ENTERTAINMENT CATERS TO YOUR EVERY NEED Burns • Company Parties • Bar & Bat Mitzvahs * Featuring Chef John Szegedi • All Occasions Let the experts plan your party Continued from preceding page TEENS — WE WANT YOU! Beg. Nov. 21, every Friday Nite is TEEN NITE • Dance Contests • Prizes • Theme Parties ASK ABOUT OUR TEEN NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY Call Kim, Banquet Mgr. 851-2990 or 531-7371 THANKSGIVING - FE ASTX 8 Person Minimum On Trays VALID ON MEAT OR FISH TRAYS 1 COUPON PER CUSTOMER Expires 1-5-86 ki n or the at Hills home. Pick up a traditonal whole turkey dinner prepared to perfec- tion by our catering staff for your enjoyment at home. Or come in with the family and enjoy our dining room menu or holiday buffet. Either way, a Bloomfield Hills tradition. all/ FRANKLIN SHOPPING PLAZA • Kings tep 29145 NORTHWESTERN AT 12 MILE. Tray Catering For All Occasions Inn Woodward at Long Lake Road • Bloomfield Hills • 642-0100 ■ How to live with someone who's living with cancer. When one person gets cancer, everyone in the family ON THE GRILL FAMILY DINING „Fr IT'S ALL NEW OPEN HEARTH COOKING Fresh Seafood Daily Fresh Handcut Steaks Feature Of The Week—Sunday, Nov. 23 Thru Thurs., Nov. 27 Broiled Lake Superior WHITE FISH Includes: Salad, Vegetable & Bread Basket Thanksgiving Reservations Being Taken. Open 12 to 8 $ 9 0 8 9 5 Children's Menu Available 27815 Middlebelt at 12 Mile • Farmington Hills • 64 Friday, November 21, 1986 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 851-8222 . suffers. Nobody knows better than wt.- do how much help and understanding is needed. That's why our service and rehabili- tation programs emphasize the whole family, not just the cancer patient. Among our regular services we provide information and guidance to patients and families,. transport patients to and from treatment, supply home care items and assist patients in their return to everyday life. Life is what concerns us. The life of cancer patients. The lives of their families. So you can see we are even more than the research organization we are so well known to he. No one faces cancer alone. AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY' • ner in a family of 12. I went into show business and the others went to school." In fact, he began singing in the streets, saloons and ferry boats at age seven with the Pee Wee Quartet. He struggled with a con- stantly changing act until 1923, when he teamed up with Gracie Allen, then an unemployed 17-year-old Irish-American actress and daughter of a song-and-dance man. They performed five times a day in Vaudeville, living out of a trunk. Initially, Burns was the comic and Gracie "the straight man," but they re- versed roles after the first performance — when she drew all the laughs. Burns, with his raspy voice and dry delivery, and the scatter- brained Gracie were perfect foils. They were married in 1926. They first entered the de- veloping medium of radio as guests on Eddie Cantor's pro- gram in 1931. Their audience appeal was great, and they were signed to appear on the Rudy Vallee and Guy Lom- bardo shows. The next year, they signed for their own CBS program, and they were regulars on radio and TV until Gracie retired in 1958. Her death, as well as that of comedian Jack Benny, were the biggest blows in Burns' life. "Jack was my best friend for 55 years. He was always great," Burns said. Benny had reciprocal feel- ings. "Everything George says makes me laugh. He is one of the funniest men in show business," he said. Ironically, Benny's death was indirectly responsible for the resurgence of Burns' career, for it was Burns who inherited from Benny the role of Al Lewis in the 1975 movie The Sunshine Boys. For his performance as the old-time vaudevillian, Burns became the oldest winner of the Oscar for best supporting actor. Next came the title role in Oh God in 1977. The Warner Brothers smash won him a new generation of young fans. He played in two other Oh God movies, which prompted him to wave his ever-present cigar and re- mark, "I played God three times without makeup." How does the doctor feel about his smoking ten cigars a day? "The doctor died," re- plied Burns. His best selling book "How To Live To Be 100 or More" is dedicated to the widows of his last six doctors. Will Burns retire? "Never," he declared. "What are you gonna do except sit there and play with your cuticles? I re- tired during all those years I worked with Gracie," he said. "Comedians don't quit. If they hear one laugh they keep going, which is exactly what I intend to do."