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Category: cabaret (2)

April 29, 2008

Welcome to the cabaret: A performing arts and show business manifesto

"What good's permitting some prophet of doom
To wipe every smile away
Life is a cabaret, old chum
So come to the cabaret."

--Lyrics by Fred Ebb, music by John Kander, "Cabaret," Broadway, 1966

Welcome to the blogosphere that encourages discourse from everyone who recognize the obvious: There are few if any boundaries among interests in the arts or their connection to show "business" and pop culture.

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Plays, musicals, opera, symphony, chorus, recitals, jazz, pop concerts, artspolitik, philanthropy, and much more are part of the Cultural Cabaret.

Here, you'll find breaking news and opinion of events - performing arts and show business - in the digital world, often as observation within minutes or hours of an event - previews to the fully vetted online and print news or reviews to follow.

Whether the discussion is conducted digitally or on paper, we all need to be a part of the community exchange. Ours is South Florida. These posts are the starting point for you to discuss our cultural community among one another.

Now that the cabaret is in full swing with a few scoops and catch-up items on the entertainment news front, it's time to pause for introductions and welcomes.

You lounge lizards know the drill - the set begins with a torch song opener, then a ballad, then the entertainer "chats" with you personal-like before diving into the show proper.

Here's my chat: I've spent nearly 40 years covering entertainment and the arts for every major newspaper in South Florida, from Miami through the Palm Beaches - over half of it here at the South Florida Sun-Sentinel.

For much of that time, I've also covered the statewide entertainment industry reporting for "the bible of show business," Variety based in New York City and Daily Variety in Los Angeles.

In the overview, that means nights in saloons and salons and sheds (a.k.a. amphitheaters), plus supperclubs, casinos and concert halls, from symphony orchestras to rock festivals, playhouses to theaters to opera houses, movies from the set to the neighborhood multiplex to art cinemas to film festivals, and artspolitik from city hall to the state legislature.

That's a jack-of-all-trades experience in a whole bunch of class-conscious worlds with many self-appointed high priests. So, expect to hear some some high-velocity rebuttals from contributors offering counterpoint as we rebuild the roads of information and opinion as two-way, community-wide thoroughfares.

This blog and its threads will attempt a univeral approach to the arts and show business without demeaning one to the other.

High priests have their place, and their standards deserve defense. I myself am a devotee of Ayn Rand's cultural philosophy and live in a condominium named The Fountainhead, for which I have been board president. This is not entirely coincidence or serendipity.

Yet, the differences that propel community expectations populate the arena of the cultural cabaret. On the web, the stage is yours, mine and ours.

There is one caveat, however. Anonymous comments won't get a followup or response from here. To be taken seriously, you need to be taken at face value. Without a face, your comments have no value.

- Jack Zink

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April 28, 2008

Swank Palm Beach hotel, the Colony, keeps cabaret cooking all summer

No, Palm Beach does not roll up its sidewalks in the summer. At least, not in front of the Colony Hotel, where the Royal Room will continue its cabaret series and the Polo Steakhouse goes Motown on weekends, through Labor Day.

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Though you might be able to find on-street parking in the off-season, the island remains pricey year-round. Dinner and show prices range $95-$110 per person for the Royal's summer rotation. Shows are 8 p.m. with dinners from 6:45 p.m.

Among the attractions, Palm Beach County resident Avery Sommers (pictured) will be making her Royal Room debut on Fridays and Saturdays for three weekends, Aug. 1-16. Liz Callaway comes in for the coup de grace Aug. 22-30.

The summer begins with torch singer Maude Maggart May 23-31, Baby Jane Dexter June 6-14, Jeff Harner June 20-28, Eric Comstock and Barbara Fasano July 4-12, and Sheera Ben-David July 18-26, last year's Backstage Magazine Bistro Award winner.

For more details, check out the Colony website or call 561-659-8100.

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About This Blog

JACK ZINK, the Sun-Sentinel theater, music & cultural affairs writer, has spent 38 years on the Gold Coast...

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