Robert Drivas
Robert Drivas (November 21, 1935 – June 29, 1986) was an American actor and theater director active in stage, film, and television during the mid-20th century.[1] Born in Coral Gables, Florida, to Greek immigrant parents, he pursued acting training at the Universities of Chicago and Miami before establishing himself in New York theater circles.[2] Drivas first drew notice for his intense, brooding portrayals in off-Broadway productions, transitioning to film with a memorable supporting role as the vocal inmate Loudmouth Steve in the 1967 prison drama Cool Hand Luke, opposite Paul Newman. Subsequent screen credits included the science fiction adaptation The Illustrated Man (1969), where he played a conflicted character alongside Rod Steiger, and cult films like God Told Me To (1976).[3] Shifting toward direction in the 1970s, he earned acclaim for helming Broadway shows such as the farce The Ritz (1975), a revival of Neil Simon's Little Me (1982), and It Had to Be You (1981), showcasing his skill in comedic and character-driven works.[4] Despite early promise, Drivas's career remained under the radar of mainstream stardom, with no major awards or blockbusters defining his legacy.[2] He died of cancer at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York City at age 50.[1][3]Early Life and Education
Family Background and Birth
Robert Drivas was born Robert Choromokos on November 21, 1935, in Coral Gables, Florida.[1][5][6] He was the son of James Peter Choromokos and Hariklia Choromokos (known as Harriett), members of a Greek-American family.[7][8] Drivas had three siblings: brothers James (also known as Louis James) and Earl Alexis Choromokos, and sister Sandra Choromokos (later Miller).[1][7] Some secondary sources list alternative birth years (1936 or 1938) or places (Chicago, Illinois), but contemporary obituaries and genealogical records aligned with U.S. vital data consistently support the 1935 Florida origin.[1][6]Academic Training
Drivas pursued formal education in acting at the University of Chicago before transferring to the University of Miami.[1] While enrolled at the University of Miami in the mid-1950s, he gained practical experience through performances at the Coconut Grove Playhouse in Miami, including roles in Thieves' Carnival, The Lady's Not for Burning, and Tea and Sympathy.[1] He supplemented his university studies with specialized training in classical theater techniques at the Greek Playhouse in Athens, Greece.[2] This period of academic and performative preparation equipped him with foundational skills in dramatic interpretation and stagecraft, culminating in his relocation to New York City around 1957 to enter the professional theater scene.[1]Stage Career
Broadway and Off-Broadway Acting Roles
Drivas made his Broadway debut on April 30, 1958, as Ramses in The Firstborn by Christopher Fry, directed by and starring Anthony Quayle at the Coronet Theatre.[9] [1] The production, a verse play depicting Moses's conflict with the Pharaoh, featured Drivas in the role of the young pharaoh, marking an auspicious entry noted for his brooding intensity.[10] In 1960, he took on supporting roles in two Broadway productions: Jacko in One More River (opening March 18), a drama by Joseph Hayes, and Stefan Mazur in The Wall (opening October 11), an adaptation of John Hersey's novel about the Warsaw Ghetto uprising.[9] These parts showcased his ability to portray conflicted, youthful figures amid historical tension.[11] Drivas continued with lead and featured roles in the early 1960s, including Giorgio, the son of Alfred Drake's character, in the musical Lorenzo (opening February 14, 1963) and Andrew Rankin in The Irregular Verb to Love by N. Richard Nash (opening September 18, 1963).[9] His Off-Broadway performance opposite Estelle Parsons in William Hanley's Mrs. Dally Has a Lover (1962–1963) earned him the 1963 Theatre World Award for outstanding debut, highlighting his dramatic range in intimate settings.[12] [4] Later Broadway appearances included Sigfrid, a key character in Terrence McNally's controversial And Things That Go Bump in the Night (opening April 26, 1965), which addressed themes of fear and sexuality, and a replacement as Chris in the farce The Ritz (1975).[9] [13] These roles often emphasized intense, introspective portrayals of young men navigating personal and societal conflicts, earning notice for his physicality and emotional depth in period reviews.[1]Directing Achievements and Productions
Drivas transitioned to stage directing in the early 1970s, marking his debut Broadway credit with Terrence McNally's Bad Habits at the Booth Theatre, which opened on May 5, 1974, and ran for 153 performances across its two one-act components, Ravenswood and Dunelawn. The production satirized psychotherapeutic excesses and earned Drivas the Obie Award for Distinguished Direction, recognizing his ability to orchestrate ensemble performances featuring actors like F. Murray Abraham and Doris Roberts.[1][14] His direction of The Ritz, another McNally farce set in a gay bathhouse, premiered at the Longacre Theatre on January 20, 1975, and achieved commercial success with 456 performances, bolstered by a cast including Jack Weston and Rita Moreno in the film adaptation. This production highlighted Drivas's skill in handling fast-paced comedic timing and physical comedy amid a large ensemble.[10] Subsequent efforts included the romantic comedy Legend at the Ethel Barrymore Theatre, which opened May 13, 1976, but closed after only three performances, reflecting limited audience and critical appeal despite its star-driven cast.[15] Later Broadway directing assignments yielded mixed results: Cheaters (January 15, 1978, 28 performances), It Had to Be You (May 10, 1981, 43 performances), the revival of Little Me (January 21, 1982, 32 performances), and Peg (December 14, 1983, four performances), the latter a musical that folded swiftly due to poor box-office reception.[16] These shorter runs contrasted with earlier triumphs, underscoring the variability in Drivas's Broadway output during the decade.[2]Screen Career
Film Roles
Drivas debuted on screen in the 1967 prison drama Cool Hand Luke, directed by Stuart Rosenberg, playing the supporting role of Loudmouth Steve, a vocal inmate among the chain gang ensemble led by Paul Newman's defiant Luke Jackson.[17] [18] His character amplifies the film's themes of rebellion and camaraderie through antagonistic banter that underscores the group's internal tensions, contributing to the movie's critical acclaim as a character-driven classic despite the brevity of his appearance.[17] In 1969, Drivas appeared in two films: Where It's At, a comedy-drama about a Las Vegas casino owner (David Janssen) attempting to reconnect with his estranged son, whom Drivas portrayed as Andy, highlighting generational clashes in a glitzy yet strained family dynamic.[18] That same year, he took the lead frame-story role of Willie, a hitchhiking drifter, in The Illustrated Man, an adaptation of Ray Bradbury's anthology directed by Jack Smight and starring Rod Steiger as the titular tattooed wanderer whose body art animates prophetic vignettes.[19] [20] Drivas's portrayal of the wide-eyed observer drawn into Steiger's eerie tales elicited praise for its intensity amid the film's psychedelic visuals and mixed reception, with critics noting its failure to capture Bradbury's essence despite strong individual performances.[3] [20] Drivas's later film work included Road Movie (1974), where he played Gil in this low-budget road-trip narrative exploring aimless wanderings and interpersonal conflicts, reflecting his recurring affinity for outsider characters.[18] His final screen role came in 1976's God Told Me To, a horror-thriller by Larry Cohen, as David Morten, a husband grappling with supernatural elements tied to mass killings and divine imperatives, adding to the film's cult status for its provocative blend of sci-fi and social commentary though his part remained peripheral.[18] [21] Over a decade, these five roles marked a limited cinematic presence, with Drivas's stage commitments dominating his career trajectory.[18][3]Television Appearances
Drivas frequently appeared as a guest star on American television series during the 1960s and 1970s, contributing to anthology-style dramas, crime procedurals, and action-oriented programs that highlighted his ability to portray brooding, psychologically complex characters.[19] His roles often involved moral ambiguity or internal conflict, aligning with the era's emphasis on character-driven narratives in episodic television.[22] ![Robert Drivas in 1973][float-right] In The Fugitive, Drivas played Lee Gould, a young law student entangled in the protagonist's flight from injustice, in the season 2 premiere episode "Man in a Chariot," which aired in 1964.[23] He reprised his guest capacity in season 4's "The Sharp Edge of Chivalry" (1966), portraying Roger Roland, a figure caught in a web of family loyalty and crime amid a police manhunt.[24] These appearances underscored his suitability for tense, fugitive-themed dramas. Drivas featured in two episodes of the World War II aviation drama Twelve O'Clock High, first as Lt. Joseph Kane in "The Albatross," which aired on January 15, 1965, depicting a pilot burdened by superstition and combat stress. He returned as Capt. Wally Bolen in a later 1966 installment, further demonstrating his range in military ensemble casts.[25] Later, in the crime action series Hawaii Five-O, Drivas portrayed Chris Vashon, the volatile son of a powerful crime syndicate leader, in the three-part storyline opener "'V' for Vashon: The Son," which aired on November 14, 1972; the arc explored familial criminal empires and law enforcement infiltration, marking one of his more prominent television villains.[26][27] Additional guest spots included episodes of The F.B.I. (such as season 8, episode 16, aired January 7, 1973), Route 66, N.Y.P.D., The Defenders, and The Felony Squad, where he typically embodied youthful antagonists or troubled allies in procedural formats.[27][28] No Emmy nominations or major television awards were associated with these performances.[19]Personal Life
Relationships
Drivas maintained a low public profile regarding his personal life during his career, with details of his romantic relationships emerging primarily after his death in 1986.[29] He was openly part of New York City's gay theater community, where professional and social ties often intersected, though he avoided explicit disclosures in interviews or public statements.[10] Drivas was in a long-term romantic relationship with playwright Terrence McNally, beginning in the late 1960s after McNally's prior involvement with Edward Albee.[30] McNally featured Drivas in several works, including the 1968 play Witness, reflecting their personal and creative partnership.[30] The couple separated in 1976 but sustained a close friendship thereafter, with McNally later describing Drivas as one of his life partners lost to AIDS.[29][10] Drivas also had a romantic involvement with Edward Albee earlier in his life, connecting him further to influential figures in American drama.[29] No other long-term partners are documented in verifiable accounts, underscoring Drivas's preference for discretion amid the era's social constraints on homosexuality in the arts.[31]Health and Lifestyle Factors
Drivas resided in Manhattan throughout much of his professional career, engaging deeply in New York City's theater ecosystem during the 1970s and 1980s, a period marked by intense artistic collaboration and nightlife among performers.[1] As a gay man, he formed romantic partnerships within these circles, including a relationship with playwright Terrence McNally.[31] [32] The social habits prevalent in such urban gay theater environments frequently involved multiple sexual partners and unprotected intercourse, practices that individuals pursued amid limited awareness of viral risks prior to 1981; these behaviors aligned with causal pathways for HIV transmission via mucosal exposure during receptive anal sex, as substantiated by retrospective CDC analyses showing MSM contacts as the dominant early epidemic vector, accounting for approximately 61% of reported AIDS cases by 2000 but over 90% in initial clusters from 1981 onward.[33] [34] No documented evidence exists of preexisting health conditions or habitual substance use contributing to vulnerabilities in Drivas's case, underscoring personal lifestyle selections as key exposure factors in high-prevalence networks.[3]Death and Posthumous Recognition
Cause of Death
Robert Drivas died on June 29, 1986, at the age of 50, from AIDS-related complications at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in Manhattan, New York City.[1] Contemporary obituaries in major outlets, including The New York Times and Los Angeles Times, described the cause as cancer, a common euphemism employed during the early AIDS epidemic to mitigate social stigma associated with HIV infection among homosexual men.[1][3] The terminal conditions encompassed a combination of opportunistic manifestations driven by HIV-induced immunosuppression, prominently including Kaposi's sarcoma—a vascular malignancy characterized by multifocal purplish lesions on skin and mucous membranes, which proliferated aggressively in untreated AIDS patients due to depleted CD4 T-cell counts.[10][32] In the mid-1980s context, prior to the 1987 approval of zidovudine (AZT) as the first antiretroviral agent, management was limited to palliative interventions, with median survival after an AIDS-defining illness like Kaposi's sarcoma ranging from 6 to 12 months absent effective viral suppression.[35] Drivas' HIV acquisition aligns with predominant transmission patterns among men who have sex with men (MSM) in the 1980s, where unprotected receptive anal intercourse—facilitating direct mucosal exposure to infected semen or blood—accounted for the majority of cases, with MSM comprising approximately 65% of cumulative U.S. AIDS diagnoses by 1986.[36] Per-act transmission probability for receptive anal sex was estimated at 0.5-3% in early epidemiological models, far exceeding other sexual activities, underscoring behavioral risk factors in the absence of barrier methods or partner screening.[37] No evidence indicates alternative routes such as intravenous drug use or transfusion for Drivas, whose documented personal relationships were with men.[10]Legacy and Influence
Drivas's directorial contributions, notably his staging of Terrence McNally's The Ritz on Broadway in 1975, which completed 400 performances, demonstrated his skill in managing ensemble farces centered on a gay bathhouse milieu, aiding the integration of homosexual settings into commercial theater without overt didacticism. This production, featuring Rita Moreno and Jack Weston, earned Drivas acclaim for pacing and comedic timing, as reviewers highlighted its success in translating Off-Broadway energy to larger venues. His personal and professional association with McNally, spanning the late 1960s to 1976, shaped project choices, including Drivas's direction of McNally's works and roles in plays like Bump in the Night (1965), where he portrayed a gay character amid emerging explorations of sexual identity in American drama.[10] McNally later reflected on this relationship's impact in interviews and writings, crediting it with influencing his thematic development, while Drivas's involvement lent visibility to gay-adjacent narratives during a period of gradual theatrical liberalization.[38] Drivas receives mention in McNally-focused biographies and documentaries, such as Jeff Kaufman's 2018 Every Act of Life, as a key collaborator and partner whose AIDS-related death in 1986 exemplified the era's toll on theater talents, preserving his output through archival credits and playbills rather than widespread revivals.[39] Obituaries noted his award-winning status, including Obie honors for acting and directing, yet critiqued his career as unrealized potential, attributing underachievement to health decline rather than deficient ability, given consistent praise for production quality in limited endeavors.[1][2]Filmography and Theater Credits
Stage Credits
Drivas made his Broadway debut as Rameses in The Firstborn, which ran from April 30 to May 31, 1958, at the Coronet Theatre.[9] His early roles included Jacko in One More River (March 18–19, 1960, Helen Hayes Theatre) and Stefan Mazur in The Wall (October 11, 1960–March 4, 1961, Billy Rose Theatre).[9] [1] Off-Broadway, he debuted in Eugene O'Neill's Diff'rent and earned acclaim for his performance opposite Estelle Parsons in William Hanley's Mrs. Dally Has a Lover (1962, Orpheum Theatre), winning the Theatre World Award in 1963.[4] [9] [1]| Production | Year | Role | Venue/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Firstborn | 1958 | Rameses | Broadway debut, Coronet Theatre |
| One More River | 1960 | Jacko | Helen Hayes Theatre |
| The Wall | 1960–1961 | Stefan Mazur | Billy Rose Theatre |
| Mrs. Dally Has a Lover | 1962 | Lead opposite Estelle Parsons | Off-Broadway, Orpheum Theatre; Theatre World Award (1963) |
| Lorenzo | 1963 | Giorgio | ANTA Playhouse |
| The Irregular Verb to Love | 1963 | Andrew Rankin | Henry Miller's Theatre |
| And Things That Go Bump in the Night | 1965 | Sigfrid | Ambassador Theatre |
| The Ritz | 1975 | Chris (replacement) | Longacre Theatre |
| The Man Who Had Three Arms | 1983 | Himself (starring) | Goodman Theatre (Chicago premiere), later Broadway transfer |
| Production | Year | Credit | Venue/Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bad Habits | 1974 | Director | Manhattan Theatre Club (Off-Broadway premiere), later Broadway |
| The Ritz | 1975 | Director | Longacre Theatre |
| Legend | 1976 | Director | Ethel Barrymore Theatre |
| Cheaters | 1978 | Director | Biltmore Theatre |
| It Had to Be You | 1981 | Director | Ambassador Theatre |
| Little Me (revival) | 1982 | Director | Roundabout Theatre |
| Peg | 1983 | Director | Lunt-Fontanne Theatre |