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Jeffrey Mylett
Jeffrey Mylett
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Jeffrey Mylett (June 8, 1949 – May 7, 1986) was an American actor and songwriter. He was best known for his roles in both the stage and film productions of Godspell.

Key Information

Personal life

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Mylett was born in North Canton, Ohio. He attended Hoover High School and studied theater at Carnegie Mellon University.

He followed the spiritual teacher Meher Baba, and he appears in The God-Man, a documentary about Meher Baba produced for Australian television in 1976.[1] In the documentary, Mylett is interviewed and performs his song, "House of the Lord."[2]

Mylett died at the age of 36 in Los Angeles in 1986 as a result of complications of HIV/AIDS.

Theater, film, and television

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He appeared in the original off-Broadway production of Godspell in 1971.[3] During the musical's initial two-week run at La MaMa Experimental Theatre Club, the show featured songs by cast members, including two songs by Mylett. A team of producers then transferred the show to commercial theaters and hired Stephen Schwartz to compose a new score. All the original songs were replaced, except for "By My Side" by Jay Hamburger and Peggy Gordon.

Mylett also appeared in Thoughts, written by Godspell castmate Lamar Alford, at La MaMa in 1972[4] and again in 1973.[5] In 1974, he appeared in the Broadway musical The Magic Show, in which he was Doug Henning's understudy and played Henning's role while he was away. During Mylett's scheduled appearances in the show, the character's name was changed from "Doug" to "Jeff."

In early 1977, he participated in the workshop that created the musical Working. When the show premiered at the Goodman Theatre in Chicago and later on Broadway, the roles Mylett had developed in the workshop were performed by Joe Mantegna.

Mylett recreated his stage role in the 1973 film version of Godspell. He also appeared in the films Money Talks (1972), Brewster's Millions (1985), and My Man Adam (1985).

He hosted The Rock 'n' Fun Magic Show, a 1975 television special featuring music, magic, and comedy. The special featured appearances by Doug Henning, Bill Cosby, and the Hudson Brothers, among others.[6][7] The series initially intended to follow this special was never produced.

References

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from Grokipedia
Jeffrey Mylett (June 8, 1949 – May 7, 1986) was an American actor and songwriter best known for originating a role in the production of the musical and reprising it in the 1973 . Born in , to a family that included a twin sister, Mylett attended Hoover High School and demonstrated early interest in while also writing and performing his own music on guitar. He gained prominence through , created by college acquaintance John-Michael Tebelak, appearing in the original 1971 cast recording and contributing vocals to tracks like "We Beseech Thee." His stage work extended to productions such as The Magic Show, and film roles included (1985) and My Man Adam (1985), though remained his defining contribution to musical theater. Mylett, a devotee of the spiritual figure , died at age 36 in from AIDS-related complications, a fate shared by several contemporaries in the during the epidemic. Despite a career cut short, his performances in Godspell continue to influence revivals and recordings of the show.

Early Life and Education

Birth and Upbringing

Jeffrey Mylett was born on June 8, 1949, in , a suburb of Canton known for its heritage tied to . He was the son of Robert Mylett and Pauline (Fladung) Mylett, and one of four siblings, including a twin named Jennifer. Mylett's early childhood unfolded in this Midwestern industrial community during the post-World War II economic expansion, where family life centered on local schools and community institutions amid a landscape of steel mills and appliance factories. Limited public records detail specific family dynamics or parental occupations, but his upbringing emphasized conventional values typical of suburbs. By his high school years at Hoover High School in North Canton, Mylett had already discerned a strong inclination toward , a passion he recalled as evident from an early age. This interest manifested amid the school's extracurricular offerings, though no verified accounts specify particular productions or mentors that catalyzed it; contemporaries later noted his innate draw to performance as predating formal training. The era's regional theater scene, influenced by nearby Cleveland's cultural outlets, may have indirectly fostered such pursuits in youth like Mylett, but direct ties remain undocumented.

Formal Education

Mylett enrolled in the theater program at , where he pursued studies in drama and performance arts. During his initial years at the institution, he gained hands-on experience through participation in summer repertory companies alongside playwright John-Michael Tebelak, who was developing early concepts related to . He left Carnegie Mellon in 1969 prior to completing a degree, transitioning directly to professional pursuits in .

Professional Career

Theater Roles

Mylett gained prominence as a member of the original cast of , which premiered on May 17, 1971, at the in . In the production, directed by John-Michael Tebelak with music and new lyrics by , he performed as Jeffrey, portraying multiple ensemble characters including Gilmer, Herb, and David (Judas), contributing vocals to numbers such as "We Beseech Thee." His participation in the , released by Bell Records, featured his lead on "We Beseech Thee" and helped cement the show's cultural footprint, as ran for 2,602 performances and grossed over $1 million in its initial engagement, elevating Mylett's visibility in musical theater circles. In 1973, Mylett appeared in the original production of Thoughts, a biographical musical by Lamar Alford about the life of musician , at the Theatre de Lys (now ). He performed in an ensemble role credited as Performer alongside castmates including and Robin Lamont, with the show opening on March 19, 1973, after previews. Though Thoughts received mixed reviews for its episodic structure, as noted in contemporary critiques focusing on its black childhood-in-Alabama narrative, Mylett's involvement marked an early collaboration with Godspell alumni Alford and Lamont. Mylett later joined the Broadway production of The Magic Show, a revue featuring magician Doug Henning, which opened on May 28, 1974, at the Cort Theatre. He served as a replacement for the role of Jeff and as standby for Doug, taking over the latter from March 1975 onward amid the show's run of 2,128 performances. This credit represented Mylett's transition to Broadway, though in supporting capacities rather than leads, aligning with the production's emphasis on illusion and ensemble dynamics over individual star turns.

Film and Television Appearances

Mylett made his screen debut in the 1972 film Money Talks, appearing uncredited as a man complaining about bedbugs in a comedic segment. He achieved greater visibility recreating his originating stage role as Jeffrey—a character depicted as a taxi driver—in the 1973 film adaptation of Godspell, directed by David Greene. The production was filmed on location in New York City from August to November 1972, utilizing iconic sites including the rooftop of the World Trade Center for the "All for the Best" sequence, the Brooklyn Bridge, Times Square, Lincoln Center, and The Cloisters museum. Mylett's television work was limited, with his primary credited role as Marc in the 1984 made-for-TV movie The Seduction of Gina, a about gambling addiction starring and directed by Jerrold Freedman. In 1985, he portrayed the Tailor in Brewster's Millions, a directed by and starring as a minor-league player tasked with extravagant spending. That same year marked his final film role as Phillip in My Man Adam, a murder-mystery directed by Roger L. Simon, in which a pizza delivery boy becomes entangled in a to impress his crush.

Songwriting and Other Creative Work

Mylett composed original music and songs, though his efforts outside of performance roles yielded limited public output. One documented contribution was "The Raven and the Swan," an original song he wrote for the initial production of Godspell in 1971, which illustrated a from the show. This piece, performed during early workshops and stagings, reflected his ability to blend narrative elements with melody but was not retained in subsequent revisions or the 1973 , where most non-Schwartz songs were excised except "By My Side." Beyond theater integrations, Mylett pursued standalone songwriting, producing unrecorded compositions that demonstrated his instrumental versatility on , guitar, and recorder. Contemporaries noted his talent for crafting personal songs, yet empirical barriers such as insufficient industry connections and the era's selective recording practices prevented commercialization or documentation. No credits exist for these works, underscoring a where promising creative endeavors from non-established songwriters often remained archival or lost due to absent preservation efforts. His songwriting output, while multifaceted, lacked the empirical traction for broader release, with sources confirming that none of his achieved recording or publication. This aligns with broader historical patterns in 1970s-1980s theater-adjacent artistry, where actor-composers faced structural hurdles in transitioning to dedicated musical careers without major advocacy.

Personal Life

Family and Relationships

Jeffrey Mylett had three siblings, including his twin sister Jennifer Mylett, as well as a half-sister Lisa and half-brother . His parents included father Robert E. Mylett, who died in 2012. Mylett's twin sister Jennifer married Jimmy May and raised three children—one daughter and two sons—before her death in 2000. Biographical accounts indicate that Mylett never married and had no children. No public records document any long-term romantic relationships.

Residences and Lifestyle

Mylett was born on June 8, 1949, in , where he spent his early years. Following high school graduation, he relocated to to pursue opportunities in theater, immersing himself in the vibrant and experimental performance scenes of the late 1960s and 1970s. This move aligned with his early professional breakthroughs, including roles in productions like . In subsequent years, Mylett resided in , a suburban area outside New York that attracted artists and performers seeking a balance between urban access and quieter surroundings during the and early . He eventually shifted to , , by the mid-, reflecting the migration patterns of stage actors transitioning toward film and television work on the West Coast. Mylett passed away in on May 7, 1986. His lifestyle centered on the demands of a peripatetic career, involving frequent travel between coasts for auditions, rehearsals, and performances, typical of journeyman performers in New York's competitive theater ecosystem and Hollywood's emerging opportunities. Documented routines emphasize dedication to craft, such as daily vocal and physical training amid the communal, bohemian environments of artistic hubs, though specific personal habits remain sparsely recorded in contemporary accounts.

Spiritual Interests

Mylett maintained a lifelong devotion to , the Indian spiritual master regarded by followers as the Avatar of the age, whose teachings centered on realizing the oneness of God through and surrender of the ego. This commitment shaped his personal worldview, fostering a disposition of and universal , as contemporaries described him as "a very spiritual and kind man, and... loving to everyone who knew him." Unlike the eclectic, often transient spiritual explorations prevalent in —such as widespread experimentation with psychedelics or diluted Eastern imports—Mylett's adherence emphasized Baba's assertion of a singular, illusion-transcending where individual actions causally align with divine purpose, demanding disciplined from intoxicants and strict ethical living to awaken innate divinity. His engagement extended to verifiable participation in Baba-related media; Mylett appeared in the 1976 Australian The God-Man, discussing spiritual insights in alignment with Baba's message, and provided for the production. He also featured in Samadhi: The House of the Lord, a tied to Baba's community. Even in the , during revivals of his theatrical work, Mylett visibly upheld this path, wearing a pin as a symbol of ongoing fidelity to the master's post-1969 guidance. This personal pursuit remained distinct from professional endeavors, serving as a foundational philosophical anchor amid cultural flux.

Illness and Death

HIV/AIDS Diagnosis

Mylett's AIDS diagnosis occurred amid the initial recognition of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States, with the first clusters of cases reported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in June 1981 among previously healthy gay men exhibiting opportunistic infections such as Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (formerly P. carinii) and Kaposi's sarcoma. By 1982, the CDC had established a working case definition for AIDS based on the occurrence of these indicator diseases in the absence of known immunosuppression causes, prior to the identification of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) as the causative agent in 1983. HIV antibody screening tests became commercially available in March 1985, enabling serological confirmation, though early diagnoses often relied on clinical presentation due to test limitations and widespread undiagnosed infections. Specific details on Mylett's date remain undocumented in , but accounts describe a brief illness preceding his death on May 7, , implying late-stage detection typical of the , when median survival post-AIDS without was approximately 12 months. In the U.S. context, over 70% of reported AIDS cases through involved men infected via male-to-male sexual contact, the predominant transmission route due to the high per-act risk of unprotected receptive anal intercourse, which facilitates viral entry through mucosal abrasions and exposure to high concentrations of in . Therapeutic interventions were rudimentary at the time of Mylett's illness, confined to supportive care for opportunistic infections and prophylaxis against pathogens like , as effective antiretrovirals such as were not approved until 1987. This absence of disease-modifying treatments accelerated progression from infection to AIDS, characterized by T-cell depletion below 200 cells/μL and susceptibility to malignancies and infections, underscoring the era's diagnostic and prognostic challenges.

Final Years and Passing

In the months leading to his , Mylett experienced a decline in health attributed to AIDS-related complications, though specific details of his medical trajectory remain sparsely documented in . He passed away on May 7, 1986, at the age of 36 in , , from those complications. No verified accounts detail hospitalizations or immediate post-death arrangements, such as a , beyond general references to a brief final illness.

Legacy

Posthumous Recognition

Following Mylett's death on May 7, 1986, a memorial service was held in his honor, with the program digitized and made available through fan-preserved online archives. His contributions to have endured through the original cast recording, released in 1971 on Bell Records, which features his vocals on tracks such as "We Beseech Thee" and remains commercially available via retailers like . This recording has been referenced in anniversary compilations, including the 2011 Godspell: 40th Anniversary Celebration album, underscoring the production's lasting theatrical footprint. Tribute efforts by fans and associates include the website "It Says Keds," maintained since at least 2014, which compiles family memories, photographs, and career details to honor Mylett's life and work. According to the site's curators, Mylett is commemorated in the , a panel-based exhibit that travels to educational and public venues across the to remember those lost to the epidemic. Archival preservation provides further recognition, with photographs of Mylett in productions like The Magic Show and held in the New York Public Library's Kenn Duncan Photograph Archive, accessible via digital collections since their digitization. He also appears in related documentaries, including , distributed by Facets .

Influence on Peers and Successors

Mylett contributed to the early development of through improvisational input that shaped key elements of the production. During workshops at and subsequent iterations, he sang a riff incorporated into the song "Day by Day," as recalled by composer , exemplifying the cast's collaborative role in refining the musical's score and communal . Original cast member Robin Lamont credited Mylett with instigating much of the physical movement and staging, noting his infectious energy influenced the ensemble's dynamic performance style. These contributions extended to peers in the 1970s off-Broadway scene, where Godspell's emphasis on , rock-infused parables, and egalitarian casting—embodied by Mylett's versatile portrayals of and Judas—helped pioneer a format blending theater, music, and that informed subsequent ensemble-driven works like The Me Nobody Knows (1970) and later community-oriented musicals. His role fostered a model of actor-driven creativity, evident in cast testimonies highlighting how Mylett's quirky humor and spiritual commitment enhanced rehearsal dynamics and the show's raw, participatory appeal. For successors, Mylett's original characterizations set stylistic benchmarks referenced in revivals; actors in the 2011 Broadway production, for instance, acknowledged the originals like Mylett for defining roles through innate ensemble invention rather than scripted directives. However, critiques note his influence remained constrained by a modest post- output, including minor film roles in (1985) and limited theater work, as his death from AIDS-related complications on May 7, 1986, at age 36 curtailed broader or solo projects. This is balanced by 's over 2,500 performances and global adaptations, through which Mylett's foundational energy indirectly shaped modern interpretations prioritizing physicality and in musical theater ensembles.

References

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