ALAN ABRA/vIS Special to the Jewish News Photos by Kris ta F lt T Margery Krevsky, left, and partn&liarriett Fuller have changed the auto shows. wo Bloomfield Township women who rewrote the manual for depicting women at auto shows have been honored by Women in Communication with the 1999 Diamond Award for their efforts for the advancement of women. Harriett Fuller and Margery Krevsky are co-presidents of Productions Plus, a nationwide talent agency headquartered in Bingham Farms with gross annual revenues in excess of $6 million. The Wall Street Journal credited the pair with convincing automobile companies to make one of the most drastic and important model changeovers in history. The women who model at auto shows are now product specialists. Their job is to communicate useful information to consumers. And men have joined their ranks. But Fuller and Krevsky's business is based on much more than just auto shows — although they provide the talent for 84 of them, including Detroit's North American International Auto Show. Productions Plus is among the top three suppliers of talent to auto shows in the country. They also book talent for hundreds of other events through their spe- cial events and entertainment department, mainly for blue chip corporate clients like MGM Casinos, DaimlerChrysler, Toyota, Nissan, Infiniti, Izuzu, Mercedes, Volvo, IBM, MCI and Pepsi Cola. "A corporation will come to us," said Krevsky, and they may be auto- motive people who want product specialists to tour around the country for up to nine months. We may have another automotive company that does 'ride and drives,' and wants a six-month time frame. "Right now we're doing a Toyota golf skills event that is traveling around the country for a year-and-a-half," said Krevsky. Productions Plus has nearly 4,000 names of "talent" in their computers. They match individuals' qualifications to the client's needs. The agency collects a percentage fee from the client for services such as et0.42,.. coordinating the project, booking the talent, auditioning and wardrobe services. A percentage is also deducted from the talent for coordi- nating their end of the business. That includes such factors as tio wardrobe fittings and insurance and, said Krevsky, "prob- lem solvinab • Agency commissions vary depending 4f; upon the scope, time frame and the project. "Zoze, Earlier this spring, Fuller and Krevsky P>iz began the 41-e th e selection process for MGM Grandettes, the goodwill ambassadors who will greet and entertain guests when MGM Grand Detroit opens its temporary casi- no this summer. The Grandettes will eventually go on to the permanent Detroit hotel/casino/entertainment complex, scheduled to be the largest in the world, which MGM will open in 2003. Several weeks earlier, hundreds of wanna-be Grandettes responded to Fuller and Krevsky's advertisements in Detroit's daily papers. The candi- dates ranged from working mothers to graduate students. Those selected had to squeeze themselves into the figure-revealing uniform of the Grandettes. But Fuller and Krevsky said MGM's choices were being predicated on more than beauty. "MGM is different because they are not looking for freelance actors and actresses. They want full-time people ... Many of them will be able to sing, dance, even be a ventriloquist," said Krevsky. Said Fuller, "If they have the talent, if they have that sparking MGM ; ling a ismnd o i ustr, 6/2 19' Detroit Jewish News 51