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Trash
With Flash
Unknown
Special
thanks to Ronni Jensen for sharing this article
The
costumes - sequins and satins from the rubbish bins of recent history -
suggest a high school prom queen masquerading as a tart. The songs are
renovated memories from as far back as the '20s: rockers like Do You
Want to Dance" and Leader of the Pack, smoky laments like
Am I Blue?, hubba hubba novelties like the Andrews Sisters' Boogie Woogie
Bugle Boy. The stage presence is an exuberantly selfaware parody of camp
nostalgia and vulgarity: "Now here's another blasto from the pasto!
You're gonna like this one 'cuz I shake my tits a lot!"
As a formula for a performance by a pop singer, it sounds - well, dubious.
The kind of thing that might catch on, say, with a minor cult
surrounding some blatantly hip homosexual nightclub. Which is exactly
what happened to singer Bette Midler 2 1/2 years ago, when she billed
herself as "The Divine Miss M" and began doing such an act at
Manhattan's Continental Baths, a gaily liberated Turkish bath that
imports outside entertainment on weekends. But since then, Midler has
left the Continental Baths far behind, and her brand of "trash with
flash," as she identifies it, has made her a rising pop star of
national scope.
Sellout Audience. Her first LP for Atlantic Records has sold 750,000
since its release last November; her second, just completed, will be
released in October. Her income from records, concerts and club dates
last year was approximately a quarter of a million dollars, and is
expected to be much more this year. Last week, starting a 32 city tour,
she drew a sellout crowd of 10,000 in Columbia, Md., most of whom, by
the end of the show, were standing on everything from plastic Spring-O-Lators
to rhinestone-studded roller skates to pay her tribute. A few days
later, at the Mississippi River Festival in Edwardsville, Ill., another
sellout audience of 4,500 stamped and roared for nearly three hours for
Miss M and her group, the Harlettes.
In Edwardsville, the orange-frizzed, troll-sized (5 ft. I in.) Midler
hit the stage like a cartoon of a cyclone. "She's here," she
assured her audience. "The Divine Miss M is here." Actually,
she was here, there and all over the stage at once - leaping, squatting,
strutting, eyes popping, cakewalking at treble speed, as if she were
strobe-lit from the inside. Midler has, as the French say, a world on
her balcony, and it threatened to topple right out of her purple satin
slip as she flounced across the stage to snipe at a mix-up by her band
with dime store hauteur: "This act is shabbay. I'm telling you;
tray shabbay!"
Midler has been compared to everything from Dorothy Parker in drag to
the entire chorus line of beruffled hippos in Fantasia, and she shows
traces of a dozen other singers: Streisand's nose and extraordinary head
tones, Garland's saturation emotions and devoted homosexual following,
Fanny Brice's waifish vulnerability, Joplin's floozy eleganza in attire
and her tendency to egg audiences on to hysteria. But Miss M's secret is
that she is not really like those others: she is acting like them.
"I just try to have a good time and let the audience in on the
secret," she says. "It's like giving a party and I am the
Grande Hostesse. I always wanted to be Gertrude Stein and have a
salon."
"Bette looks at her act as if it were a scene from a play,"
notes ex-Harlette Gail Kantor, and she stages it as carefully as any
director. She chooses all her own material, which arranger Barry Manilow
then revs up to Midler's energy level - a level, notes a friend. "about that of World War
II." Most of her patter, seemingly so spontaneous, is carefully drafted with the aid of gag writers. "If
I am really cooking, I cook," she explains, "but if I'm not,
it is very important to give the semblance of cooking. That's what an
act is."
Very Helen Morgan. Offstage, in her velvet and chintz-laden Greenwich
Village apartment, the self-styled "last of the real tacky
ladies" is nothing of the sort. Bette (pronounced Bet) Midler is a
nearly homely, exceedingly bright jeans and-T-shirted young woman. The
"divine" will not, of course, discuss her age, but Midler is
approximately 30. She was born in Honolulu, where her father was a house
painter employed by the Navy. "I was an ugly, fat little Jewish girl with
problems." she recounts. "I kept trying to be like everybody
else, but on me nothing worked."
After
a year as a drama major at the University of Hawaii, she got a bit part
in the film Hawaii and used the profits to pay her way to New York.
Supporting herself by selling ladies' gloves in a Manhattan department
store, she took (and still takes) lessons in everything - voice, dance,
piano, acrobatics, acting. She spent three years on Broadway in the
chorus and later as the daughter Tzeitel in Fiddler on the Roof, singing
after the show in small showcase nightclubs. "She started out very
serious and dramatic, very Helen Morgan," says Talent Manager Bill
Hennessey, one of her former comedy writers and a close friend.
"Once she went to the Baths, the Divine Miss M came to the
surface."
"The more outrageous I was, the more they liked it," says
Midler. "It loosened me up." Able mimic Midler also learned to
dish it out in the bathhouse customers' own argot, and today, her
homosexual in-jokes seem to amuse everybody. Even with straight
audiences, she can limp-wrist a laugh with a precisely dropped
"Bitch!"
Since the divine Miss M is so completely a creation of Midler's, the
question arises: When will it become an idea whose time has passed? Will
Midler move on to a more straightforward singing career? To dramatic
acting? So far, she has confined herself to the sort of cryptic hint
that she dropped to a New Year's Eve concert audience in New York.
"I hope you stay with me, even when I don't always do what you want
me to," she said. "Next year you won't even recognize
me." A St. Louis reporter asked her last week where she would like
to be a year from now. Miss M replied, "I would like to be the
sanitation commissioner of New York City."
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