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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Midler opens her splashy gig in Vegas

By Ryan Nakashima
Associated Press

Hawaii news photo - The Honolulu Advertiser

Entertainer Bette Midler has signed up for a 2 1/2-year stay at Caesars Palace.

JAE C. HONG | Associated Press

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LAS VEGAS — Bette Midler unfurled the big feather boa Wednesday in her Las Vegas show, "The Showgirl Must Go On," a sassy musical reprise of the best hits and worst jokes from her decades in show biz.

The glitzy production, backed by a 13-piece orchestra and 22 rhinestone-studded showgirls, opens with a computer-animated sequence of a whirlwind barreling down the Las Vegas Strip. Ninety minutes later, it ends with Midler towering high above stage on a platform and singing her Grammy-winning "Wind Beneath My Wings."

In between, a boisterous Midler intersperses her songs with plenty of gutter-ball humor, as seen during a full-dress rehearsal at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace. Midler entered the stage in a sparkly silver pantsuit atop a burro before breaking into a classic Las Vegas-style showgirl number.

Tired and panting afterward, she kept the crowd laughing.

"Oh my God, I'm exhausted," she said in a mock collapse. "See, that's what happens when you do your own singing."

Hers is to be a 2 1/2-year, 200-show engagement at the stage once filled by Celine Dion, before she embarked on a worldwide tour for her album, "Taking Chances."

It marks the 62-year-old Midler's first major live performance run since her "Kiss My Brass" tour in Australia in 2005.

Midler worked with gusto, recreating such hits as the song that launched her career, "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy," from 1973, and many others: "Do You Want to Dance?" (1972), "From a Distance" (1990) and even an upbeat bola-swinging version of "My Way."

She frequently joked at the size of the stage, at one point equating a walk to stage right to moving into another ZIP code. "If I have to cross this stage one more time, I'll have a stroke," she said.

Midler had a half-dozen costume changes and broke out many of the signature characters from over the years, such as Dolores DeLago, the singing mermaid on a wheelchair, and the crass joke-teller in a nightgown, Soph. She also poked fun at today's troubled young celebrities, including Britney Spears and Spears' pregnant teenage sister, Jamie Lynn, before declaring herself the front-runner as a trashy party girl.

Along with the "Caesars Salad Girls" roster of dancers ("each and every one a tomato"), Midler got backup singing from three recent graduates of a famed school, for which she was pleased to spell the acronym, the Staggering Harlette Institute of Technology.

Various forms of the Harlettes have long been backup singers for the Divine Miss M, who got her start in show business in the 1966 movie epic "Hawaii." She later landed on Broadway in "Fidler on the Roof" and in the 1970s, thrilled the gay clientele at New York's Continental Baths with her trashy sass and Barry Manilow on piano. She went on to win four Grammys, an Emmy and star in movies such as "Beaches," "Ruthless People" and "The Stepford Wives."

The $95 million Colosseum was custom-made for Dion's run, which began in March 2003, played to nearly 3 million fans and grossed more than $400 million over five years.

For Midler, the stage was shortened and its rake, or incline toward the audience, was flattened, allowing more than 100 seats to be added, at a cost of $5 million.

Nearly $20 million was spent on the production, and more than that was guaranteed for Midler herself, said John Meglen, the president of Concerts West, an AEG Live company that books talent for Caesars.

Midler shares the Colosseum with Elton John on different nights and then with Cher, starting May 6.

Tickets, ranging from $95-$250 for Midler's first run of 19 shows, are more than 90 percent sold through mid-March, Meglen said, and are available through Ticketmaster. She performs five nights a week.

"She was right, we're paying her a lot of money. But you know, Bette's worth it," he said.

• • •

Middler hangs on to Island ties

While she does not enjoy performing before a hometown audience, Bette Midler continues to maintain her Island ties.

She owns property on Kaua'i — though last year, she made headlines when more than 230 trees on a 58,000-foot parcel of the North Shore were cut down with proper permits — and she has championed a green life-style, advocating recycling yard trimmings for compost and a green environment in New York, where she does charitable work.

Her Hulaween fundraiser every October — drawing a celebrity crowd, to raise money for the New York Restoration Project to restore and revitalize neglected neighborhood parks — often has Island connections. The title of the event, obviously, borrows from her Hawai'i lineage; she has ordered Big Island Candies sweets for party favors.

While never known for doing hula, Midler has spoofed Maori dances in her classic spectacles on stage, doing the New Zealand poi-ball dance in authentic costume.

Then there was the time she serenaded longtime fan and friend Johnny Carson, when he retired from the "Tonight" show. She presented Carson a red carnation lei — retaining the Hawai'i tradition of lei-giving at special occasions — and sang "One More for My Baby," leaving him teary-eyed.

Before her yet-to-bloom fame as the Divine Miss M, Midler graduated from Radford High School, studied drama at the University of Hawai'i-Manoa, appeared in UH and Manoa Valley Theatre productions and had a small role in the Island-filmed "Hawaii" film based on the James Michener novel.

Her most recent reach for her Island roots was last year, when she recorded Andy Anderson's "Mele Kalikimaka" Christmas classic, for her "Cool Yule" CD, which earned her a Grammy nomination.

Her mother, Ruth Midler, was an avid Bette Davis fan, so she named the last of three daughters after the film star. However, she pronounced Bette like "bet," not "Betty," giving her show-biz distinction.

— Wayne Harada