-,-4, 34wrowassafwaRwmacce....,, * - COMPARE OUR LOW PRICES WITH ANY DELICATESSEN IN TOWN! MEAT TRAY STAR DELI I IS ONE OF THE BEST CARRY OUT ONLY RESTAURANTS IN AMERICA! Hours: Open is & Ent ertainment Not Your Father's Song Recital from page 37 $6,95 7 days from 7-10 per person SALAD TRAY $7 , 50 * Handcut Lox * Our Regular Tuna & Fat-Free Tuna Can't Be Beat! * Vegetarian Chopped Liver * Homemade Potato Salad & Coleslaw per person DAIRY TRAY $1113.99 per person STAR'S TRAYS CAN'T BE BEAT FOR QUALITY & PRICE! ON STAR'S BEAUTIFUL ALREADY On LOW-PRICED MEAT OR DAIRY TRAYS WITH THIS COUPON • Expires 3-31-06 • One Per Person • Not Good idays • 10 Person Minimum 24555 W. 12 MILE ROAD ‘, Just West of Telegraph Road .•Southfield 248.352* 7377 Three Mo' Tenors features two casts with three tenors each. farriig restaurant 'Broiled Grouper 'Stuffed Salmon 'Whitefish Almondine 'Stuffed Cantaloupe with Chicken or Tuna Breakfast Specials 7 days a week New Hours: Sunday-Thursday: 7-9 • Friday & Saturday: 7-10 29221 Northwestern Hwy. • Southfield, MI 48034 248-358-2353 PEKING DUCK COMBO FOR TWO! LOBSTER COMBO FOR TWO! 33.95 Includes: Includes: Peking Duck 11/21, 33 6,95 Whole Lobster, Chicken with Shrimp with - mixed vegetables, mixed vegetables, Shrimp with lobster sauce General Tao Chicken 1 1/4 pound "%, Soup, Spring Rolls, Soup, Spring Rolls, Duck Fried Rice Chicken Fried Rice -h Lobster $13.95 '44.0010 0 Chiv ■ C 5‘11( 0% OFF 1 everything With Coupon only. Excludes Lobster and Peking Duck Specials. I - Open 7 Days a Week From 1 lam to 12midnight Lunch Specials served from 11-3pm, 248.615.8866 • 248.615.8877 Mon-Sun 38259 West Ten Mile Road, Farmington Hills, MI 48335 087990 - Bar Available (Between Haggerty Road & Halsted Road) TRUST YOUR AFFAIR TO THE FINEST CATERER WE'LL BEAT YOUR BEST PRICE! Weddings • Bar/Bat Mitzvahs • Showers • Banquets Reunions • Anniversaries • Birthdays • Etc. We Cater at Most Synagogues, Temples, Hotels and the Halls Of Your Choice PHILIP TEWEL, Food & Beverage Director .1 1 248-661-4050 Farmington Hills 40 March 2 • 2006 CLASSIC CUISINE APProlvd (7ouncil ( )rihrelox Rabbis 9 ized there were many young black tenors whose operatic talents were enhanced by skills in gospel, rock and other forms of popular music — and who were probably a lot more com- fortable with these other genres than the "big three." Klausner saw in Three Mo' Tenors an opportunity to attract a wide audience while giving valuable exposure to tal- ented young performers. Like most other classical music and theater venues throughout the United States, the Los Angeles Music Center attracts mainly older, white, middle- to upper-class audiences, she says. Because Three Mo' Tenors combines so many genres, Klausner realized the show would bring in a new demo- graphic, "without losing the audience we have." The show features two casts of three tenors each. Because each of the singers has a somewhat different range of talents, each cast presents a slightly different show. Performing in Detroit will be Kenneth D. Alston Jr., Ramone Diggs, Marvin Scott, James Berger, Duane A. Moody and Phumzile Sojola. Klausner travels to every venue and tries to hear each cast at least once. "At our performances, we have kids standing at the lip of the stage, with their mouths open, looking up in awe she says. "We are hoping not only to entertain, but also to inspire. I keep looking at the Tiger Woods phe- nomenon — before Tiger Woods, black children never thought of play- ing golf." Each show starts with operatic selections and continues with jazz, blues, gospel, songs from musicals. Among the selections at any given performance are "Le Reve," from Massenet's opera Manon; "La Donna E Mobile," from Verdi's La Traviata; Sondheim's "Being Alive;' from the Broadway hit Company; the Marvin Gaye hit "Superstar"; "Minnie the Moocher," as popularized by Cab Calloway; the spiritual "No Way Tired"; and a "new school" program, with songs of Alicia Keys, Art Kelley and Usher. "Except for that segment, a lot of the music we do comes from the '60s; even the soul and rock music is from that era:' Klausner says. "People come out of this show feel- ing happy and joyous. We have what we consider a feast for the sour Er Three Mo' Tenors takes the stage at Detroit's Fisher Theatre 8 p.m. Tuesdays-Fridays, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays and 2 and 7:30 p.m. Sundays, March 7-26. Tickets are $27.50-$57.50. Information: (313) 872-1000 or www.NederlanderDetroit.com . Tickets: (248) 645-6666, www.ticketmaster.com or www.NederlanderDetroit.com . Groups of 12 or more can receive a discount by calling (313) 871-1132.