Wednesday, November 5, 2014

Nicholas Daks (Nattova's husband, 1928)

Roxy Theatre, New York City, New York - February 18, 1928 

     It would be lovely to have a photo of Nattova's husband, Nicholas Daks (1897-1978), from the time of their marriage (they wed in 1928, apparently divorced in 1934).


     Well, the good news is that I found one, and it's dated 1928. The bad news is that it couldn't be much worse, resolution-wise. If you squint or view the photo from a distance, you'll see that the fellow had a high hair line, perhaps receding.

I tried to clarify his profile. Not sure how accurate this is.
     The photo, such as it is, appears on a Roxy Theatre "program" from February of 1928.

The Pajama Game Program for Aug 29 1957
Rockefeller Center
      By 1957, Daks was a production assistant at Radio City Music Hall (see under "Moods and Music" above).

     The New York Public Library has a cassette of an interview of Nicholas Daks and Marc Platt “on Radio City Music Hall.” I doubt that I can get my hands on it.
     The record for this library item includes the following information:
Host: Marian Horosko. Recorded in April 1965 and broadcast by radio station WNCN, New York, on its series, Profiles. Nicholas Daks was associate producer at Radio City Music Hall; Marc Platt was the director of the corps de ballet 
Mr. Daks and Mr. Platt discuss the first performance in Radio City Music Hall; Harald Kreutzberg; the Radio City Music Hall corps de ballet; the Rockettes; Jack Cole; Mr. Daks' background; the production procedure for a show at Radio City Music Hall.
     Daks, still married to a dancer with whom he worked starting (?) in the early 40s, died in Florida in 1978. As explained previously, Daks and Nattova wed in 1928 but Nattova, then referred to as Mrs. Nathalie Daks, filed for divorce in 1934. The breakup provided grist for the newspaper rumor mill in 1934 (Nathalie/Natacha accused another dancer, a woman married to a Hollywood director, of hanky panky with Nicholas. Her suit for alimony to pay for divorce expenses was denied by the judge.)
     The record, insofar as I can find it, is pretty blank after that.
     Oddly, census records indicate that Nathalie (the Natacha Nathalie, later called Natalie) was living with Daks six years later in New York, apparently as his wife. And yet it is clear that Daks is dancing with his future second(?) wife by 1941, perhaps earlier.
     Even more oddly, I found a record of Daks' marriage to yet another Natalie in 1932, which, presumably, would be during his marriage to Nathalie/Natacha, given that they were going through a divorce in 1934.


Variety, June 1936, Variety House Reviews
Music Hall, NY. Variety, Jan '41

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