Felipe Rose
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox musical artist Felipe Ortiz Rose (born January 12, 1954) is an American musician who was an original member of the disco group the Village People. While in the group, he performed as "The Indian",<ref name=Bloomberg/> usually wearing a costume consisting of an imitation, "bespangled war bonnet",<ref name=":3"/> loincloth, and theatrical face paint. Rose was a member of the group from 1977 until 2017, when the name of the group was turned over to the original lead singer, Victor Willis. Rose subsequently launched a solo career and released the single "Going Back to My Roots" in 2018.
Early years
Felipe Ortiz Rose was born in Manhattan.<ref name=LivingMedia/> His father, reportedly of Lakota descent, moved to New York for work as a welder, where he met Rose's Puerto Rican mother.<ref name=Hank>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Rose has said his father was Mescalero Apache, Lakota, and Cherokee.<ref name=Bloomberg>Template:Cite news</ref> He was raised in Brooklyn, where he displayed an interest in the arts during his childhood, and first dressed as "an Indian" while in school for "the Christopher Columbus parade and celebration."<ref name=Bloomberg/>
After graduating from high school in 1972, he moved to Greenwich Village where he stayed with a succession of friends and acquaintances. He also spent time in Provincetown, Massachusetts, where he performed his "Indian" character in the Arthur Blake bicentennial revue.<ref name=Bloomberg/>
He cites his mother was his main inspiration as she had been a dancer for the Copacabana during the 1940s and 1950s.<ref name=LivingMedia/>
Village People
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In the early 1970s, Rose was working as a nightclub dancer. He describes being encouraged by an aunt to begin dancing in what he says was "his father's tribal regalia,"<ref name=LivingMedia/> which he says led to his costume, acting and neon facepaint in the Village People. "His aunt, he has said, inspired him to work the Indian angle into his showbiz ambitions: 'Why not honor your father's heritage,' Rose has recalled her saying, 'and dress in your tribal regalia in your dance journey through culture?'"<ref name=Hank/>
Rose was working as a dancer and a bartender in the New York gay club, The Anvil,<ref name=Bloomberg/> dressed "as an Indian" when he was discovered by French producer Jacques Morali and executive producer Henri Belolo and so became the first recruit for Village People.<ref name=LivingMedia/>
In 1977, Village People had their first hit with "San Francisco", although this song became a hit only in the United Kingdom. Then in 1978 they had their first hits in the U.S. with "Macho Man" followed by "Y.M.C.A.".<ref name=LivingMedia/><ref name="FR">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
He was a member of the band's board of directors, called Sixuvus Ltd ("six of us" - named for the six members of the Village People).<ref name=LivingMedia/>
Solo career
From 2000 to 2008, while still part of Village People, Felipe wrote and recorded "Trail of Tears," "We're Still Here," "Red Hawk Woman" and "Going Back to My Roots."<ref name=":3">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
His single "Trails of Tears" won a NAMMY (Native American Music Awards) for Best Historical Recording.<ref name="LivingMedia" /> In 2002, Rose was the opening act of the fifth Annual Native American Music Awards celebrated at the Marcus Amphitheatre in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.<ref name="FR" /> His media company was the "Tomahawk Group".<ref name="FR" /><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Rose has appeared in the movies Can't Stop the Music (1980), The Best of Village People (1993), and Feathers and Leathers: The Story of the Village People (1999). He also participated in the 2000 documentary, Village People: The E! True Hollywood Story.<ref name="LivingMedia" /><ref name="FR" />
In 2008, Rose received a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He was inducted into the Native American Music Hall of Fame a month later.<ref name=":3" />
His 2018 single, "Going Back to My Roots," begins with a Lakota prayer and includes a rap by Native American hip-hop artist Sten Joddi.<ref name="Jordan">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He first performed the song during a tribute show of the 40th anniversary of Saturday Night Fever.<ref name="Jordan" />
By 2014, he had become an ordained minister along with Eric the Biker, to gain the ability to marry fans.<ref name=":2">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}Template:Dead link</ref> When asked if this was used for gay marriages, Rose claimed he once spontaneously married a gay couple while aboard a ship in Australia.<ref name=":2" />
Personal life
After his mother's death, Rose moved to Richmond, Virginia. He briefly lived in Jersey City, New Jersey, though he found it to be too crowded.<ref name="LivingMedia" />
In a 2008 interview, he stated that approximately four or five years prior, he moved to Asbury Park, New Jersey, on the advice of several friends who lived there, saying, "So I came down and I just fell in love with the shore... I love the diversity of Asbury because it brings everyone together. There is a very large gay and lesbian community here, but the diversity of artists is amazing; it's become very bohemian."<ref name="LivingMedia" />
Rose is also a hobbyist cook, making dishes inspired by his Puerto Rican heritage. He says his mother was not a cook, preferring to prepare "five cans of Chef Boyardee and a loaf of bread", leading Rose to learn to cook at a young age.<ref name=":3" /> He pitched a cooking show to ABC, with the idea of preparing meals at various celebrities' houses. He then revamped the show idea with the late Chef Lou Petrozza, a Hell's Kitchen runner-up, but ABC declined unless the other Village People members were present.<ref name=":3" /> As of 2021, he continues to cook on his YouTube channel.<ref name=":3" />
See also
References
External links
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- Pages with broken file links
- American dance musicians
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- Living people
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- American musicians of Puerto Rican descent
- Village People members
- Musicians from Asbury Park, New Jersey
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