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Bette
Midler: She Brings It All Back Home
Let's
Hear It Big For Bette
George
Engebretson
SHOWTIME AT THE HIC arena: house lights dim and the last
stragglers are fumbling for their seats as on stage bursts a five-foot
female tower of power. Orange curls bouncing above elastic features,
she is constant animation; dancing, posturing and shimmying her way into
another concert.
But this September night's show is more than just another
concert. For Bette Midler, formerly of Aiea, the weekend of Sept. 7 and
8 is a public homecoming - a chance to finally strut her stuff for the local
folks who've watched from afar as her singing career soared like a
skyrocket on New Year's Eve.
For the girl who made it from the pineapple cannery to the
Philharmonic, that career now includes club dates, national tours, a
pair of albums, a Newsweek cover and three upcoming ABC
television specials. And, though her smoky voice and outrageous brand
of entertainment are familiar to millions, this is Bette's first chance
to bring it all back home.
“I’m going to pull out all the stops for Honolulu,"
says Bette. “I’m going to wear more sequins per square inch than
ever before."
Will she do her New York show for the hometowners?
"Sure - don't you think they'd like it?
But I'll do my pidgin English number and I think I should do some of
those trashy Hawaiian songs like Maunawili Boy and When Hila Hattie
Does the Hila Hop and The Cockeyed Mayor."
This will be Hawaiian music as never heard before.
Onstage, the local-girl-made-good is all wild arm-waving and
suggestive slinking - a heady mixture of vamp and camp. Dressed in
Salvation Army gold lame or gaudy white satin, face painted, as someone
has noted, for the last days of the Weimar Republic, she comes on
strong: "I'm the last of the tacky women - trash with flash!"
Backed by a quartet of musicians, Bette (pronounced Bet, she
says, because that's the way her mother thought Miss Davis pronounced
it) unleashes an electric barrage of songs.
From the Andrew Sisters to Leon Russell: rock, blues, swing,
oldies but goodies.
"It's not what you sing that matters," she's said.
"It's the fact that you love what you do that makes you hot."
The Shangri Las, the Dixie Cups, Patti Page; all are
recalled. Her ability to recreate the musical mood of days gone by is
uncanny. She sings Old Cape Cod and Martin Block and the
Make-Believe Ballroom come alive. Then into Leader of the Pack,
Chattanooga Choo-Choo, or two of her biggest hits, Do You Wanna
Dance? and Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy. All woven together with
her own brand of raunchy comedy.
The Divine Miss M, as her rabid fans have dubbed her, exudes
more New York than Honolulu which is understandable since Fun City has
been home for nearly a decade.
"She's the biggest thing here ever," exults Wendy
Morris, Bette's New York publicist. "She's so popular you can
hardly get near her concerts. We get ticket requests from all over and
people on the street even imitate her - the way she talks and the things she says. She's so
busy, I have to spend all day just taking care of Bette Midler
business."
These
days, it seems, nearly everyone has heard of Bette; everyone, that is,
but Mayor Frank Fasi. "When we wrote to your mayor about her
homecoming," said Miss Morris, "he wrote back and asked,
'Who's she?’ He called her Betty."
For the cover subject of last month's Ms. and Playboy on
the Scene magazines, it all started right here by
the battleship-gray waters of Pearl Harbor.
Back in the '50s, home was the converted barracks of Halawa
Housing, where funny-looking, frizzy-haired little Bette found herself
one of the only haole
kids in
gradeschool. Her father
was a housepainter for the Navy and, for the six Midlers, life was
something less than luxurious.
"Growing up in Hawaii," she reminisced, "I
had fancies about the South Seas. But there was no romance, no moon of
Manakoora where we lived."
For three summers she packed pineapple for Del Monte and,
for old times sake, Ms. Morris tried to line up her Honolulu press
conference on a packing table, inexplicably at Dole rather than Del
Monte.
Whoooooooooomyaaaaaaaaaak came Bette's roaring hoarse
laugh as this reporter told her Dole had declined. Her publicist had
forgotten to tell her of this great press agent's dream.
"Whoooooooooomyaaaaaaaaaaaak, it's
the wildest idea I ever heard of. The greatest! "
Even in those pine-packin' days, the life of the celebrity
had its appeal. "I used to call people 'dahling.' 'Oh, my deah,' I
would say." From there, apparently, it was a natural progression
into drama and speech at Radford High where she was senior class
president.
The acting bug persisted, and after graduating in '63, she
spent a year in drama at the University, then snared her first
theatrical job, a bit part as a seasick missionary wife in Michener's Hawaii.
The part was small, but the pay was good, good enough to take her to
the Big Apple and a seedy room in the Broadway Central Hotel, a move
that proved beneficial to her breath control. "I developed a lot of
wind," she said, "running from all manner of strange
people."
Her father was not enthusiastic about her stage career.
"He wanted me to be a secretary - I think he still does," says
Bette. "But my mother thinks what I'm doing is great."
After roaming the village - go-go dancing,
waiting tables and working kiddie shows – she found herself in the
Broadway production of Fiddler on the Roof. For three years Bette
sang in the chorus and played Tzeitel, Tevye's No.1 daughter. Then came
restlessness.
"I came to New York to have a career, not to be in one
show," she told the New York Times. "I thought 'time to
move' and I had a bunch of experiences that related to that move. I was
getting very high and I was with people who were brilliant and they were
flashing things across my brain. I was getting freaked out on everything
that was going on, so I just started singing."
And taking acting lessons. It was a teacher at these studios
who turned her on to the singing job at the Continental Baths, a
homosexual health spa and cabaret on Manhattan's West Side. The
"tubs," as she calls this somewhat unusual hangout for a
Jewish girl from Aiea, turned out to be her career catapult.
"I wouldn't trade a minute of it," Bette said.
"The tubs encouraged me to explore satire and the audience there
wouldn't settle for half-ass. If I'd kept my distance they'd have lost
interest because there were too many other things going on in the
building that were more fun."
Making a big splash in the tubs, her popularity pyramided.
From fruit stand to supermarket she went, growing into a cult idol of
New York's underground chic - and of national television
audiences.
First David Frost, then Johnny Carson began boosting her on
their talk-shows. As something of a regular on the Tonight Show, Bette
became a heroine of high camp, dressed in tacky black lace, chattering
absurdities, singing with the Doc Severinson Orchestra and making
occasional references to life in Hawaii. After a year and a half with
Carson & Co., she found herself playing such showcases as Las
Vegas' Sahara Hotel, Chicago's Mr. Kelly's, Los Angeles' Troubadour and
Upstairs at the Downstairs and the Bitter End in New York City.
She was signed by Atlantic Records, cutting her first
album, The Divine Miss M, last year and another this summer.
And on New Year's Eve, she sold out both performances at New York's
Philharmonic Hall in Lincoln Center. This year, she has embarked on
major tours; one earlier this summer, around some of the Western states
and another, starting last month, which finally brings her to the HIC
stage.
Her sequined tawdriness is sometimes left in New York when
Bette goes on the road. "I don't dress up at all in some
towns," she said. "The people couldn't deal with it. They'd
say, 'What? What?' In New York, I have a huge following of the most
wonderful gay creatures and when we do it, we all do it together, so
it's like an event."
Her parents (now living in Manoa with son Daniel) have never
watched her work in the flesh in her own show, a prospect about which
Bette has expressed reservations. "They've seen me on TV," she
told the Times interviewer, "but I would never work live in
front of my parents. My father would die."
But Ruth Midler, her mother, has other ideas. Says Mrs. M:
"I don't know about that - we'll be there."
And what does Bette think of the jump from audiences wrapped
only in towels to those in everything from jeans to jewels?
"I
just want to give it to them and if they dig it, they dig it, and if
they don't dig it, they don't - but it's scary. I've had so much fun up
until now. I have had such a good time in this thing."
But there's nothing frightening about returning to Honolulu
in triumph. A heroine's welcome at the HIC is a far cry from life in
Halawa Housing during the '50s.
And, come concert night. it's a sure Bette that
that elusive moon of Manakoora will shine brightly for the Divine Miss
M.
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