October 14, 1987 ENTERTAINMENT Dolly's diet NEW YORK (AP) — Dolly Parton says she devised her own diet in shedding 60 pounds from her 5-foot-2 frame. “I gave myself permission to eat whatever I wanted, but in very small portions,” 9:30. 1:30 p.m. BAND: “IDAHO SPUD" Guests must be signed in Proper dress after 9 p.m. 352-5358 Open Monday to Thuredey acer H., Nelson . a Fridey & Saturday 2a.m. 365-7017 Sponsored by Robson Ri Otters Payout INO ADVANCE TICKETS Tickets at the Door $9.00. Arena Complex EARLY BIRDS 6 P.M. * REGULAR GAMES 7:00 P.M. Baa gS PRICE. OF Atuney thing hey gperednthe wn tothe bas station | ADDED ' A MiP comic CLASSIC VAMPIPE STORY?" = MLW YORK TIMES. Conn James ie [SAT|[SUN) MON [T 380, YOLLY - ED TheP, ..-has finally =) met his match/ ied Murphy's become big business LOS ANGELES (Reuter) — Eddie Murphy says he's not yet being paid $16 million for a picture; “but I've got a raise.” Murphy, the 26-year-old street smart comedian who drives a Rolls Roy¢e to his favorite fast-food restaurant, has become big business. There are Eddie Murphy record albums, Eddie Murphy concert tours, Eddie'Murphy Productions Inc. and Eddie Morphy Television Enterprises Inc. Paramount Pictures said M y's five films for studio — Beverly Hills Cop (4 11), The Golden Chi Trading Places and 48 Hours + Mave taken | than $632 million at U.S. box offices 90 far. And tig studio has just signed a deal for the comedian to star least five more movies. “Eddie Murphy is the bona “fide number-one box, office star in all the world,” a studio spokesman declared. Murphy refused to discuss how much he will gwt-for the films, except to say it will be more than he wag.paid. before. For 48 Hours — “my best film,” Murphy said — thé comedian was paid $200,000 to make his ome debut. Asked if his next film would put him on ‘the same earning level as Sylvester Stallone, reported to have re- ceived $16 million for his last film, Murphy conceded his price didn't quite come to that. HEADY DAYS But these are heady days for a comedian who 10 years ago was earning $30 a night in backstreet clubs. Flanked by four bodyguards and with his friend, world heavyweight boxing champion Mike Tyson, tagging along, Murphy appeared on a Paramount sound- stage to discuss his latest contract. EDDIE MURPHY . with Jamie Lee Curtis in the. 1983 movie Trading Places “Do I believe in being underpaid for something I do? No," Murphy told reporters. “Stars make good money. But stars come and go. I'd rather be a good actor. “In fact, it’s getting to the stage where it is not just the money,” he said. Murphy would even like to develop a serious side. He hopes to play a role in a film version of the Broadway play Fences, a drama about a black baseball player who was d from being a pi | athlete and who tries to stop the same thing from happening to his son. “I would not play the leading role because I would not want my audience going to a film like that and thinking it is another Eddie movie," he said. NEW ROLE? “I can't jerk my audience round like that,” he said, “T'd much rather ease into something like that slowly. I would probably play the son.” Murphy started his career with 10 other black comedians. Referring to the Hollywood “bratpack” of Sean Penn and other young stars, Murphy said: “We were more like a blackpack.” “One of my greatest friends was Arsenio Hall,” he added. Hall will star with Murphy in his next film, Quest. In the film, Murphy wil) have five parts and definitely won't direct. “That would be pretty much like saying I would like to have a nervous breakdown,” he said. “I would like to be involved in the produetion of my next five pictures. I would like to direct them. But if there is a good seript, and a good director comes along — fine,” Murphy was born in Brooklyn, N.Y., and moved with his mother, Lillian, and his stepfather, Vernon Lynch, to New York’s Long Island when he was nine. He was performing at a local youth center when he was 16 and, four years later, was earning $750 a show starring in the television series Saturday Night Live. Murphy says he draws on experiences in his life for some of his comedy. “So far, I have used up about five hours of my 26 years,” he said with a laugh. Is there anything he ‘misses? “I haven't got a girl fried right now,” he replied, murmuring: “Poor guy.” CBC needs more money — HULL, Que. (CP) — CBC President Pierre Juneau, acknowledging his message is an old one, told the federal broadcast regulator Tuesday that CBC radio networks need more government money to maintain high stan- dards in programming. “The primary challenge for Juneau radio is to maintain what has already been accomplished rather than being forced to water it down or even dis- mantle it because of lack of funds,” Juneau said. Juneau was speaking at the opening of four days of hearings by the Canadian Radio-television and Tele- communications Commission into the licence renewals of the CBC English and French radio networks. It’s the first time in nine years the CRTC and the public have had a chance to question the CBC on how, and with what, it fills the AM and FM airwaves. CUISIN Juneau said the CBC be- JOIN US FOR lieves it fully meets the man- © BREAKFAST date outlined for the CBC in © LUNCH the Broadcasting Act, al- © DINNER though changes to the act are © WEFKEND SMORG [fl being lated by Com- TAKE OUT munications Minister Flora Semvice CALL 365-6887 9 yecponaid. The CBC radio networks operate economically and ef- ficiently, Juneau said. RESTAURANT We Specialize in Mv P LTO PRESENTS pnosis Sessions with pose WEIGHT 6:30 P.M. Change your attitude to change your body. Learn | miles and wondered how you got to lose the urge for sweets and learn to enjoy low- there? calorie nutritious food. Feel full with less food you Strengthen ydur desire, determination and will power Are you tired of going from one diet to another? Learn self-discipline. YOU HAVE BEEN HYPNOTIZED Have you ever placed your keys or your glasses somewhere and two minutes later wondered where? Or, forgot where you just parked your car? Then you were not only in a hypnotic trance, but in a deep trance with loss of memory EVERYONE EXPERIENCES HYPNOSIS Have you ever looked for something that was ‘staring you in the face’ but you didn't see it? Have you ever lit a ci- garette not knowing that you already had one lit? Ever driven your car for HAV HYPNOTIZED or HERS Have you ever spokeh to someone and STOP SMOKING 8:30 P.M. ;: Learn to think of yourself as a non-smoker a you are. Help to lose the desiré Overcome withdrawal symptoms and desire to substitute food for cigarettes. Does a two-inch roll of paper stuffed with tobacco dictate your lifestyle? Practical Methods. Bring your last cigarettes when you come they stopped moving; their eyes became glassy and it was like talking to a wall SUGGESTIONS20 YOURSELF Have you ever told jpurself to awaken at a set tigen the morning and you did? Have you ever said “I'll hide this where NO ONE can. find it" and you couldn't find it yoursejf? Have you ever said “I can't lose: weight or quit smoking.” Then you have given to smoke. without the SPECIAL OFFER Bring this Information When you Register For thei eaetal $4goo be ONE NIGHT Sun., Oct. 18 ONLY NELSON Heritage inn Wore: Only one session is required. Each session includes o printed ma- reintorcem: ent recording, 11 hypnosis methods One Coupon Per Waka ivine Over Capone suggestions to yourself USE THE POWERS OF YOUR MIND Have you ever forgotten a name that was on the ‘tip of your tongue’? Where did the name go? In the ‘back of your mind, your subconscious or inner mind. You can learn to make your subcon- scious work with and for you instead of against you HYPNOSIS FOR EVERYONE Romane’s main concern is to have hyp- nd subliminal this ancient art should be AIDS AND HOLLYWOOD Monogamy back in style NEW YORK (AP) — James Bond doesn't bed his usual bevy of beauties in his latest adventures, contenting himself with one lusty lady. It isn't love that prompts this jolt of monogamy, but safe sex. Tom Hanks has second thoughts about frolicking with a blond in the movie Dragnet, once he discovers his box of condoms is empty. AIDS is touching Hollywood, as it has every other arena of the arts and entertainment world. Filmmakers and other artists are becoming more responsible regarding onscreen sex and are trying to weave awareness of the illness into creative projects. While the deadly disease has served as an artistic theme in plays, songs and movies, it has also stolen some of the creative world's brightest talents. This year alone witnessed the AIDS-related deaths of director and choreographer Michael Bennett, theatre in- novator Charles Ludlam, the flamboyant showman Liberace,” and Charles Ward, a principal dancer with the American Ballet Theatre. “Almost every day we open a newspaper or hear on radio that someone else has died, and unfortunately so many of them are the greatest figures in the arts,” said the actress Joanne Woodward in an interview. DELIGHTS WORLD Bennett was the Broadway gypsy who delighted the world with the blazing dancing in A Chorus Line. He was 44 when he died June 30, the same age as Ludlam, founder of the Ridiculous Theatre Company, who died May 28. “The worst part of the tragedy is their youth,” John Glines, producer of Torch Song Trilogy and As Is, a play about AIDS, said in an interview. “They were in full flower and were just getting there.” When William Hoffman wrote As Is, nominated for a 1985 Tony award, he was respondifig to the painful memory of a friend who had recently died from AIDS. The play examines the relationship between Richard, a homosexual novelist suffering from the disease, and Saul, his ex-lover. Other plays with AIDS themes have included Larry Kramer's The Normal Heart, Robert Chesley's Nightsweat, Stephen Holt’s Fever of Unknown Origin and Coming of Age in Soho, by Albert Innaurato. Beirut, which had a short off-Broadway run this summer,, examined heterosexual fears of AIDS. In the spring, Harvey Fierstein (Torch Song Trilogy) opened. Safe Sex on Broadway. His trio of one-act plays depicted homosexual characters coping with AIDS in an almost humorous way. The work was dedicated to Court Miller, who starred in Torch Song, and died last year from AIDS. The number of people in the arts and entertainment who have died of AIDS is difficult to assess. REPORTS REASONS Actors Equity, for example, said it didn't keep such statistics because many victims are reported as aving of or i that are a f AIDS. While Hollywood has responded to the ‘AIDS. tragedy by a moving away from scenes of illicit liaisons, instead por- traying safe sex and encounters with one partner, it hese generated movies that use the disease as a theme, as has theatre. As a fund-raising effort, the disease has won support from many artists and entertainers. The revelation that actor Rock Hudson suffered from AIDS focused worldwide attention on the disease. A month before his death two years ago, more than $1 million was raised at a benefit for AIDS research. . It wag J by actress Elizabeth Taylor. Thirteen of the léding dance companies in the United! States united for an AIDS benefit on Oct. 5. They included the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre, American Ballet Theatre, Merce Cunningham Dance Company, Dance Theatre of Harlem, Martha Graham Dance Company, Joffrey Ballet and the New York City Ballet. Lansbury never forgiven snub NEW YORK (AP) — Ang- ela Lansbury, four-time Tony award winner and TV star, says she has never forgiven Hollywood for snubbing her in the 1950s though she has learned now to wallow in self- pity. Hollywood, she says in an issye of US magaine, sistently refused to let me carry a movie.” Theatregoers ‘on Broadway found out Lansbury could carry a show when she tarred in th ical Mame. ; 5 in the musical Mame. ANOUKIA ay me Shhhhhhb... Its A Secret As of Tuesday, Oct. 20 we’re open for LUNCH From 11:30 a.m.-2:00 p.m. Tuesday to Friday A great way to break up the day — enjoy fine food,’ . snubbed “Suddenly, at 40, I was considered to be a glamorous ‘woman, on and off stage,” she said. “Mame was a milestone for me.” Then, after being snubbed for the film version of the musical, “I turned my back on Hollywood,” said the 61- year-old actress. It was television that re- turned Lansbury to Holly- wood. Her series, Murder, She Wrote, is in its fourth Season and has “zoomed me into another career and a wholenew audience,” EEDA ANT, JALLOWEEN DANCE Sat., Oct. 31 Robson Hall 9 p.m. -la.m. FRIDAY-ONLY SPECIALS zen Ge 299 FRIDAY 7 P.M.-9 P.M. ONLY! SATURDAY ONLY, 9 A.M.-10 A.M. Bruce Springsteen “Tunnel of Love”. L.P. or Tape .. L.P.’s & TAPES (Thurs.-Sun.) 9-9709 CCD Movie Camera/Recorder Reg. -f2199-98 VIDEO $1 699° = fed = 7:7150 0 SPACEMAKER™ ‘wanch TV inthe Rt. A R. 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The key to Ro- DOUBLE GUARANTEE a oe mane’s success in helping others lies in the fact Romane is “a man of ac- tion.” ¢ FULL REFUND AT FIRST BREAK OF [Bglpmibedblesd IW 4 though the sessions are helpful and EACH SESSION IF NOT FULLY SATIS- ceraeen fun. this ia NOT stage hypnosia. There- FIED peutic hypnosis is nine times as Copyright (19867) powertul and helps you to unlock the MVP. Lid powers of your mind ont —y> hearty portions and fast service during lunchtime hours. Watch our board for our great opening specials 364-0922 WE SERVICE \WHAT WE SELL!