Grand Open ii Bramble wrote the book for the show's 1980 debut. Bramble directs the cur- rent production, with Randy Skinner as choreographer. Al Dubin The music was created for the 42nd Street movie by a couple of journey- man Warner Bros. tunesmiths — a Catholic with three long Italian names shortened to Harry Warren, and portly Al Dubin. Their combined careers spanned six decades. Warren and Dubin wrote "We're in the Money," "You're Getting To Be a Habit With Me," "Lullaby of Broadway," "I Only Have Eyes for You," "About a Quarter to Nine," "Shuffle Off to Buffalo" and the title number, danced down a flight of steps. With other lyricists, Warren later wrote "Chattanooga Choo Choo," 'Atchison, Topeka & the Santa Fe" and "You'll Never Know." Dubin's family fled the anti-Semitic Russia of the late 1800s to Switzerland, where he was born, then to America, where his father became a doctor and his mother, a science teacher. Young Dubin cut classes to see musical shows, and completed high school in a private seminary — hardly appropriate for a Jew. But his love for alcohol, girls and partying resulted in his expulsion a few days before graduation. He sold his first successful song at age 25, but always seemed to be in debt -- often selling lyrics for $25- $50. He wrote "Among My Souvenirs" on the back of a utility bill and sold it to get some quick cash for a stake in a poker game. Dubin teamed up with Warren in 1932 and they penned 60 hit songs over six years, mainly for Warner Bros. movies. Dubin later col- laborated with other composers, including Victor Herbert, and died in 1945 of barbiturate poisoning at age 52. ribk Motoe Belcher, to form a popular husband-and-wife dance duo. As the curtain came down on 42nd Street's opening night in 1980, the cast, crew and audience realized they had a smash hit, mainly because of the exciting tap dance num- bers. As is often the case in Broadway musicals with sim- plistic plots, the dancing once again had stolen the show in what critics agreed was an "old-fashioned dancing specta- cle." But producer David Merrick stunned everyone by announcing that Champion had died that afternoon of a rare blood cancer. He received a Tony Award posthumously. of Novi Our specialities: iana Whitefidi Daub& Skettwit Sfvtimp & Scat-op Salmon ate/xi/3 Neuf: clituth St* Steak All Entrees are served with the Vegetables of the Day and your choice of Redskin Potato, Baked Potato, Rice. - Sweet Potato Fries or French Fries. 0 95 Lunches start at $ 6 25 Dinners start at $ 1 it • Full Service Bar • Open for Lunch S Dinner • 7 Days a Week Tap Dancing Mon.-Sat. 11-10 • Sunday 11-9 Blair Ross plays Dorothy Brock, the aging leading lady. With speed, agility and improvisation, the precise, per- cussive footwork of the tap dancer has dazzled audiences for generations and is now more pop- ular than ever. "Tap dancing hit a low period sever- al years ago as hip-hop and modern jazz sort of took over, and tap became a losing proposition in dance schools," observed Barbara Fink, owner of Miss Barbara's Dance Centre in West Bloomfield and Birmingham. Fink started giving dance lessons in her basement as a youngster and has been teaching for almost 50 years. "Tap made a resurgence in recent years and is big again with youngsters and adults ... especially what we call rhythm tap, which was made popular by dancers like Savion Glover and Gregory Hines. Our students feel it's `cool' again to take tap." The dancers in the Masonic Temple production range in age from 18 to the mid-40s and go through the rigor- ous production numbers for eight per- formances a week. They "must take good care of themselves and stay in Gower Champion shape," said Renee Rimland, 33, the Jewish production stage manager for 42nd Street's original choreographer, Gower Champion, firmly believed that the company. "Physical therapy is an ongoing dance scenes should tell a story that fit experience for them because of the the plot and be fully integrated into the story line. He accomplished this in sprains and minor bumps and bruises that occur throughout the run," she 42nd Street and his other Broadway said. "I keep reminding them of the shows and also as a director-choreogra- real-life application of some of the pher in many movie musicals. lines in the production ... We have a Champion was noted for his intense show to do,' 'You'll be a star' and 'The concentration and demanding show must go on.'" rehearsals. A native of Illinois, Raised in the Kendall section of Champion began dancing profession- Miami, Fla., Rimland danced in musi- ally at age 15, and later teamed with a cals as a youngster and attended the ballet teacher's daughter, Marge 47690 Grand River Ave. • Novi NW Corner of Bedk & Grand River • Look for the Home Cepa 24E3.347 7020 .0 University of Pennsylvania and the famous Juilliard School in New York, studying stage management. She has managed operas, ballets and many Broadway musicals, including Les Miserables, Phantom of the Opera, Evita, Cabaret and Jekyll Hyde. A devout Conservative Jew, she finds it to be difficult observing the holidays while touring, but she once arranged a Passover seder in Greensboro, N.C. "The few Jews in the crew and many of the gentiles in the cast attended to learn more about each other and our various customs," she said. Besides the dancers, the 42nd Street cast includes Blair Ross as Dorothy Brock, the aging leading lady; Catherine Wreford as Peggy Sawyer, the "star-is-born" character; and Patrick Ryan Sullivan as Julian Marsh, the tough producer — a role played in the original Broadway production by current NBC-TV's Law and Order detective Jerry Orbach. 0 ' or he MI? 0. -f total fooci bll • no cam out • • iot good .pith urn other offer • • exp 12131:02 • Private RoomiCatering/Deli -s-ery ❑ 42nd Street runs Oct. 22 through Nov. 10 at Masonic Temple Theatre, 500 Temple Ave., Detroit. Show times are 8 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday, 2 p.m. Saturday-Sunday, and 7:30 p.m. Sunday. $32-$69. Advance tick- ets at Fisher Theatre box office; Masonic Temple Theatre box office on show days only, or TicketMaster, (248) 645-6666. Information: (313) 872-1000. Since 1985 2000 Town Center, Suite 98 101 /2 Mile on Evergreen Road (248) 358-1911 http://vvvvw.musashi-intl.com, OPEN . T ll.A .vs A \VEEK Click Shop jowl .com molutammk, 10/18 2002 89