A6 CASTLEGAR NEWS, April 6,.1983 KOOTENAY SOUND SHOW Portable Sound System IF YOU NEED MUSIC FORA... . x Renae % DANCE PARTY % SOCIAL CLUB Our experienced staff will hoop Your friends dancing ‘til dawn with a wide variety of music from the swing time twen- fies a the rock ‘n roll fifties, and tight on up to the hits of Very Competitive Rates—BOOK NOW & CALL 364-2212 days — 364-0159 evenings Royal Canadian Legion Branch No. 170 ARET Friday &: Saturday. Dancing 9:30 p.m.:' a.m. Open3 p.m. at oh Open p.m, Saturday Proper Dress Ene & Sat. after9 p.m. Guests Must: . Playing Fri. & Sat. Be SIGNED In “BREEZIN" [SAT|[SUN)MON [TUE] “Two hours of non-stop thrl WHO Says ‘THERE'S NEVER A GOOD GUY'ARCUND | WH NEED ONE? INDIANA JONES iS BACK! WARRING: Some roa Violencé &. MARI Occasional Swearing B.C. Director = COMMUNITY oe Bulletin Board ILL GOSPEL « auesaitin BANQUI Ful ET Will ba held on Thurs. Apr, 14th at 6:30 p.m. Fireside Place. For information ph. 365-! ” SENIOR CITIZENS’ ASSOCIATION | All members are urged fo attend the April Business 2 _meetiiig to be hald on Thurs. a ae 17 ol Annual meeting will be held on April sae 1983 Doukhobor Village at 7 p.m. 4/26 WHITE ELEPHANT AND BAKE TABLE At Kinnaird Hall on Sot, April 16th from 10 a.m. = 4 p.m. Proceeds-First Kinnatrd Scouts. Donations appreciated - For pickup 365. LADIES GOLF 1st ladies’ day of the season. Tues. April 12th. Castlegar Golf Course at 10 a.m, Everyone welcome for a fun day Coming ‘events of Couper and District non-profit organizations may be li ere, The first 10 words are $3 ond additional words are’12¢ each. Boldiaced words (which must be used for headings) count as two words. There is no extra charge for a second consecutive Inser- tion while the third consecutive Insertion is half-price. Minimum charge is $3 (whether ad is for one, two or three tintes). Deadlines are 5 p.m. Thursdays for Sunday's paper and 5 p.m, lays for Wednesday's paper. Notices should be ccueht to the Castlegar Nows at 197 ras ois back = — again LOS ANGELES (AP) That sly fox Zorro{s back for his 20th incarnation on: the) screen since’ Douglas’ Fair- banks first played the. aris- tocratic Don “Diego do: cls Vega in 1902. °°: In Zorro atid Bon, you get: not one sword-wielding ad- venturer, in Old. California but two. Henry, Darrow ‘plays . . the senior Zorro, whois. get: ‘ ting on a little and fa fraining premiers tonight: of CBS, is: from Walt Disney Produc-’ tions.. Disney also. produced the first ‘Zorro series, 19ST. Br if you think “Albert - Hague looks the part ‘of the / music professor on NBC's ‘| Fame, chalk it up to type" casting... - Hague is a. teacher, lec- turer, coach. anda: Tony d-wi 0, and some of the same sots ‘and costumes are being used. “Zorro can’ still handle himself but'he's not what he -was 80 years ago,” says Dar- row. “I'm 50 years-old. It's great that I don't have to do all those physical things. It's “the father trying, to hand over, the family | business to his’ son.” ‘ : Bill Dana also stars as the: faithful servant °/Bernardo. Barney Martin has the twin roles’: of Franclacan monks ;Napa ‘and ‘Sonoma; John’ Moachitta;” ‘the’ tasetlhing, to be poinp posity’ defeats ‘Hague said he doesn’t teach music but gives instruction in. the :thé- tre, ‘particuarly on ‘how | fo get a play ‘onto: ‘Broadway. SERIES OF SKETCHES use pom | filmin; ning P who didn’t turn'to acting un- til he was 59. “He stars as the acerbic, , eccentric teacher, Benjamin Shorofsky, . the. man. who rains‘‘on the parade of the students _at New . York's gehen for ‘the Performing . “Shorofsky is two things, said Hague,, who grew his professional’ white . beard When hee le Fame for thé season, he and his wife, Renee Crin, will put on a one-night ‘performance of their. Hague ‘and: Hague. He describes it as humorous. autobiographical sketches and songs that relate his es- cape to the United States from Germany before the Second World War. Hague, who is Jewish, was : born in Germany but fled the when he was cast'in thé hit country with his parents af- ter Hitler came to power. “I’ . played: a role ‘in an NBC. movie’ ‘coming : Up. eae: man from the’ commercials, plays Pico’s human recording machine, Cpl. Cassette... . WAS ZORRO'S VOICE This is the second time Darrow has protrayed Zorro. He was the voice‘in'a Sat- urday moralng cartoon ser- tes. “I had a ball going to bookstores: looking for old , books and d magazine pictures was. my, { entrance: in the opening show. I’was.in the Zorro costume and people down below were saying that ‘old boy’ can’t cut any - more. Then the camera’ pans “pefore the Nazis got m: was ‘nightmare: enough. i Hague has a new. musi Flim Flam, that is Broadway .. bound. It’s based on.four C. Henry short stories, “about way Plain‘and Fancy 1n.1955 and he won a Tony award for his music for Redhead. Hague said-in his own classes one of the’ things ‘he teaches is the Roeesally for hard ° ‘work, + “Tsay you need a “pain,” he said. $I: n my students.to:do: nything that Lhaven't done. If-1-tell them “to. sit: at: the piano working for 14 hours a day, it's because Tt lent for asked °-me” if “I. had: any . nightmaresof: my own. I said ye Columbia Ave. COMMUNITY. Bulletin Board d House cf the up and I can..1' picked ue a few ‘pointers oa: handling’ sword by, watching old’ Errol Flynn movies.” One of: the most recent portrayals of Zorro: was. by. -also doubles for Darrow, "In hose... scenes “1 look.. much tween Varicouver Col- lege. and . Centennial. Background informa- tion ‘on both teams - and pied precedes Soviet LU KI al 9 Of Brilliant Cultural Centre ; visits here Ludmilla Zykina will appear at the Brilliant Cultural: singer Centre at 7 p.m. April 12. A world-famous personality,: Zykina has appeared ‘around the world ‘entertaining ,audiences with a: wide range of music - from. ihe folk ; genre to the, classics. ‘ She shares on’ stage “folk songs about weddings, comic and dance songs and flowing melodies of lyrical romances,’ all of ‘which are easily understood. Her ‘repertory includes: ,the works of contempory Soviet composers. “» Lydmilla. Zykina- has been awarded the title, ‘Peoples’: ‘Artist of the USSR” for her talent. Her music presents: the“soul of the Russian people. : 8 be ecompanied by Victor Grydin on the Broadway director ‘still refuses’ “NEW YORK (aP After the long standing ovation for Wed., April 6 to Sun., April 10 PONDEROSA BUFFET eh $8.50 Children under. 10 only $5. SPM. T On Sundays, Every Sth Member of + aReservation Is ‘Complimentary! "Also open for private jagreue Phone 364-2616 for Reservations the revival of On Your Toes, the. director,-an old, old pro, is coaxed on stage for a curtain‘ call. His eyes twinkle, - “When the management asked me to take a curtain call a few weeks ago I re- fused,” George Abbott: tells the black-tie audience, “Time and time again I refused and as I stand here before you tonight I still refuse.” George Francis ‘Abbott,’ ‘seven decades. in theatre, ” Cdstleaird Plaza e Salad Bar. © Pizza's © Scampi Steak’ —‘* B.B.Q. Ribs © Lobster ¢ Italian Dishes Ae OUT DELIVERY SERVICE rarganes Bae 365-2421 . Your Guide To Good Times Torneveninge! 6 CEOANTER 362-7375 Mon. to Sun., Aprit 4-10 nes A Al SPECIAL Sree proancalé Mushroom Rice Pilaf st bees pining room : Your Spaghetti house at the OOTENAY DINING ROOM ‘FIRESIDE DINING ROOM FOR FINE DINING Dining Room... Cocktail Lounge Open Mon. - Sat., 4- 10 p.m. “OPEN EASTER SUNDAY" 4P.M.TO9 P.M. CLOSED GOOD FRIDAY Reservations Appreciated. 365-6000 Bookings Available for Meetings, Bonquets & Weddings March 28 to Aprit2 ANDRIA LOUREN & FANTASY from LaJolla California . 5S piece band. MOTOR HOTEL CASTLEGAR director, actor, writer and show-doctor. Back again with a hit, a musical “comedy .he co-authored~ in ~- °1986 with Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart. The revival . ‘is his 120th sho Sunday, April 10: 6:30 p.m. — CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH 809 “about the . famed Merry C Rd, {up from Fireside inn) * ‘Atew ot his other biggies: Three Men on a Horse, Pal Joey, The “Pyjama Game, Damn Yankees, A. Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum and Fiorello, for which he won a Pulitzer Prize in 1960.. . That and his. longevity leads folks. to .call him a Broadway, legend. “Ahh, it’s kind: of phoney,” he says of the label. ‘He ‘shrugs when asked “Abbott touch,” the effect of speed achieved by contrast of char- acters, movement and tone of voice. « JUST TIMING “Well,-that’s just timing,” he says, “It: hasn't ‘anything to do with speed: When I see. some of my farces done by =stock: companies: or small theatres, I'm always shocked by the way they always play them — very broadly, bang, bang, bang, and lots of mug- ing. “And they're not.funny at all. Because . they‘ were: de-’ signed to play ac that they're” real people in trouble, not mannequins.” . ” vee A story: Obes frustrated talent ~ EDMONTON (CP) — Dur- ing . a youth spent in rural Ontario, inet dreams is the most. important thing,” Storey explains in a. ~ Storey’s forays through the “world of small-town theatre exposed him to some tragic examples of wasted talent. “I did’a lot of community theatre,” he says. “I'd see housewives and dentists who had an enormous amount of talent, but they didn’t do anything with it..It was much safer for them to stay at home than take the risk of exploring their potential.” Such brushes became the basis of Storey's hit Edmon- ton musical, Country Chor- ale, which began its second run in two years recently at Theatre Network. The musical looks at the “fortunes of,a young woman growing up in rural Canada in 1958. She has dreams of “becoming a country and western star in the mold of a Patsy Cline, but is stymied by, pregnancy and marriage. Juxtaposed with her life is the progress of a Grand Old Opry-style establishment called the Country Chorale, which operates in the play like a traditional Greek chor- ‘us. “It's about this woman coming to the realization that the pursuit of her personal Toronto home. FAMILIAR CHARACTERS | The production's familiar setting and characters were largely responsible for the play’s overwhelming critical interview from his’ success when it premiered in Edmonton last year. One critic called it “the ~ best small Canadian musical . .. in the last 10 years.” Theatre Network is also subjecting Country Chorale tothe true test — a tour of 15 small communities from Slave Lake in the far north to Red Deer in central Alberta. “The reaction in the rural communities is far different | than in. Edmonton,” Storey. “Urban people find some- thing intrinsically funny about things like people eat- ing canned peas and white bread for supper. But in the’ small communities, the audi- ence just nod their heads and say, ‘That makes sense to me. says In part, Storey believes the same rationale applies to why the musical “has not managed to get off the ground in larger urban cen: tres, If you're looking for fine cuisine In a most Treat er Right . «this is. the place! Full men prepared byourcl * VILLE-DU-PANTAGE |_| PRIME ai } DINNER WITH. Yorkshire Pudding * Horseradist This Fri., Sat. and Sun. at Ville-du-Pantage we cre featuring 367-7511 All for $10.95 ; VILLE-DU- -PANTAGE - Volley tore fs te YOUR HOS in : ale B.C. Deluxe Salad Bar Baked Potato Fresh Cauliflower with cheese sauce or... Fresh Gingered Carrots Our own homemade rolls Dessert Table Tea or coffee RESERVATIONS PLEASE JEROME STUART 367-7511 dren's.'\ books ' after» experience of'teaching luctant, readers in ele: sam, ‘The workshop is en: titled Writing for'a‘Young Audience, practical “advice on -Writing and Getting The Sunday morning pro- : gram part, “Producing do-ers Cominco Gymnasium: discontent, to make th * for) thelr ‘semi-annual’ eireult they! are entitled to der:the direction’ of Doug : roault; : i Heldiand Ray Zwidayk of the ‘challenge of being rich to- tous, Watch ’.Tower Boelety' of -ward God and not: covetous, Witnesses in being more ef- fective in their Bible study. work in which they help in- terested persons to become rich toward God, not cove- The public ¢ talk to be given delegates will bo helped by Held on Sunday. at 2 p.m. will raise a thought’ provok- ing question, “Is thie world doomed 2" Newer ones’ who have | come to appreciate ‘the need J: ” to be ‘rich toward. being not just hearers of. the word but do-ers.of word workers in ‘God's ‘service, — will indicate this ‘decision by water baptism on Saturday. On. behalf of, the’: local ard Castlegar congregation, pre-. \ siding minister, John Kisiel- ewski extends a warm wel come: to all persons ‘in the a and surrounding district ito attend these two days of fellowship ‘and Bible edu- cation in order to be “rich to- rd God — not covetous.” : Refreshments. will be pro- : of the word” will assist the ' iia aR _j CASTLEGAR NEWS, April’6; 1983: “ems suitable for aGarage Sale - to be held fo raise funds for the FOOD DEPOT tems may be left'at 532-10th Ave. Nee ‘or'atth Food D Depot (old-‘Speedway building) on ‘Tues. wee: or nurs: from 10 a.m.'to 2 p.m., or phone 12 Different Styles and’. ; colors. : f Local 168 Tunnel and Rock on trade. He was a member, ~ man, 8, and an avid fisher- Mr. Postnikoft is: survived shipping cl orge illy, Cyril and:Allan; one niece, Shelley; * }- one aunt, Helen Postnikoff of ial Atioclated Stores. 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