"Chicago Hope" 10 p.m. Wednesday, April 29 and May 6. The Tony Award- winning actress plays a famous artist with an inoperable brain tumor who develops a friendship with Dr. Aaron Shutt (Adam Arkin) and "runs away" with him to California. CBS, Channel 62. Check your local listings. The Art Scene The Sybaris Gallery holds its ninth annual Basketry Invitational April 25- May 30. The opening reception for the group exhibition is 6-8 p.m. Sat- urday, April 25. Public welcome at no charge. The gallery and Cranbrook Academy of Art will sponsor a special symposium titled Universal Crossings: Linking Basketry, Music and Archi- tecture 7:30-10 p.m. Friday, April 24, and 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday, April 25, at the academy. $10-$25. The Sybaris Gallery, 202 East Third St., Royal Oak. (248) 544-3388. The Michigan Modernism Exposi- tion, featuring the best of 20th-centu- ry design, comes to the Southfield Civic Center 11 a.m.-9 p.m. Saturday, framed and unframed works. April 26- May 3 at the William M. Costick Activities Center, 28600 11 Mile Road, Farmington Hills. (248) 646-3707. Family Fun The Birmingham Temple welcomes Gemini in concert 11 a.m. Sunday, April 26. The sibling duo of Laz and San Slomovitz entertain with enchant- ing songs about children's everyday experiences. Free of charge. 28611 West Twelve Mile Road, Farmington Hills. (248) 477-8295. The Lyric Chamber Ensemble pre- sents Babar the Elephant 11:15 a.m. Sunday, April 26, at the Detroit Insti- tute of Arts Lecture Hall. Local TV personality Sonny Eliot will narrate, accompanied by pianist Louis Nagel. Brunch served at 10 a.m. in the Kresge Court. An art workshop for children ages 7-12 will be held in the DIA base- ment studio at 9:45 a.m. Concert only $18/$15, students and seniors/$10, under 12. Art workshop and concert: $15/child. Concert and brunch: $30/$27, students and seniors/$22, under 12. (248) 357-1111. Whatnot Sybaris Gallery opens its ninth annual Basketry Invitational on Saturday. April 25, and 12-5 p.m. Sunday, April 26. $8. A gala preview will be held 7- 10 p.m. Friday, April 24, to benefit the Art Deco Society with hors d'oeu- vres, wine and entertainment. $60. (248) 547-5716. A Spring Exhibit and Sale by the Farmington Artists Club features Bid on the wheels of your dreams at the Michigan International Classic Car Auction, April 24-26 at the Novi Expo Center. 4-10 p.m. Friday; 9 a.m.-10 p.m. Saturday; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday. $8/day, $12/three days. From 1-3 p.m. Saturday, April 25, Borders Book Shop hosts Dan Butler, who will sign his book Unsinkable: The Full Story of the RMS Titanic and present new research findings. 31150 Southfield Road, Birmingham. (248) 644-1515. Jewish poets Lynne Meredith Cohn, Mark Phillips and Susan Knoppow will read from their pub- lished collectiong'7:30 p.m. Wednes- day, April 29, during this special National Poetry Month celebration. Borders Books & Music, 34300 Woodward, Birmingham. (248) 203- 0005. It's "Final Exam Time" with the zany Ask The Professor panel in its final taping of the season. The panel will tape two live programs at Borders Books & Music, 30995 Orchard Lake Road, Farmington Hills. 7:30-9 p.m. Wednesday, April 29. Free and open to the public. The Girl Behind The Glasses F more than she studied and teamed or avid dirt diggers and up with Liz Mitchell to form a group gossip groupies, called Liz and Lisa. "Yes, Duncan singer/songwriter Lisa Sheik played guitar in our band for a Loeb's life leaves a lot to be year. That is his real name. I think" desired. "No stories about living in a "The big break" came when Ethan van in Alaska," she says. Hawke asked for a copy of her song Instead, she begins her life story "Stay (I Missed You)." He played it with a tale her mom tells ... for Ben Stiller, who used it in the "When my older brother, Ben, soundtrack for Reali Bites. "Stay" was born, my mother's obstetrician soared to No. 1 on the charts and told her to put him in front of the received a Grammy nomination. hi-fi and listen to classical music. He "Now even my parents believed I was became a classical musician. "I then asked my mother what she a musician," says Loeb. Loeb's newest album is Firecracker, made me listen to. She was a bit a name she likes because it makes the busier when I was born, so she cover image of her lying on the strapped me into my car seat as we ground seem a little more enigmatic drove around and listened to music and passionate, instead of vulnerable. on the radio. She said, 'Something "To me, the songs are stories. Some about a stairway to heaven.'" are very close to my heart and per- Loeb and her sister spent hours sonal. singing along with Olivia Newton-John, while immersed in music and per- formance lessons after school. She remembers play- ing roles as diverse as Muset- ta in La Boheme and Linus in You re A Good Man Charlie Brown at the local Jewish community center. Dad played the piano constantly, "when he wasn't at work looking in someone's colon," and subsequently, Lisa quit her piano lessons and yielded the keyboard to her brother, the world-class pianist in the family. Instead, she started playing the guitar, like her hero Andy Summers, of the Police. It was at sleep-away sum- Lisa Loeb performs Tuesday at the Royal Oak Music Theatre. mer camp that Lisa made her grand debut. 'Alma Doll McCutchin and I did our rendition "The best thing to do is just listen of 'Stairway to Heaven' on acoustic to the album and stare at the artwork guitars. Alma Doll taught me how to (yes, I'm back with the glasses)," says pick." Loeb. At age 15, when Lisa started hav- ing trouble remembering all of the Linda Bachrack John Cougar songs her guitar teacher was showing her, she began to write her own. "I bared my soul secretly in the songs," she says. Her cryptic Lisa Loeb performs at the attempts were inspired by her Royal Oak Music Theatre favorite rockers, the Cure, David Tuesday, April 28, at 8 p.m. Bowie and Jimi Hendrix. $22.50. 318 West Fourth "So then I went to Brown Univer- Street. (248) 546-7610. sity," says Loeb. She played music — 4/24 1998