Friday, January 29, 2010

Honoring Ms M

Oh! What A Night. Thank You Bette!
Last night Dan and I celebrated an early Valentines Celebration.We attended Bette Midler's show at Ceasar's Palace. OMG! I hope you were able to see her show during her run. Her last show is this Friday. I can only say I hope she comes back to Vegas.
So a bit of trivia is called for:
Date of Birth:
1 December 1945, Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
Birth Name:
Bette Davis Midler
Nickname:
The Divine Miss M, Bathhouse Betty
Height:
5' 1" (1.55 m)
I was so surprised about her height. She looked so much taller on stage. I guess when you have that much self confidence you just seem to grow! A good idea for all of us to believe in.
Ok I will admit I did so good until she finished with "Wind Beneath My Wings" (Niagara Falls) Sniff! Could not hold the water works back, cried like a baby. (some of you got that reference didn't you?) lol.
I just have to take a trip down memory lane with her music & movies.
My favorite Bette Movie and Song; (1988) tear-jerker Beaches (1988).
#2, (1979), The Rose, for which she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Actress.
#3, (1991), For the Boys, she was so matched with James Caan in the WWII drama. And some of my favorite songs from that era are (she did a few in her live
performance in Vegas) So great.
#4, (1996), The First Wives Club, Goldie Hawn and Diane Keaton.
(What can I say she was so funny in this movie.)
#5, And finally, (2004), the remake of The Stepford Wives.
"Apart from her four Grammy awards, Bette Midler has also won four Golden Globes, one Tony Award, and three Emmy Awards, plus she has sold in excess of 15 million albums worldwide. Most recently, she toured with her sassy "Kiss My Brass" show, and is promoting her album "Bette Midler Sings the Rosemary Clooney Songbook".
Some more Trivia;

Performed her cabaret act at the famed gay men's club, The Continental Baths, in the 70s with Barry Manilow as her accompanist.
Worked at a Dole pineapple processing plant in Hawaii in her early years.
Her first big album "The Divine Miss M" was produced by Barry Manilow.
Graduated from Radford High School, Honolulu, Hawaii in 1963
Majored in drama at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.
Listed as one of twelve "Promising New Actors of 1979" in John Willis' Screen World, Vol. 31.
Sang with Tom Waits on "I Never Talk to Strangers" on his album "Foreign Affairs".
Was the final guest on "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson" (1962).
(I looked for her on Cohen's last show.)
Sang to Johnny Carson on his second-to-last show (The last show was taped highlights).
(I looked for her to be on Leno)
She appeared in the music video and sang in the choir on the song "We Are The World."
One child, daughter Sophie von Haselberg (b. 1986)
She performed a cover version of the song "Beast of Burden". She also appeared in a video of the song with Mick Jagger that was choreographed and cast by Lori Eastside.
Has brown eyes, hair is naturally blonde
Measurements: 36 1/2-25-36 (Source: Celebrity Sleuth magazine)
Ranked #51 on VH1's 100 Greatest Women of Rock N Roll
Won four Grammy awards including the 1973 Best New Artist and the prestigious Record of the Year in 1989 for the soaring rendition of her # 1 hit "Wind Beneath My Wings" from the movie Beaches (1988).
In 1974 she received a special Tony Award "for adding luster to the Broadway season."
Is named after Bette Davis and her sisters Susan and Judy are named after Susan Hayward and Judy Garland.
She is a member of Delta Phi Epsilon International Sorority.
When The American Film Institute announced "The 100 Years of the Greatest Songs" on June 22, 2004, two of her hits were selected: "Wind Beneath My Wings" from Beaches (1988) (#44), "The Rose" from The Rose (1979), (#83).
Her album "Bette Midler Sings the Rosemary Clooney Songbook" was originally titled "Rosemary for Remembrance". The name was changed just weeks before the album's September 30, 2003 release.
The last syllable of her first name is unpronounced because her mother thought that was how Bette Davis pronounced her name.
She is a huge fan and long time friend of the late singer Rosemary Clooney.
The role of Delores in Sister Act (1992) was originally written for her; however, she turned it down.
While Bette was on Broadway in "Fiddler on the Roof" (she played the character Tzeitel until 1969), her sister Judy visited New York City to see her perform and was tragically struck by a taxi and killed.
Graduated as valedictorian of her high school.
Can be seen in the crowd as an extra in Hawaii (1966) (1966) as a seasick passenger aboard a ship listening to a preacher, played by Max von Sydow. Midler was also hired for a small speaking role in the film and went to Los Angeles to film these scenes in a studio. Her scenes were cut from the final film. However, she used the money she earned to move to New York, where her career took off and she became a star.

She was awarded a Star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for Recording at 6922 Hollywood Boulevard in Hollywood, California.
Ex-girlfriend of Peter Riegert. They lived together in the 1970s.
Personal Quotes
I try not to drink too much, because when I'm drunk, I bite.
[on acting] You have to think you're the greatest thing since sliced bread, but know you're not.
[during a concert in Brisbane, Australia 2005] It's been 26 years since I was last here. Before my fans were all taking drugs; this time they're all taking medication!
The worst part of success is to try finding someone who is happy for you.
I always try to balance the light with the heavy - a few tears of human spirit in with the sequins and the fringes.
I bear no grudges. I have a mind that retains nothing.
Get the trash off the street and back on the stage where it belongs.
In Hawaii I was the chief chunker in a pineapple canning factory. I used to come home smelling like a compote.
Underneath all this drag I'm really a librarian, you know.
I wouldn't say I invented tack, but I definitely brought it to its present high popularity.
[Asked by Parade Magazine whether she will retire after her show in Las Vegas] I think so. I must say, my high kick is just as high as it ever was, thanks to tai chi. But everything is a bit slower. The mind - things don't stick the way they used to. I feel like I'm going out with a bang. It's something my husband and I have talked about. I certainly don't want to die in harness. I'm not one of those people.
I want world peace. Please. Just for my sake, before I go. I also hope that Meryl Streep has the good taste to step aside and let the rest of us have a crack ... but I know she won't. She has a really good agent. She's great, but I know there are some ladies behind her saying, 'Meryl, for God's sake, do you have to say yes to everything?'
I'm kind of healthy but has a little bit of arthritis, my eyes are a little shaky. I drank a little, I didn't do drugs to any great extent. I do get depressed but not like you do if you drink or do drugs. I have pretty bad melancholia, but I've found you can get rid of that by exercising. [I have therapy.] A lot of people don't love what they do and I do. I still love music and I love, love, love to dance. For most women - I can't speak for men - I'd say dancing is the key to happiness.
I love Barbara Hershey and Lainie Kazan. I had no idea Beaches (1988) was an 'uberweepie'! The nerve! It wasn't so bad. I co-produced it. It was a pretty damned good screenplay. I thought it was just another movie. I didn't think of it as a women's picture. I was so excited to be able to sing again and have a soundtrack.
Thank God for the gays. I don't know what would have happened but I know what did happen. Good for them and good for me.
I was riveting. Yes, it was a place where gay men met and had sex. I didn't see that. Someone sent me a picture showing me in a 1930s costume with my hair pulled back and all these cute young men in bathrobes watching me. It seemed very innocent. I would stand at the top of a little staircase with a towel round my head and act out whacked-out movie heroines. Patti LaBelle played there, too. I wasn't there long, but I was there long enough to make a splash, ha-ha.
I've never been to a sex orgy in my entire life. Studio 54 was way worse than the baths.
I'm glad my daughter has been [university educated]. I sometimes think I should go back to school to learn French and music, but who would have me?
I'm an open-space person. I'm not a believer in sprawl. I don't particularly care for postmodern architecture. I believe in solid fare and building fair. I'm green to the core. This group I run in New York bought 60 community gardens and helped another group to buy 55 in congested neighborhoods’. I'm doing a similar thing in Hawaii, but it's harder there, the tracts are so big and there are these things about road zoning, dams, reservoirs ...
My parents (mother Ruth a seamstress, father Fred a painter) were not encouraging. My father put everybody down. Yeah, it was a real drag but he had his moments. His saving grace was a wicked sense of humour. He was a good provider. They were a team. They were at Pearl Harbour, they knew hardship. My mum was supportive, she had a tinge of showbiz fever and named me and my sisters after Hollywood icons. My dad was like, 'Get a job'. But that gave me something to fight against.
[On growing up in Hawaii]: We were very poor, it was a hard-scrabble childhood, not particularly happy. The best part was nature, which is so intense there. The sky is bright blue, the clouds are puffy, the grass is lush, it feels like you can touch the stars. But the people were not very nice. I was a white kid in a mostly Asian neighborhood. You heard Hawaii was a great melting pot? Hooey. I had a very strong fantasy life. Sorry, what was the question? I'm bonkers. Where am I? Who am I? I love your socks.
I thought I would be an actorrrr. I thought I'd be Ethel Barrymore. I didn't know who she was, but she was my idea of an actorrrr. It seemed it would be more fun to be someone else rather than myself.
On desire: If somebody makes me laugh, I'm his slave for life


All of the aforementioned is from Bette's online Bio.








No comments: