Bennett's next project was
A Chorus Line. The musical was formed out of twenty hours of taped sessions with Broadway dancers. Bennett was invited to the sessions originally as an observer but soon took charge. He co-choreographed and directed the production, which debuted in July 1975
off-Broadway. It won nine
Tony Awards and the 1976
Pulitzer Prize for Drama. He later claimed that the worldwide success of
A Chorus Line became a hindrance, as the many international companies of the musical demanded his full-time attention. Bennett would later become a creative consultant for the 1985
film version of the musical but left due to creative differences. He always sought creative control over his projects, but Hollywood producers were unwilling to give him the influence he demanded. The 2008 feature-length documentary
Every Little Step chronicles the casting process of the musical's 2006 revival, with re-created choreography by Bennett's long-time associate
Baayork Lee, and, in the course of the film, the saga of the original production is re-told through the use of old film clips and interviews from the original collaborators, including Lee,
Bob Avian (who was the show's original co-choreographer with Bennett and the director of the revival), composer
Marvin Hamlisch and the original's leading lady,
Donna McKechnie. Bennett's next musical was a project about late-life romance called
Ballroom. Although financially unsuccessful, it garnered seven Tony Award nominations, and Bennett won one for Best Choreography. He admitted that any project that followed
A Chorus Line was bound to be an anti-climax. Bennett had another hit in 1981 with
Dreamgirls, a backstage epic about a
girl group like
The Supremes and the expropriation of black music by a white recording industry. In the early 1980s, Bennett worked on various projects, one of which was titled ''The Children's Crusade'', based on a legendary story "
Children's Crusade", but none of them reached the stage. In 1978, he purchased 890 Broadway and converted it for use as a rehearsal studios complex for dance and theatre. In 1986, he was forced to sell it for $15 million due to stress-induced
angina and the financial losses of the property. Two tenants purchased the building, and it remains a rehearsal facility for
American Ballet Theatre,
Eliot Feld's Ballet Tech, Gibney Dance Company, and others. He always collaborated with his assistant Bob Avian, who was a lifelong friend. In 1985, Bennett abandoned the nearly-completed musical
Scandal, by writer
Treva Silverman and songwriter
Jimmy Webb, which had been developing for nearly five years through a series of workshop productions. The show was sexually daring, but the conservative climate and the growing AIDS panic made it unlikely commercial material. He was then signed to direct the
West End production of
Chess but had to withdraw in January 1986 due to his failing health, leaving
Trevor Nunn to complete the production using Bennett's already commissioned sets. == Analysis ==