'ENTERTAINMENT
Since 1939 1
TRAYS
FOR ALL OCCASIONS
OUR
SPECIALTY
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SPECIAL QUALITY PARTIES
UP TO 200
Remember . . . All Our Trays Include
A Beautiful Fruit Basket
Specializing In: Bar Mitzvahs, Sweet 16's,
Showers, Anniversaries, Retirement
Parties, Birthdays, Weddings, Etc.
Cakes Custom Styled
To Your Specifications.
Special Appetizer Parties Available
LOW BANQUET RATES
FOR ALL OCCASIONS
West Bloomfield
737-3890 967-3999 645-5288
yj
Casual Elegance
OPEN SUNDAYS
12 TO 8
I
Ac48,
Bingham Farms
Oak Park
871.1590
7618 Woodward Ave.
Restaurant
851-6577
6066 W. MAPLE, West of Orchard Lake Rd.
CARRY-OUT DEPT.g'sTAJI1
(F___ __R _E T __
RANT)
Featuring
• Pizza • Ribs • Greek Salads • Lasagna • Chicken • Sandwiches • Etc.
r-
E- 1 COUP " r --
i COUPONI
BUY ONE PIZZA
GET 2nd SAME
PIZZA ANY SIZE
$4.00
$2 OFF
CHICKEN TERIYAKI
FOR 2
FRENCH CUISINE & BANQUET HALLS
ii
(Reg. $12.95)
• GREEK SALAD
• BAG OF BREAD STICKS
Authentic
French Dining
Traditional
and
Contemporary
CARRY-OUT LOCATION ONLY
JILL'
LExpires Feb. 6, 1992
Alias
543 N. Main Street, River Square
Rochester
650-1390
FAMILY DINING
Homemade From Natural Ingredients
Dania and Ed Farah Invite You To Enjoy
American and Lebanese Cuisine
C/,
12 FOR 1 SPECIALSI
V ialma Z
FINE WING AND consup
411•11•1111111111111111111111111111
DISCOUNT TO SENIOR CITIZENS
FROM 3 p.m. to CLOSING
10 °A
(Not Good On 2 For 1 or Early Bird)
HOMEMADE PASTA AT II BEST
I CARRY-OUT & CATERING AVAILABLE
Proudly Presents
JAll PIANO & SHOW TUNES
EVERY TUES., FRI. & SAT.
OFF
Open For
Lunch & Dinner
Serving
DINNER
FOR 2
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY I
Valid Thru Jaw. 30, 1.9911
WEDNESDAY IS LIVE OPERA NIGHT
31735 Plymouth Road
For Reservations Call:
3 Blocks West of Merriman
Plymouth
261-2430
FRIDAY, JANUARY 24, 1992
Bangkok
1,.
27167 Greenfield, Just N. of 11 Mile
7 p.m. to 11 p.m.
Full Orders
Only
CARRY-OUT LOCATION ONLY
JILI
LExpires Feb. 6, 1992
AUTHENTIC
1
Thai Food
and
Cocktails
559.8222
Club
11:30 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mon. Thru Thurs. • 11:30 a.m. to 11 p.m. Fri. • 5 p.m. to 11 p.m. Sat.
OPEN SUNDAY 5 p.m TO 10 p.m.
29269 Southfield Road north of 12 Mile
In The Southfield Commons
569-1400
Conrad Birdie's pompadour.
"I think I have maybe 13-14
lines, tops," says Mr. Kudisch,
who grew sideburns for the
part. "Because I don't say
much, I have a lot of freedom
with other kinds of expres-
sion: walking, facial expres-
sions, singing. It's really
tough to stand up on the
stage and do nothing and let
that work for you!'
Although Birdie is in the ti-
tle of the show, the character
is considered a supporting
role, although he's crucial to
the witty script by Michael
Stewart and the score by
Charles Strouse and Lee
Adams.
Before Birdie is dispatched
to boot camp, his manager,
Albert, who is quitting show
business, decides to go out
with a bang by staging a
lucrative stunt that puts an
Ohio teenager named Kim
MacAfee on the receiving end
of one last civilian kiss from
Conrad — to be televised on
"The Ed Sullivan Show" via
remote from her hometown of
Sweet Apple.
What happens between
Albert, his clinging mother
and his girlfriend — to say
nothing of the confused
parents and kids of Sweet Ap-
ple — is what Bye Bye Birdie
is really all about.
Mr. Kudisch won the role
after auditioning twice for
casting directors who initial-
ly dismissed his resume
because it showed limited
musical credits.
For the first open audition,
he sang a non-Birdie song and
read from the script. When he
made it to the call-back audi-
tion a month later, he read for
Gene Saks and sang "Sin-
cere," one of the purposely sil-
ly rock songs from the score.
The next day he was told he
got the part.
In the show, Birdie sings
three songs: "Sincere," "A Lot
of Livin' lb Do" and the
hilarious "One Last Kiss,"
which stretches the word
"baby" into 14 syllables.
In the rock'n'roll perfor-
mance sequences, when Bir-
die is not in his street clothes,
Mr. Kudisch wears a gold
lame jumpsuit similar to the
getup actor Dick Gautier
wore in the Broadway
original.
"It fits tighter than my
underwear ever did," says Mr.
Kudisch. "I hate the outfit
because it's so tight and so.
hot — I can't breathe in the
thing. But it's everyone's
favorite because it's that total
Elvis kind of costume!'
Elvis, of course, didn't dress
that gaudily until the late
'60s and '70s, so where did the
gold lame idea come from in
1960?