ENTERTAINMENT • , ' o 1 i 'ss 0 1 5 fp...74 ...e,- ,. f.it N.# \., ‘. i 1 , .., „ WI . '` "t ii, C,I,, W • 11% 11,,, , , * hi" tr , 116. 4, - ... ", : ,,.. to , ',4.# 1, ,, , • 4,.. / - \ .,v . , t , _ . • , , ,- Ott 4f 0 ,,,,/ ,1 ,..A. 0 ,..) :,), l' e, w . w.f.., ` V . . ci i, • \ ,.. if I) -et .2, '",.■■ • s .4*, 1 6 V ,,,.'-'-' <,.....- 1, .s. 4t, ----.), / i - i / .„, ,..,''''' *4 — ittott•it -a * * 14, ,,, i - . 0 - .-., „), // i ft \ • . • 1, t 6 .,.. -- "4 --- sa gr AI, 4. e 4 "a ..'"•,, 4/07 4 40 " `` \ \N Nra". - i 1 \ % ft, • i '40.1' ''''',.' '''''''' Comedienne Norma Zager enjoys a good joke. ~ Don't Call Me Totie Although many compare her to the late Totie Fields, Norma Zager has her own comedy style JUDY MARX Special to The Jewish News hen I thank God for all my blessings, I count my sense of humor high among them:' says local 11111 comedienne Norma Zager. The only female regular at Mark Ridley's Comedy Castle in Berkley, Zager goes on stage each week with one thought uppermost in her mind — to have a good time. With her Totie Fields image — "she was my idol" — audiences can tell before the end of her opening joke that Zager is at home under the night club lights. Few realize that - two years ago, this funny lady had never even considered performing in public. It wasn't that young Norma Weitz, a '64 graduate of Mumford High School, wasn't a funny little girl. "I wasn't one of those quiet, shy types who came out of the closet. They us- ed to call me 'giggles.' I remember my father saying, 'What, are you some kind of comedian?' Well, now I guess I have to say I was, Dad." But Zager admits that it still surprises her folks when they realize that she has become a full-fledged stand-up come- dienne. "No, 'shocked' is probably closer to the truth." Understandably, the entertain- ment would hardly entered into Zager's career plans when she began her college education at Michigan State University. Four years later, with a bachelor's degree in jour- nalism from Wayne State University, she was "determined to become another Brenda Starr. "But when I started working I saw that this wasn't exactly Watergate. The realization that I was in the wrong business for me came when I was sitting at 10 p.m. one night at a council meeting in Hun- tington Woods listening to a debate on which side of the street to put a sewer drain. After an hour and a half, I said to myself, "I don't think this is what I had in mind when I went into this profession! " Married 16 years to Michael Zager, Zager says that he has the real sense of humor in the family. "He'll do 20 minutes at the check-out counter at K-Mart.' Likewise, daughter Laurie, 14, and son, Brad, are both witty, according to their mom. "Laurie's very artistic, and Brad is already a comedy groupie. He knows all the comics at the club, and he knows their routines. He's a real comedy connoisseur at age nine!" Zager took an early retirement after one year on the Oak Park News. "When Laurie was born, my career went out the window. I wanted to stay home with her!' By the late 70's, she found, however, that she missed writing and began free lancing. At heart, she was a '60's kid, and she decided that life for her was more than cookie baking. "I owe that realization directly to the movie, The Big Chill." Zager came home from the theater and decided that she didn't want to let the plans she'd made for herself in college slip quietly away. "I began doing a humor column, and I finally got it off the ground in The Jewish News. It was also in the Palm Beach Jewish World, but I couldn't get it syndicated. The world wasn't ready for a Jewish Erma Bombeck." "A lot of people feel real funny about being Jewish," Zager observes. "They think Jews should move into the mainstream. The Jewish Mother should be dead and buried. All these stereotypes are bad. Well, I disagree wholeheartedly. When gentile kids I GOING PLACES I WEEK OF NOV. 13-19 SPECIAL EVENTS NORTH CENTRAL COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER Mercury Theatre, Six Mile Rd., Detroit, Rebecca, 8 p.m. Tuesday, 7 p.m. champaign reception, admission to benefit mental health center, 369-1720. GIRLSTOWN FOUNDATION Pontiac Silverdome, Pontiac, charity auction, 8 p.m. today, admission, 399-1112. MUSIC MICHIGAN OPERA THEATRE Fisher Theatre, Detroit, Man of La Mancha, 8 p.m. today and Saturday, admission, 874-SING. FOLKTOWN Southfield Civic Center, Parks and Recreation Building, 26000 Evergreen, Loreena McKennitt, 8 p.m. Saturday, admission, 855-9848. DETROIT SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA Pontiac Central High School Auditorium, Pontiac, concert, 8 p.m. today; Trenton High School Auditorium, 8 p.m. Saturday, admission, 567-9000 ext. 63. CONCERTS-IN-THE-GARDEN First Center Office Plaza, 26913 Northwestern, Southfield, Prism Saxophone Quartet, noon Sunday, admission, 357-1111. POWER SERIES University of Michigan, Power Center, Ann Arbor, La Rondine, 8 p.m. Thursday, admission, 764-0450. BRUNCH WITH BACH Detroit Institute of Arts, Verdehr Trio, 10 and 11:30 a.m. Sunday, admission, 832-2730. UNIVERSITY MUSICAL SOCIETY University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Rackham Auditorium, Balalaika Orchestra, 8 p.m. Saturday, admission, 764-2538. METROPOLITAN YOUTH SYMPHONY Southfield High School, Lahser Rd., Southfield, concert, 8 p.m. Saturday, admission, 477-2894. DETROIT SYMPHONY LEAGUE Radisson Hotel Plaza, Southfield, Alexander Zonjic, "Fall Fling '87," 6 p.m. Wednesday, admission, 652-6805. CARE CENTERS OF MICHIGAN Continued on Page 71 THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 69