ENTERTAINMENT IF or more than 25 now, years Margelee Greene- Ruby has been en- tertaining Detroit- area audiences. You may have heard the soprano singing with the Bel Canto Choral Society, the Shaarey Zedek Choir and at concerts around town for Jewish organiza- tions. Or you may have seen her in Michigan Opera Theater productions like Carmen, La Boheme, and many others. Earlier, she entertained au- diences in her native Chicago — at the Lyric Opera Com- pany there, or as part of the Ernie McLean Quintet, per- forming at night spots in the Windy City. As a teenager, she sang at lakeside summer concerts sponsored by the Chicago Tribune. A photo in one of her scrapbooks shows the perky redhead as she guested on the popular "Welcome Traveler" radio show (broadcast out of Chicago in the 1940s), along with film star, John Garfield. The oldest of six children, her interest in music surfac- ed early, says the "60-ish" grandmother of two. "When I was growing up, my mother saw to it that we all had piano lessons. The piano teacher would come to our house and give all six of us the lessons, starting with me, the oldest, and finishing up with the youngest." She started school a year early, skipped "a grade or two," and ended up graduating from a Chicago high school when she was only 15. Set apart from her classmates because of her young age, Ruby says she put all of her energies into study- ing as she was growing up — especially the study of music — and aspired, always, to becoming a singer. "When I was very, very young, I used to listen to all the Metropolitan Opera pro- ductions on radio. Patrice Munsel was a favorite. I knew she was only 16 when she was accepted into the Metropoli- tan, and I thought myself, `there's hope for me.' "In high school, my choral teacher took a liking to me," says Ruby who comes from a family that includes a large number of cantors. "That's how I got to know that I had singing talent. But I had always loved music. When I was in high school, I also played the baritone horn in the concert band, and the trombone in the school or- chestra. At our graduation ceremonies, I conducted the orchestra." (Today, Ruby plays , ----11111111 11. 1 In her native Chicago, Ruby sang in operatic productions. A Musical Gem Margelee Green-Ruby has enjoyed singing and playing music since her youth. VICTORIA BELYEU DIAZ Special to The Jewish News "just about everything but the strings.") Having been awarded a scholarship, the aspiring col- oratura entered Chicago Musical College and Roosevelt University Workshop when she was bare- ly 16, and studied voice with Nellie Gardini, director of the voice department there. Before she was 18, the energetic performer, in addi- tion to her studies, was holding down a full-time job as a file clerk in a U.S. govern- ment war bonds office in Chicago. After marriage at 18, she dropped out of school, but con- tinued private voice lessons, and also performed part-time in the Chicago area, once giv- ing a concert only a few days before the birth of her second child. (Her accompanist at that concert was Cantor Sholem Kalib, now a professor of music at Eastern Michigan University.) "I can remember often tak- ing the babies downtown with me, putting them on a couple of blankets, and taking my lesson while they slept," she. says. "I used to take them with me when I was doing some photographic modeling downtown, too. They got ac- customed to sitting on the sidelines while I worked." The family's move to Detroit during the 1960s was an adjustment she found rather difficult to make. "I had no family here," she says, recalling the move. "In fact, I didn't know anybody here. I felt very depressed. To get out of the depression I felt, I went back to my music. Lit- tle by little, I got involved — with the choir at Shaarey Zedek, which I still sing with; with the Bel Canto Choral Society, which I'm also still involved with; and with the Michigan Opera Theater." Her debut with the MOT in La Traviata was followed by supporting roles in Boris Godunov, La Boheme, The Pearl Fishers, Regina, Carmen, The Student Prince and Show Boat, with such stars as Jerome Hines, Bren- da Booser and Andreas Poulimenos. (Ruby, who is 5'2", remembers once having to climb onto a high chair in order to kiss the towering Hines good-bye at the com- pany's farewell party after the close of Boris Godunov in 1974.) Always interested in all aspects of theater, she's even tried her hand as make-up ar- tist during the run of Bizet's The Pearl Fishers, lerarning the techniques pretty much on-the-spot, before and during each performance, and bet- . ' I GOING PLACES I WEEK OF MAY 12-18 SPECIAL EVENTS NEW DETROIT One Kennedy Square, "Ages of Apparel," fashion and food of many nations, today, free, 496-2000. DETROIT INSTITUTE OF ARTS 5200 Woodward, "Kin Arthur's Birthday Party," today, admission, 833-796 - • • ey, KevArti 2593 Berkley, today hough May tW arY mission, 5421090 205 W. Long Lake, ty, The Dining Room, Troy, *tod ay S*11:42* 3 p .4 HARRISON 14*--7 SCHOOL 29995 W. :gwelve Mile Rd., Bye Bye Birdie, 7:30 p.m,- Thursday an May 19kadmissibn 477-331A. - THE PERFORMANCE NETWORK 458 N. Crooks, Cl4wson, West End Pektuctions, EAC'emities, 8 p.m. Thursday through May 27, 2 p.m. May 28, admission, 435-7859. BILBERRY THEATRE Wayne State University, Detroit, The Night Thoreau Spent In Jail, 8 p.m. Saturday; Working, Monday through May 20; Romeo and Juliet, 11 a.m. Wednesday, admission, 577-2972. PONTIAC THEATRE IV Pontiac Northern High School, 1051 Arlene, Pontiac, Baby, 8 p.m. today and Saturday and May 19 and May 20, admission, 338-2903. THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 61