90210's
Jamie
Walters
Rocks His
Way To
48067

ack Wagner. John Travolta. Bruce Willis.
Kathy Lee Gifford. The next thing you
know, Tim Allen's gonna want to sing, too.
TV stars have this thing about want-
g to be rock stars; maybe it's because they
spend too much time in the bright lights, but
without the screaming throngs of fans. What-
ever the reason, they seem to pursue this kind
of career diversity with alarming regularity.
The latest — Jamie Walters. A veteran of
FOX-TV's short-lived The Heights, he now
plays Donna's (Tori Spelling) abusing ex-
squeeze Ray on Beverly Hills 90210. Describ-
ing his music as "straightforward rock & roll,"
Walters also has an album, simply titled Jamie
Walters.
But the Boston-born Walters deserves a lit-
tle more respect than some of his musical TV
forebears. Before his acting days, he was a
Jimi Hendrix wanna-be. The Heights was a

show about a band at least, and it shot the
Walters-written "How Do You Talk To an An-
gel" to No. 1.
"If people listen to the album, they'll know
that I'm not just some actor with a hobby,"
Walters promises. Judge for yourself: He per-

forms at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 30, at the
Royal Oak Music Theatre, 318 W. Fourth
Street. Tickets are $17.50 general admission,
all ages. Call (313) 546-7610 or Ticketmas-
ter at (810) 645-6666 anytime.

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Weaving Out Loud: Sandra
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Young Curators Choose
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Stitched, Layered, Pieced:
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F'ainting With Fire: Pewabic
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The PaineWebber Collec-

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Thomas Cole: The Voyage
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Nature Observed, Nature
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31. The Detroit Institute of Arts.
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Birmingham Bloomfield

