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The Times Recorder from Zanesville, Ohio • 21

Location:
Zanesville, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
21
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

sr Friday, Jan. 6, 1989 Edited By Dawn Maxwell TV Listings For Jan. 6-12 JUIX. llllllMUlpWMiwiii 11 il IlliMfi 'MWM'MIEfl Pinky Lee 'Sugar Babies' Here Brass Ensemble Slated To Bring show features all the elements of old-time vaudeville dancing girls, corny jokes, comedy, singing and lots of dancing. Babies is, frankly, one long smile," says Variety magazine.

"A magical musical trip down burlesque's memory lane that everyone should take, suggest the Chicago Tribune. Tickets for 1989's initial show at the auditorium are $17 and $15 for reserved seating, $12 for general admission. They are available at Secrest Auditorium, Sears at Colony Square, Muskingum College Book Store and Sights and Sounds (north and south). Additional information is available by calling the Secrest Auditorium at 454-6851. Pinky Lee, 8 p.m.

Thursday, Jan. 26, Secrest Auditorium. Tickets available at Secrest, Sears, both locations of Sights and Sounds and Muskingum College bookstore. REGION Cincinnati Boat, Sport and Travel Show: Jan. 7-15, Conven-tion Center, downtown Cincinnati.

Buckeye Classic Dog Sled Race: 10 a.m. Saturday and Sunday, Jan. 7-8, Punderson State Park, Geauga County. Elvis: A Musical Celebration: Tuesday, Jan. 10-Thursday, Jan.

12, Capitol Music Hall, Wheeling, W.Va. Tickets available at Capitol Music Hall box office. Cheap Trick: With The House of Lords, 7:30 p.m. Friday, Jan. 13, Vets Memorial, Columbus.

Tickets available at Ticketmas-ter outlets, Ohio Center and Mershon box offices and Buzzards Nest Records or by calling 221-1414. Hocking Hills Winter Hike: Saturday, Jan. 21, Hocking Hills State Park, Logan. For information, contact Ric Queen, 385-6841. Longhorn World Championship Rodeo: Friday, Jan.

27-Sunday, Jan. 29, Richfield Coliseum. Tickets available by calling 1-80O-362-04OO. will perform a varied repertoire consisting of music from the Baroque period to the 20th century. Admission is by season membership, which will be sold at the door.

A season member Cleveland Lyric Brass will present the second concert of the series sponsored by Zanesville Concert Association at 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 8, at Secrest Audi torium. Cleveland Lyric Brass In the tradition of old-time burlesque, "Sugar Babies" will be staged at 8 p.m. Thursday, Jan.

26, at Secrest Auditorium. The third installment in "Showcase '88" at the auditorium, "Sugar Babies" features an all-star Broadway cast led by vaudeville great Pinky Lee. The Tony Award-winning musical comedy ran five years on Broadway. Since then, it has toured coast to coast headlined by such greats as Mickey Roo-ney and Ann Miller. Musical numbers featured in the nostalgic revue include: "A Good Old Burlesque Show," "Let Me Be Your Sugar Baby," "Down At The Gaiety Burlesque," and "I Just Want To Be A Song and Dance Man." The LOCAL Square Dancing: 9 p.m.

to midnight every Saturday' at Mudgetts Danceland. No alcohol permitted. Cleveland Lyric Brass: 3 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 8, Secrest Auditorium, sponsored by Zanesville Concert Association.

Admission by season membership. Country Music in the Barn: Sunday, Jan. 8, Roger's Auction Barn, Adamsville. Good-N-Country performing at 12:30 p.m., with Green River Band performing at 1:30 p.m. Those attending should take chairs.

No alcohol is permitted. Refreshments served by Adamsville Fire Department and Emergency Squad. January Show: Zanesville Art Center. Open house, 1-5 p.m. Sunday, Jan.

8, closing 1-5 p.m. Sunday, Jan. 29. Show includes drawings and paintings by Phillip Wilson, photography by Cliff McCarthy and hand-colored photography by Anna Star-vaggi. Gallery open 1-5 p.m.

daily except Mondays and holidays. "Directors on Art show featuring works of Dr. Charles Dietz of Zanesville and Richard Bauer of Columbus, through January at Gallery Upstairs, 16 W. Broadway, Granville. "Sugar Starring Travel Broadening Horizons Kathy Mattea Sunday ship gives admission to the two remaining concerts of the season.

The remaining concerts are the Arion Consort on Feb. 12 and Budapest Symphony Orchestra on March 17. wedding to songwriter Jon vezner. In 1978, she dropped out of West Virginia University and headed for Nashville after she found herself spending more time with a bluegrass band than on her studies. "One of my band members was moving there, so I tagged along," she said.

It eventually proved to have been the right choice: "It was a town where I could flourish. I wasn't threatened by its size." She had the usual round of jobs waitress and secretary, then tour guide at the Country Music Hall of Fame. She was singing demonstration tapes and advertising jingles when she signed with the Mercury label in 1983. A year later, her self-titled first album yielded three well-received singles and she was on her way. flDDgQfsj For Singer By DAWN MENDEZ Associated Press Writer CHARLESTON, W.Va.

(AP) Singer Kathy Mattea's heart will always belong to her native West Virginia even though she's strayed far from home in the decade she's become a country music star. Mattea, from Cross Lanes, W.Va., had one of country music's biggest hits in 1988, "18 Wheels A Dozen Roses." "I find traveling broadens the horizons," she said from Los Angeles where she was taping the TV show "Hollywood Squares." "But the funny thing is I ve developed a stronger sense of home that's a real comfort." She's lived for 10 years in Nashville, where she has been working on her fifth album, scheduled to be in the stores next spring. Clearly happy with her thriving music career, she regrets only being too busy to visit her family and friends as much as she would like: "My success hasn't made a difference with my friends. I've only lost touch with the ones who would have drifted away anyway." It took years of work and six failed nominations before the 28-year-old Mattea "made it" in October with her recent Country Music Association award for single of the year for "18 Wheels A Dozen Roses." The event was a thrilling culmination to a year of rising record sales, growing concert audiences on a tour headlined by George Strait and her personal favorite her Valentine's Day Features Record Reviews Page 2 Robbie Nevil Page 3 'Working Girl' -Page 5 Turntable Tips Page 15 Television Puzzle Page 16 Listings Daily Listings Page 2 Friday Listings Pages 3-4 Saturday Listings Pages 5-7 Sunday Listings Pages 7-10 Monday Listings Pages 10-11 Tuesday 12-13 Wednesday Listings Pages 13-14 Thursday Listings Pages 15-16.

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1885-2024