, Hangin' with the Honiegirls , Rap star Queen Latifah joins her Sesame Street Satari Sisters (I-r), Prairie Dawn and Merry w.onster, as they search high and low for the missing letter "0", Latifah's performance with the muppets airs on Sesa�e Street Monday, February 1 on P�, (check local listings.) , :complled by Ka�cene �ark DCPA (Detroit Center of Performing Arts) 2-3 Sojourner Truth - Powel1ul Woman Orator - Sojourner Truth knew her mission was from God. She walked from podium to podium across New England, the Eastern Seaboard, the South, and Midwest, proclaiming Truth about Negro rights, women's rights and human rights. A Sojourner for Truth, she finally settled In Battle Creek, MI. 2-4 Martin Luther King - I Have A Dream (the moral leader of the Civil Rights Movement) - His dream and the Civil Rights Movement are powerfully portrayed on our stage with the songs, the speeches, and the people who marched with him. See Rosa Parks says "No". Expenence the marches and the historic events reenacted. See MLK and his dream come alive. Feb. 25, 1993: (313/577-2972) , SUNDAY, JAN� 'I WEDNESDAY, . 31 _j FEB. 3 .-cr PHANTOM OF THE OPERA - By '------ ....1 ;Gaston Leroux, the musical tells the 'c NOTHING SACRED - Is a free 'story of the hideously deformed adaptation of the 1862 Russian novel Phantom who lurks beneath the stage about the tensions between young 01 the "'aris Opera, exercising a reign rebels and their parents In over all Its occupants, He falls pre-Revolutionary Russia. _Instantly In love with the young Performances held at 'the Hilberry : soprano Christine, devoting himself Theatre (WSU campus). Runs thru ; to creating a new star for the Opera Feb. 8, 1993. For tickets : by nurturing her extraordinary talents (313/577 -2972). ,by employing all the skills at his . disposal. "Phantom of the Opere" opens at the Masonic Temple 'Theatre, 500 Temple Avenue In : Detroit. Runs thru Feb. 14, 1993. Ticket/Information call (313/832-5900), THURSDAY, 'FEB. 4 � MADE IN AMERICA - Thts vast, new multl-rnedla exhibition showcases the actual 18th, 19th and 20th century machines that transformed Americans' lives by revolutionizing the production of power and· goods. Video presentations and photographs Introduce, visitors to the men and women behind the machln Henry Ford Museum (3131271-1620). � THE HOT L BALTIMORE - The WSU Department of Theatre wIll present Lantord Wilson's 'Tne Hot L Baltimore" at the Bonstelle Theatre, Feb. 5-14, 1993. Tickets are $8. (313/577- 2960). mu ic means t them as Atrican-: American . Teach th m th hi t ry of African and Afri an-American mu ic. Create a "Black Mu 1 Wire Service" (mak up a name) a 3 cia room project. end th ar­ tiel in the "wire service" to your local Black newspaper. I thi i don, mu. i and p pular eultur hi. torians (many of whom hopefully l i k c 'Havel ck clson and Mt .hacl o nzs I z, wh wrote the br ok "Bring t c oi ': uide 0 R, P Music and Hip-Hop ulturc", Random House - Will I ' Black) will hav other ur ·e. on hip-hop music and Afri an meri nth, n either The Sourc r Vibe. Thi way we will 10 e the (cir ulati n) attle but will have w n the (hi t ric I) w: r. [_I_M_O_N�D_A_1 y_,_F_E_B_.----l - DCPA, 8041 Harper Ave at Van Dyke (313/884,-5741 or 3131642-6383) . · t'lIMAGING ALTERNATIVES: WAR 'OR PEACE? - A permanent collection from February 1 thru March 11, 1993 at he Swords into · Plowshare's Peace Cen er & Gallery, , 33 E Adams. For information : (965-5422). : t't THE VIOLENT UNIVERSE :_ A : forty-five minute program every Tues. • and Thurs. Feb. 1 thru March 25, ; 1993, at 7pm. The program Is , narrated by veteran actor Vincent Price. This sky show takes • planetarium visitors on a tour of -things that go bump in the night." ·Locatlon: The Carr-Fles Planetarium 01 MeC, 221 S. Quarterllne Rd in ,Muskegon. For Information (777 -0289), HIP-HOP continued from 81, FRIDAY, FEB. 6 ., THE DRESSER - I s an affectionate, funny, and moving portrait 01 life backstage. Ronald Harwood's The Dresser runs Jan. 29 thru Feb. 14 in the Earl DA Smith Theatre on the U of 0 Mercy's McNichols campus. For Information, 'a brochure or reservations (313/993-1130) . �'( LET IT SNOW - gives a glimpse Into how early Detroiters entertained themselves on those days when It was wiser to remain Indoors. This exhibition runs thru March, 1993 at the OHM, 5401 Woodward. (833-1805). ; I__";;T,"---U_E_S_D_A_Y_,, -= _ FEB. 2 '.,'c THE REAL THING - is about Intel ligen and sophistlca ed people : caught up In the irresis ible bonds of 'love and marriage and the ,unrelenting pain of adultery. Tom 'Stoppard's comedy of fidelity and I in dellty, opens at t e Hilberry Thea re (WSU campus) rind runs hru n n y By TUREKA TURK BENNY AND EWS 4 . __.; , . So what dr ve Benny Andrews to the depth of artistry that he had within? uld it hav been his moth r ' piritcd mott , "You can't quit!" Or maybe it was his own "patron", the Mason family. While uch artists as Lang ton Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, and Dr. Ala n Locke were bankroJled by the generous patr nes of the Negro rts, Park avenue's Char­ I tte Ma n. Andrews was: part another Ma on gr up. Andrews and his family ndurcd thc lot of sharccr pping and were referred to as "the Mason igger" by the 10- cal.. Andr w. I went to scht 01 five month' ut of the y ar and served the remaining month working in thesw ltering heat and one ntrat­ ing on the day he w uld be rid of the "Mason i 1ger" label. 'DREW R ED a scholarship t ,F Valley State college in Geor ra, which gave way to at ndane t th Art In­ stitutc of hicago. fund d by the 0.1. Bill. It was In I 54 when Benny ndrews finally he an life as a protcs: Ion, I arti s t. It \ a: also the arne year ndrcw bcuarr his struggle to be accept d a an Am ri an artist and not a painting :' egro". He was o. traciz d in hice The world wa not r ady t accept a Black man rnakin COllages. New Yorker w: ntcd to know, in 1 5<., wh he '': poiled" therwisc 10 d pc mnn 1\; ith s raps otburlap and other backwood materials. Andr w. paintin T o! Bla .k fe . 'S as well ( S whit � ones was ob .urc. Even wh n hrs f( mily was hun ry and his babies had no milk ndrcws nev .r succumb xl to the mainstream id 'as of the art world. H . urvi cd dcspit 'his lew York de lcr' advice, "The life ot the arti. t is he rd." ndr 'WS, cspc -j, 1- ly his v ork, n .vcr quite fit into the me in tr am of th ' art \ rid. Yet, to lay, the avant-garde arti r hard w rk has paid otf. H is now rcpr scntcd In th m jor In tituti ns that tormerly rcjc t d him and in private , llection ar und th world. The f rm r country b .y i now, e ccordi n to th ' .w ork Tim s Pre ented by Tite Centers f. (POt;'TIAC) (CLARKSTON) (NORTHVILLE) •