apartment in the city. In addition to acting any time she could and knitting,
she was also an administrator for the Michigan Senate.
As her reputation grew
from her great Boarshead performances she dipped her toe in several other
theater markets. She starred in ‘Clara’s Play’ in Chicago which won her the
coveted Joseph Jefferson Award.
In addition, she appeared
in an off-Broadway show called “Palace for Amateurs” with Laura Dern and Kyle
McLachlan, worked at The Peterborough Players (with co-star James Whitmore) in
New Hampshire, appeared in “Lend Me a Tenor” with Lorna Luft at the Birmingham
Theater and created a longtime friendship with Rita Moreno when she performed
in “Steel Magnolias” in Traverse City. She
also appeared in various summer stock productions, one with Mickey Rooney in “Sugar
Babies”.
But despite her nationwide
gigs, she always returned to Lansing. Peakes said, “Her career outside of
Lansing was never as good as it should have been. She was modest and had some
fear about places outside of her home.
In many ways, her insecurities were crippling until she was on the stage.
She had the talent to have had a big acting career in New York and beyond. She
was a world class actress but didn’t feel comfortable selling herself to
producers.”
Decker loved words and was
revered for her ability to memorize huge amounts of dialogue – and helping John
Peakes rebound after he forgot bunches of lines on the stage. But she always
respected the words. Peakes said “Words really mattered to her”
Michelle Raymond said,
“She would drop words into a conversation that were so different but were
always so right. Once I really liked one
of her words and used it in another conversation, a couple of weeks later. Carmen smiled, “Good word”. She knew I took it from her.”
All of the people I
interviewed for this article mentioned how humble and almost self-conscious she
was off stage. She had no ego and was
never fully happy with her performances. In fact, she enjoyed poking fun at
those theater types who flutter around, bragging about themselves.
When people complimented her,
she was surprised that they liked the show. Raymond said, “She was very
humble. She almost didn’t realize her
talent”. Her son Marc said that she was shy to the
point of almost being a recluse among people she didn’t know.
Although she was unassuming,
her theater friends found her to be an entertaining companion to be with.
Rochowiak said, “People loved Carmen – they liked being with her. She had energy with people. She became a part of my family.”
While audiences loved her
performances, she had an acting style that many claimed she repeated in every
role. Her facial expressions and vocal mannerisms were seen in many of her
characters. It is true that Carmen
Decker was always Carmen Decker, but Carmen Decker was also always good.
Decker did not have many activities
outside of theater, but Rochowiak said that she was very bright, and politics
ran very deep for her. She was always attuned
to world events
Raymond remembered seeing
Carmen with her transistor radio walking back and forth in the parking lot at
Boarshead trying to listen to Tigers games or her beloved Wolverines – trying
to get the antenna and reception right.
The plays that people consistently
speak about as her best were: “The Gin Game”, “Clara’s Play”, “The Lion in
Winter”. “Mornings at Seven”, “Foxfire” and “Driving Miss Daisy”. For “Daisy”, Raymond recounts that Decker
fell off the stage when the lights were down for a scene change. She broke a rib but completed the show despite
the injury.
Her last theatrical
performance in Lansing, 2012, was a memorable one. She starred with Hollywood star (and East
Lansing grad) Tim Busfield in the play “The Vigil”. She did not speak a word throughout the
play. She was playing Busfield’s dying
mother. But the comedy and emotions she brought to the part was stunning,
remembers LCC’s Kaplan.
After “The Vigil”, Decker
began to lose her eyesight and became very ill.
Amazingly she continued to live by herself in her own apartment, but her
friends saw to it that she was taken care of and made it to her doctors’ appointments.
Always self-deprecating,
Carmen Decker would sometimes say “I bet I’ll be long forgotten.”
Judging from the
enthusiastic remarks from all of her friends and their volumes of scrapbooks
and pictures that document her life, that fact is far from accurate.
3 comments:
What a lovely tribute to a most remarkable Lansing icon!
What a marvelous encomium!
Lovely tribute -- a lot of things I didn't know about her history. Enjoyed this in the Journal... yes, we still get the Paper paper.
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