Ted Bloecher
Theodore Bloecher was an American ufologist, singer, actor, and author who performed on Broadway and toured with productions of Oliver!, Hello Dolly and My Fair Lady. Bloecher was a pioneering member of New York City gay culture, singing with the New York City Gay Men's Chorus from the 1980s.
Early life
Theodore Bloecher was born in Summit, New Jersey, on August 22, 1929. Bloecher received a scholarship to study Fine Arts at Cooper Union and first began acting for the Provincetown Players. He attended Columbia University, majoring in dramatic literature, with a minor in music.Career in the arts
Bloecher started his career as a singer, and worked as an actor in theater from the late 1950s until 1973. In 1953, Bloecher was profiled for his upcoming role in a production of Street Scene. In 1957, Bloecher co-authored a musical titled "The Money Colored Rainbow". In 1959, Bloecher appeared in an opera titled The Clarkstown Witch based on the Nathaniel Hawthorne story Feathertop, with Bloecher taking the role of Feathertop; His performance was praised in reviews. In 1961, Bloecher appeared in productions of the musicals Tenderloin and Destry Rides Again. In 1963, Bloecher appeared in The Unsinkable Molly Brown, and Irma La Douce.Bloecher appeared on Broadway and was part of the national touring company of the musicals Oliver!, My Fair Lady in the 1960s, and Hello, Dolly in 1972.
In 1985, he joined the New York City Gay Men's Chorus as a tenor and served as the group's librarian. In retirement, he served as a volunteer at the city's Museum of Modern Art. In 2019, Bloecher's memoir Coming of Age in Provincetown was published. In 2020, Bloecher's journals and art were exhibited as part of a retrospective on the role of queer people in New York's history; Bloecher, then aged 90, attended in person.