Broadway To
Vegas 
SHOW REVIEWS CELEBRITY INTERVIEWS GOSSIP NEWS
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Copyright: January 23, 2000
By: Laura Deni
BROTHEL TO HONOR ANDY KAUFMAN
The
Moonlite Bunny Ranch - the brothel that has given us the Jesse Ventura "Oral
Office" suite named in honor of the Minnesota governor is opening a theme room
in honor of the late comedian Andy Kaufman.
ANDY KAUFMAN
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The Ventura suite was originally going to
ballyhoo his stint as a Navy seal - since it was during those days that Ventura
admitted to being a visitor at the brothel located in Lyon County, just outside
Carson City. However, the Navy took a dim view of the decorating theme, so the
motif took on an "Oral Office" concept as well as displaying memorabilia
denoting Ventura's days as a wrestler.
The wrestling theme will also be
carried out in the Kaufman bedroom. It seems that the actor "used to hire two
girls, one in a black leopard, the other in white. Kaufman would pay $350 to
$400 per match. They'd wrestle each other and then he'd wrestle the winner,"
divulged brothel owner Dennis Hof, who insisted that Kaufman never engaged in
sexual activity with either of them. He just got his kicks by wrestling. "He'd
spent thousands of dollars in a weekend. A lot of people are sexually repressed.
Wrestling women is a fantasy for some men. It's a way to satisfy their desires,"
he continued.
Kaufman is the subject of the hit movie Man on the
Moon. His brothel wrestling events took place during the time he starred on
Saturday Night Live. On that show he'd offer $1,000 to any woman who
could beat him in a wrestling match.
Kaufman's sexual antics at various
Nevada brothels have been well documented. In 1979, while in Nevada for a week,
he decided to have sex with every prostitute in one brothel, paying $100 per
girl - twice the then going rate. He bedded 49 prostitutes in those seven
days.
SUNDANCE - LOOKING FOR DISTRIBUTORS AND ROBERT
REDFORD
Robert Redford was a no show at the
opening night of his Sundance Film Festival. Nobody was too sure what happened
to Bob, who was away finishing up his next directing effort, The Legend of
Bagger Vance. He had been expected to not only attend but deliver opening
remarks. Somebody goofed and neglected to inform the Festival that - at the last
second- Bob wasn't going to make it. He did arrive the next day, attending a
brunch at the Sundance Resort where 19 films will be screened. Jodi Foster is
also at the Festival.
ROBERT REDFORD
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Also missing, but with a good reason, was
Stanley Tucci. He was attempting to get to Utah for the world premiere of his
movie Joe Gould's Secret. He flew from Rome to Los Angeles and was ready
to board a flight for Park City, Utah when he got word that his pregnant wife -
expecting twins - had gone into labor a month early in New York. Tucci
immediately flew to his wife's bedside. We wish them all the best.
As for
Sundance - that's the premiere Festival for independent films looking for
distributors. Last year the event gave the world The Blair Witch Project.
WHAT'S COOKING Lainie Kazan (left) Maury
Chaykin, Albie Selznick, Estelle Harris & Ralph Manza
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This year the opening night film was
What's Cooking, set at Thanksgiving. Gurinder Chadha, an Englishwoman of
Indian descent co-wrote and directed the film. Along with two of the film's
stars, Alfre Woodward and Julianna Margulies, Chadha introduced it at the
premiere.
What's Cooking takes the traditional Thanksgiving dinner
viewed through the eyes of four families.The Williamses - Ronald (Dennis
Haysbert) and Audrey (Alfre Woodard) - are an African-American couple trying to
live a WASP lifestyle. The children of a Mexican-American family, the Avilas,
(Julianna Margulies) are trying to get their fighting parents back together. The
Seeligs (Lainie Kazan and Maury Chaykin) are attempting to cope with the fact
that their daughter (Kyra Sedgwick) is a lesbian, And Vietnamese immigrants the
Nguyens (Joan Chen and Francois Chau) are faced with rebellious
children.
During the 10-day the Sundance Film Festival will screen 112
feature films, 71 of them making their world premiere.
On Tuesday Kevin
Spacey will be honored with the festival's Piper-Heidsieck Tribute to
Independent Vision Award. Spacey's next project will find him in Las Vegas. His
next flick Pay It Forward will be filming in Las Vegas.
NOTRE DAME DE PARIS; PARIS HOTEL, LAS VEGAS
This isn't your father's Hunchback of Notre Dame. In
fact, the program says this award winning highly touted musical is "based
on the novel by Victor Hugo."
There is a program which explains every
scene. That's a good thing, because unless you read the program before
the performance you're going to get lost. Even so, be prepared for culture
shock.
If Rent was your all time favorite Broadway musical, then
Notre Dame De Paris is right up your alley. And, you're going to have to
see it in Las Vegas, because this isn't going to make it to Broadway. The music
is recorded. Beautifully composed, arranged and exquisitely balanced - but
recorded. The musician's unions in Paris and Toronto have lodged charges. Las
Vegas has several hotels that use canned notes, making Notre Dame De
Paris mountable in Vegas without the litigation.
FRANCIS RUIVIVAR plays Frollo. He
starred on Broadway in Miss Saigon, becoming the first Asian-American to
portray the Engineer, replacing Jonathan Pryce. He originated the role of Lord
Toranaga in Shogun.
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If you are a dance major, or have a deep
appreciation for acrobatic dancing, then you're going to marvel at the highly
trained dancers - many of whom should be getting hazard pay.
Those who
rank Andrew Lloyd Webber's Les Miserables or Phantom of the Opera
at the top of their personal preference list won't know what to make of this
show. There are no elaborate period costumes. Think sweats, karate outfits, The
Gap and anything that might be roaming around a high school hallway.
The
set - singular - is your basic rock climbing wall from the gym, cut into
sections and made moveable. The lighting effects are excellent and the
choreography inspired. The bell ringing scene being a highpoint. What this show
has is enormous talent taken straight from Broadway.
DOUG STORM is Quasimodo. He comes
directly from the Broadway cast of The Scarlet Pimpernel. Credits
include Les Miserables, The Civil War, Terrance Mann's Romeo & Juliet,
Chess and Jesus Christ Superstar.
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Bringing that combination to Glitzville
is taking quite a gamble - six the hard way.
Chicago the award
winning musical, has triumphed in Vegas at Mandalay Bay Resort because the
household name cast is regularly changed. It's a pleasure to see Chicago
more than once.
Notre Dame De Paris has no marquee names. It's
been a sell out in Toronto - one of the world's greatest theatre cities. The
fact that it's been a smash in Paris is a given. This is its first engagement in
English. Something may have been lost in the translation - like character
development. There are no supporting cast comic relief roles. Even all the cast
members look about the same - young. We have a Paris only inhabited by the 25 or
younger crowd. There are no songs delivered in a stand out, memorable fashion.
When Dr. Jekyll sings This Is The Moment in Broadway's Jekyll &
Hyde the house comes down. When Quasimodo sang God You Made The World All
Wrong, referring to the pain of his affliction, the audience responded with
polite applause.
The audience never really develops any empathy - or
hatred - for any character or situation. The audience needs to feel something
besides puzzlement. The opening night audience appreciation went to the
acrobatic skill of the dancers and in acknowledgment of the great singing
ability of the stars.
DAVID JENNINGS plays Clopin. His many
Broadway credits include in Ragtime, Miss Saigon, Godspell, Play On, Once
Upon A Mattress, Ain't Misbehavin and Guys & Dolls.
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The first show - Saturday - opening night
was a heavily papered house. The couples in front of me and to my right were
from Canada and friends of the producer. Many in the audience had connections
with the production. Even so, the response was tepid although there was a
standing ovation at the end. I overheard many Canadians indicate they preferred
the Canadian production, which we haven't seen.
Las Vegas has a large
contingent of Oriental and Spanish tourists with English as a second language,
who may not be able to follow the show and won't enjoy it unless they are crazy
about interpretative dance. To make this show succeed will be an interesting
challenge. The showroom of the Paris Hotel seats about 1200. There are two shows
a night 7:30p.m. and 10:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays, with two separate
casts. That's a lot of tickets - at $69.50 - for an avant guard production with
crib notes and no intermission to try to sell - week after week, month after
month.
Leaving the theater there was a couple behind me - age
approximately 50. The man said to his wife: "There were some great voices up
there on that stage. And, yes it was a musical. But, to tell you the truth I'd
rather have seen Tony Bennett."
It took a lot of innovative thinking and
courage to mount Notre Dame De Paris in Las Vegas. There is a lot of
talent up on the stage. That may not be enough.
JERRY HERMAN LEADS THEATER PANEL; SCHOLARSHIP FORMED IN HIS
NAME
Jerry Herman, composer of Mame, Hello
Dolly! La Cage Aux Folles among other Broadway hits, was the featured guest
artist in the three day Utah Theatre Association Conference, which ended last
night, at Dixie College, St. George, Utah.
JERRY HERMAN
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The conference theme was "The Best of
Times" taken from the lyrics of the stand out song from La Cage Aux
Folles. Proceeds from a concert which culminated the three day conference
will be used to establish a scholarship in Herman's name.
Panel
participants included Herman, Paige O'Hara, Karen Morrow, Jason Graae and Don
Pippin.
O'Hara, who sang the role of Belle in Disney's Beauty and the
Beast, appeared on Broadway as Fantine in Les Miserables and
performed in the national tour of The Mystery of Edwin Droos and the
Broadway revival of Showboat before moving to Las Vegas where she starred
in the Rockettes show at the Flamingo Hilton Hotel.
Graae is currently
featured as Chad in the Showtime series RudeAwakening and performed as
Houdini at the Shubert Theater in the Los Angeles production of Ragtime.
Karen Morrow has appeared on Broadway in The Grass Harp, If I Had a
Ball and The Selling of the President and off Broadway in The Boys
from Syracuse. Musical director Don Pippen rounded out the panel. In
addition to being musical director for many of Herman's works, he has had a
distinguished career that includes A Chorus Line, Woman of the
Year, and Cabaret. He was the first musical director to receive to
receive the Drama Desk Award "for consistently outstanding musical direction and
commitment to the theater."
DON PIPPEN
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The discussion and question and answer
period focused on the professional musical theater.
Keynote speaker for
the conference was James Christian, Weber State University's director of theater
studies. He also conduced a series of workshops which culminated in a cabaret
performance showcasing the students who participated in the
sessions.
College from Utah, Idaho, Colorado and Nevada took part in the
conference. The Utah Theatre Association is a coalition of representatives from
public education, higher education and community theaters throughout Utah. The
major aspect of the conference is giving high school seniors the opportunity to
audition for college and university scholarships.
Tony award winning
Herman is the only composer/lyricist in history to have had three musicals
running more than 1,500 consecutive performances on Broadway. Among his other
accomplishments are Dear World, Milk and Honey, Mack and Mabel, and
Jerry's Girls, a revue showcasing highlights from his previous hits. His
newest show will be Miss Spectacular,opening next year at the Mirage
Resort in Las Vegas.
LAS VEGAS WEALTH BENEFITS PERFORMING ARTS STUDENTS
Julliard, Yale and Columbia are about to get some competition
from the midwest.
Thanks to a gift of $18 million from the estate of a
guy who got lucky buying undeveloped Las Vegas real estate, the College of Fine
Arts at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln intends to jump to the top of the
pecking order for fine arts-theatre training institutions.
Christina M. Hixson, the sole trustee of
the Lied Foundation Trust announced last week that the latest bequest by the
Lied Foundation Trust, Las Vegas is an $18 million grant to the University of
Nebraska, Lincoln College of Fine and Performing Arts. "This has the potential
of moving this college literally to the top of the performing arts training
institutions in this country," announced college dean Richard Durst.
"We
are exceedingly grateful for the generosity Christina Hixson has shown to the
college," continued Durst. "Since the college was founded in 1993, we have
striven to offer an outstanding education in art, art history, theatre, dance
and music. This wonderful gift will create an even more effective learning
environment, continuing the highest professional standards in fine and
performing arts education. It will enable this college to take a place at the
pinnacle on fine arts training."
DANCE DEPARTMENT IN THE HIXSON-LIED
COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS
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Part of the money will be used to compete
with the top college fine arts departments in recruiting both faculty and
students.
The University Board of Regents also voted 8-0 to rename the
college in honor of the Lied Foundation and the sole trustee, Christina Hixson.
The college will be called the Hixson-Lied College of Fine and Performing Arts.
In the 131-year history of the University of Nebraska, this marks the first time
a college will bear the name of a supporter.
The late Ernest F. Lied was
a University of Nebraska graduate - class of 1927 - who became the owner of a
growing Buick dealership in Omaha. Lied hired Hixson as his secretary. The two
worked together in Omaha until the 1950s, when Lied moved to Las Vegas and began
investing in underdeveloped land purchased at low prices. Those investments grew
to extraordinary proportions. When Hixson joined Lied in Las Vegas as his
assistant in 1960, he had already developed shopping centers, homes and a hotel.
As Las Vegas began to expand, the land he owned continued to increase in
value.
Lied established the Lied Foundation Trust in Las Vegas in 1972,
in honor of his parents, Ernest M. And Ida K. Lied. Before his death in 1980 at
age 84, Lied named Hixson, his associate for more than 40 years, as the sole
trustee of the trust, and instructed her to sell the acquired land to benefit
the trust.
Proceeds from the Las Vegas land sale resulted in a $133
million trust.
According to reports presented at the regents meeting, the
money will be placed in an endowment fund to generate income for the Fine and
Performing Arts College. It is expected to be fully funded within four years. At
that time $900,000 a year is expected. The principal will be permanently
invested as a means of providing the annual income.
THE LIED CENTER FOR THE PERFORMING
ARTS
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Half of the income will go to programs at
the college and it's ancillary units including the Lied Center for the
Performing Arts, Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, the Mary Riepma Ross Film
Theater, the Lentz Center for Asian Culture and the Nebraska Repertory
Theater.
The other half will be divided equally; 25 percent will fund
faculty chairs and professorships to attract and retain leading national
scholars in fine and performing arts. The other 25 percent will be used for
student support, including student scholarships, fellowships, working grants and
research grants.
Endowing institutions of higher learning has been a
staple of the Lied Foundation.
In 1984, the Lied Center was built thanks
to a $10 challenge grant from the Lied Foundation. The Nebraska State
Legislature approved fund and individuals jumped on the donation bandwagon.
Construction of the 150,000 square foot, $20 million structure began in October,
1986, completed late in 1989. The Lied Center's premiere season was a tremendous
success with sellout performances by Isaac Stern, the Joffrey Ballet, the
Philadelphia Orchestra and the Broadway hit Les
Miserables.
Through various projects at the University of Nebraska,
Hixson has provided more than $47million in gifts from the Lied Foundation
Trust.
The Christina Hixson Opportunity Awards program was created at
Iowa State University when Hixon gave $5 million from the Lied Foundation Trust
of Las Vegas to a program that provides 100 full tuition awards to students from
Iowa. One student from each of Iowa's counties is provided with a $2,500
scholarship each year.
The Lied Foundation didn't forget the
city where the wealth was acquired. At the University of Nevada, Las Vegas there
is the Lied Institute for Real Estate Studies. During an anniversary celebration
held last May at the Venetian Hotel, Hixson was honored.
"The Institute
is forever grateful to Christian and the Lied Foundation Trust for sharing our
vision of becoming the premier academic real estate program in the Western Unite
States," said Larry Singer, chair of the Lied Institute Advisory
Committee.
"In 1992, Christina made the Lied Institute one of her
priorities by endowing the program at UNLV. As the chair of the Lied Institute's
Board of Governors, she continues to influence and steer the program's direction
academically, in community outreach and in the wise investment of the Lied
Institute Endowment. "
Hixson was also recognized by The Las Vegas
Review Journal as Best Humanitarian.
COWBOYS WAXING POETICALLY
"If I
can't drown my troubles, baby, I'll teach them how to swim."
"He's got a
way with woman, and he just got away with mine."
"Next time I fall in
love, I won't."
Inspirational words written by Country
Music Hall of Famer, Hank Thompson, 76, one of the great songwriting sages who
penned 180-proof songs with poignant lyrics that put a foam on
emotion.
Waxing poetically is a mainstay of the country/cowboy lifestyle,
with cowboy poetry roots going back to the 1860s.
The 16th annual Cowboy
Poetry Gathering is taking place in Elko, Nevada through Jan. 29. The event
brings together cattle people, rural folks, poets, musicians, gear makers, as
well as city folk who gather round the bunkhouse to participate in workshops -
ranging from blacksmithing to rawhide braiding, horsehair photography to ranch
cooking - poetry and music sessions, concerts and dances.
RED STEAGALL the official Cowboy Poet
Laureate of Texas entertains
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Three full days of performances by cowboy
poets and traditional western entertainers will include; Baxter Black, Red
Steagall, Ian Tyson, Joni Harmd, and Paul Zarzyski. Byron Price, Executive
Director of the Buffalo Bill Historical Museum in Cody, Wyoming, will give the
keynote address.
Special guests are the winners of the Quantas-Waltzing
Matilda Australian Bush Poetry Champions; Louise K. Dean from Hugheden,
Queensland, Australia; and Guy McLean who entertains guests at the Susan River
Homestead Ranch Resort in Queensland by riding his buckskin quarter horse
stallion, Nuggett, into the dining room and reciting poetry while guests eat
dinner.
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While there are more than 150 cowboy
poetry gatherings throughout the United States, the Elko Ho-down is the
granddaddy of them all. This year's gathering focuses on; The American Cowboy -
tough enough to survive the new millennium?
And for your Hank Thompson
fans, there is a 12-CD package of all his recordings available on Germany's Bear
Family label for approximately $200. That includes 320 songs and a hardcover
booklet.
APPLAUSE, APPLAUSE
THE PENUMBRA THEATER CO based in Minneapolis,
devoted to the work of African-American artists, is the winner of the $50,000
Jujamcyn Award for 1999. The prize, for artist development, will be presented to
them this week by Danny Glover.
MICHAEL MC DONALD former Doobie Brother, received the Yamaha Lifetime Achievement in
Musical Excellent Award. Tribute takes place Feb. 4 at the Shrine Auditorium,
L.A. The event will be hosted by Jeff Bridges with performances by Ray Charles,
Kenny Loggins, Steve Winwood and Patit LaBelle.
OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY
DONALD TRUMP intends to build an opulent
residential community and golf course in Henderson, Nevada announced Mayor Jim
Gibbons. "Donald Trump plans to build an upscale, master-planned community in
the city of Henderson that will bear his name," Gibbons said. Trumpville or
Donald's Delight is a 640-acre project on what is now Pago Pago Street. When
completed the development, which will have no more than 600 lots, will include
single family homes and golf villas. Expect lot prices to start in the $1
million range.
SWEET CHARITY
ANGIE DICKINSON and GREGORY PECK in Las Vegas last
Thursday for an Alzheimer's Benefit held during the grand opening of Wolfgang
Puck's latest eatery - Postrio - located inside the Venetian Hotel.
ANGIE DICKINSON
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Dickinson had been at the forefront of
Alzheimer benefits. Her older sister, Mary Lou Belmont, was diagnosed with the
disease in 1985 at the age of 55. At that time the actress pay $80 a day for
nurses to care for her sister. Angie took care of Mary Lou until the disease
progressed to the point that Angie was forced to place her beloved sister in a
home. At that time Dickinson announced that if she ever got the disease she'd
kill herself. Then she marshaled her energies to find a cure for
Alzheimer's.
At the benefit bad boy Robin Leach was emcee for the live
auction. Gaveled down was a dinner and private sex therapy lessons by Dr. Ruth
Weitheimer, who also attended. Also auctioned off was a walk-on part in Ally
McBeal and some enjoyer of gourmet food plunked down $50,000 for a private
dinner provided by Wolfgang Puck. Tom and Dick Smothers attended as did the Las
Vegas Greenspun published family, who are best buds with Bill Clinton and his
missus. All in all over $800,000 was raised.
HOPEFEST
2000 Bo Diddley, Chuck Berry, Billy Branch and the Sons of
the Blues, The Robert Cray Band, The Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band, The Staple
Singers, KoKo Taylor, and other special guests, Jan. 25 at the Riviera Theatre,
Chicago. Performance and VIP reception; proceeds benefit Chicago Coalition for
the Homeless and Willie Dixon's Blues Heaven Foundation.
ANOTHER OPENING, ANOTHER SHOW
OUR PLACE IN TIME by
Clare Coos premieres as part of Women's Project & Productions Theatre, NYC.
A collage of New York stories woven from the defining event of the last 50
years. The cast features Gena Bardwell, Elizabeth Hess, Jacqueline Knapp, Norman
Maxwell, Daniel McDonald, and Keith Randolph Smith. Sets by Narelle Sissons,
with costumes by Gail Copper-Hecht, Jane Cox on lights and Stefan Jacobs, sound.
Performance begin Wednesday, Jan. 26. The Women's Project & Productions is
the nation's preeminent non-profit Off-B'way theatre company dedicated to
producing and developing new plays by women. Founded in 1978 by Julia Miles, WPP
has produced over 100 plays by women playwrights and sponsored 400 readings and
workshops. In addition the Women's Project publishes anthologies of the plays
produced, and hosts conferences and panels on women in theatre.
KING JOHN by William Shakespeare, directed by
Karin Coonrod begins performances Jan. 25 at the American Place Theatre, NYC.
King John is a rarely produced and neglected play which is filled with
political acumen and depicts a world where expedience is more important than
honor. King John is Shakespeare's only play about the English medieval
history prior to the fall of Richard II. The plot line revolves around the
question of who is England's rightful heir. It chronicles the entire span of
John's turbulent reign, from his coronation in 1199 to his death in 1216 and
dramatizes timeless topics - the confict between church and state and
politicians driven by self-interest rather than public good. The cast includes
Ned Eisenberg in the title role, Derek Smith as The Bastard and Bruce Turk as
Louis, Glenn Fleshler, Nicholas Kepros, Michael Rogers, Craig Wroe, Myra Carter,
Michael Ray Escamilla, Katie MacNichol, Neil Maffin, Pamela Nyberg and Mark
Vietor. The creative team includes Douglas Stein sets; PK Wish costumes,
Christopher Akerlind lighting, Ben Neill composder/sound design, B. H. Barry
fight choreography and David Hale Flying Effects by Foy.
DEFENDING THE CAVEMAN opened on Broadway in
March 1995, ran two and on-half years, played 671 performances, and entered the
record books as the longest-running solo play in Broadway history. Written by
and starring Rob Becker, Defending the Caveman which hilariously explores
ways tht men and women struggle to relate, opens Jan. 24 at the Civic
Auditorium, Portland, Oregon in an engagement running through Jan. 30.
THE KEY The United States
premiere of Philip King's mystery-thriller about a famous actor who's wife is
discovered murdered in her bedroom. Opened Jan 21 at the Delray Beach Playhouse,
Delray Beach, Fl. Engagement runs through Feb. 6.
LITTLE ME Royal Palm Dinner Theatre, Boca
Raton, FL through Feb. 27
MISS SAIGON opens Jan 28 at the Morrison Center, Boise, ID. Performances
through Feb. 6.
CAMELOT Chester
Fritz Auditorium, Grand Forks, ND Jan. 29. Upcoming Victor/Victoria and
1776.
WHO'S WHERE
MARC
ANTHONY slated for a Feb. 17 performance, Rosemont Theatre,
Chicago. Tickets now on sale. $29.50-$49.50.
PAULETTE
WILLIAMS renowned back up singer for Marvin Gaye, Quincy
Jones, Luther Vandross, Patti LABelle, R Kelly, Mary J. Blidge, Aretha Franklin
steps out with her own band of soul. Joe's Pub, NYC Tuesday, Jan.
25.
JACK WAGNER who has a long list
of fans thanks to his roles on General Hospital and Melrose Place
makes his Broadway debut in the dual role of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in
Jekyll and Hyde beginning Jan. 25.
JERRY HADLEY
and BRIAN ZEGER in the first of a three part series of
performance chats with prominent classsical singers who are breaking the
boundaries. Opera stara Hadley and Zeger will each sing about 25 minutes which
will provide the context for conversations following the performance. Jan. 30,
Joe's Pub, NYC.
JAY LENO entertains
at Cesars Tahoe, NV Jan. 28-29
WAYNE NEWTONaccompanied by police escorts. rode his $360,000 Rolls Royce up to
the entrance of the Stardust Hotel, Las Vegas to throw a switch sending power to
the multi-million dollars sign turned on 33,000 lights. That renamed the hotel's
theater in his honor. Monday has also been dubbed Wayne Newton Day in Las Vegas
in honor of The Midnight Idol, whose grand opening Monday at the Stardust begins
an engagement running until Newton passes away from old age.
THE BACON BROTHERS, JEFFREY GAINES/FIVE POINTS SOUTH The Bacon Brothers - that would be Kevin and Michael Jan 26 Music
Hall, Birmingham, Alabama and then head into The Big Apple for their first big
time NYC concert - Town Hall, Friday, Jan. 28. Kevin is alsso the first
recipient of the Film Society of Lincoln Center's annual Young Friends of Film
Honors. At the presentation they'll screen his Telling Lies in America.
movie. Michael, of course, already has his own awards. He took home an Emmy for
his score for The Kennedys.
ZZ TOP AND LYNYRD
SKYNYRD marking their 30th anniversary, perform Tuesday, Jan
25, Pepsi Arena, Albany, NY.
THE MOODY BLUES Feb. 2-3 Plaza Theatre, Chicago.
JIM
STAFFORD who underwent laser throat surgery Jan. 9, to
remove a benign nodule on his vocal cords, expected to be able to open as
scheduled on Feb. 9 in Branson, MO. Stafford reported that his physicians told
him there were no complications and a complete recovery was expected. Until then
he'd been told to keep quiet.
THIS AND THAT
SWING! the original Broadway cast recording,
will be released by Sony Classical Records on Tuesday, Jan. 25. The vocalists of
Swing! include Ann Hampton Callway, Everett Bradley and Laura Benati,
with Casey MacGill. The all-singing, all-dancing musical plays at the St. James
Theatre, NYC.
SYLVESTER STALLONE in Las Vegas filming Get Carter a flick in which Sly plays
a casino collection - the person who goes after gamblers who owe casinos
money.
Mention BROADWAY TO VEGAS for Special
Consideration
Call (800) 942-9027
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Next Column:
January 30, 2000
Copyright: January 23, 2000. All Rights Reserved. Reviews,
Interviews, Commentary, Original Photographs from any Broadway To Vegas columns
may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, utilized as paid leads, or
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Laura Deni
U.S. Postal Address: Post
Office Box 60538, Las Vegas, NV 89160 Fax Number (702) 457-5173