ENTERTAINMENT Carmela's Spaghetti House and Calabria Pizza Enjoy the true Htalian Spaghetti Dinner All the Spaghetti You Can Eat — $6.95 Private dining rooms at no extra charge. Siete 368-9399 ‘Rocakend of the toot of Semaine 18 CHICKEN NUGGETS on a golden bed of French Fries ea LONDON DEBUT Dunaway back on stage LONDON (Reuter) — For Faye Dunaway, the Academy Award winner who was first discovered in an off-Broadway hit 20 years ago, there is np better way to sharpen her acting technique than a taxing stage role. So the willowy Southern belle who shot to stardom in Bonnie and Clyde is making her London stage debut as the wife of U.S. a president, holed up in the Camp David, Md., presidential retreat as a security risk with a Secret Service agent to guard her. Ciree and Bravo by American playwright Donald Freed is just the sort of challenge she was looking for and she She is married to London photographer and the couple have lived in London for the last four years with their son Liam. After the 10-week run of Circe and Bravo, which opened in London's West End, they are going back to live in New York. “I must confess I miss the drive and energy of America but I have to be careful that it's not just the drive for success,” she said. Dunaway, who was Terry O'Neill BUSINESS Union hopes to organize Michelin workers HALIFAX (CP) — Seven years after the Nova Scotia government enacted the so-called Michelin bill, provincial labor leaders still bristle with anger over what they regard as the biggest insult in years of anti-union legislation. ‘The law forces a union seeking certification to win support from workers at all i di di i failed. “For the most part, people don’t really seem to think that they need a union,” says Mark Toomey, who worked at the Bridg plant for two summers and was there when the labor congress failed to win certification after owned by a single company, and affects only Michelin ‘Canada Ltd. and its three Nova Scotia plants. It so ed trade unionists that the 60,000-member Nova Scotia F of Labor ily severed most relations with the government. Expensive efforts since then by two unions to organize the workforce of 3,000 at the French. tiremaker's plants in three and pi major role in the battle Michelin plants in North America. Michelin, known for its secrecy, has pulled no punches are scarce. this time in saying workers neither need nor want a union. While the reality of a decent livelihood has apparently And the company may be right. strengthened employee loyalty, labor federation president Gerald Yetman remains livid over the Michelin bill's affront married for three years the long and role as “a tour de force to rock singer Peter Wolf of the J. Geils Band, said: “Living OPEN 4 P.M. DAILY WESTAR & COMINCO VOUCHERS ACCEPTED. — AIR CONDITIONED — Reservations for Private Porties — Located | mile south of Weigh Scoles in Ootischenio. monologue which really stretches you in terms of technique.” Dunaway, who won her Oscar for Network and garnered two other nominations for Bonnie and Clyde and Chinatown, said: “It's good to be back in the theatre. This is a complicated and difficult role. It's about a woman who cares desperately and is in extreme jeopardy.” Asked if it was based on any past wives of American presidents, Dunaway told reporters at a press reception to launch the production: “I have met Rosalyn Carter and Jackie Kennedy briefly. To some degree, my portrait here is based more on Martha Mitchell (the garrulous wife of President Richard Nixon's attorney general, John Mitchell, who was convicted for his role in the Watergate scandal).” ENJOYS THEATRE Dunaway won fame on film but clearly revels in the adrenaline-pumping experience of a live performance. Nightly repetition never palls for her. “Doing a play every night stretches you,” she said. “You have to use all your wits. Each performance varies. On the whole, the more you play it, the more nuances you find. “Making films is such a completely different experience. With film, it’s each day, it's over and it’s in the can,” said Dunaway, an elegant and carefully coiffed blonde of 46. in England has given me a sense of proportion. I love the tranquility, the quiet. “Terry has helped a great deal in bringing me balance. The English sense of humor also helps a jot.” DIRECTOR PRAISED For this play, Dunaway is being directed by British playwright Harold Pinter whom she describes as “probably the greatest living dramatist today.” The play was given a trial run at a tiny suburban in Hampstead where the critics were quick to praise her performance for “its brittle, exciting edge.” She acknowledges Pinter’s help in moulding the part, saying: “He does not have pre-conceived ideas when he comes to a piece. He is a master at evolving a role. He draws a performance out of you.” Dunaway learned the trade of acting in Boston where she also paid her way by working as a cocktail waitress, wearing a false wedding ring to fight off the lounge lizards. After that, she studied under Elia Kazan at the Lincoln Centre in New York. She would never dream of settling in Hollywood. “I like to work there but I am more at ease in the East,” she said. “As director Sydney Lumet once told me on the subject of Hollywood, you ean never grow in a company town. BRIGHT SPOT . . . New study says the one bright spot on TV for older women is NBC's Golden Girls which features Betty White (left) and Bea Arthur OLDER WOMEN ON TV NOT TRUE TO LIFE Crest. WASHINGTON (AP) — Older women on US television are portrayed as “attractive, affluent and available for romance” but they bear little resemblance to their counterparts in real life, says 4 study. ‘Television's protrayal of older women has gone from ‘one extreme to another, from befuddled characters such as Aunt Bea on The Andy Griffith Show 20 years ago to today's ruthless, wealthy Alexis Colby on ABC's Falcon BCRIC lays off staff VANCOUVER (CP) — British Columbia Resources Investment Corp. has laid off 11 staff members, including a vice-president, in a move to “downsize” the loss-plagued company, a spokesman said this week. Gary Duke, vice-president of government relations and public affairs, was the most senior staff member to go, said corporate man- ager Ray Dykes. Names of the other 10 people let go were not dis- closed but Dykes said they THE ULTIMATE CAR AUDIO SHOW & SALE Wed., August 20 12 noon to 8 p.m. HERE FOR THE FIRST TIME ON DISPLAY THE NEW LAMBORGHINI COUNTACH ‘The National Commission on Working Women concludes: “If painting a rosy picture is a crime, TV is guilty when it comes to older women. Never has life been 80 good for females over 50. They are healthy, attractive, included a director of trea- sury and director of taxation. Dykes said that because Bronski Beat controversial This Week in DEXTER’S PUB MON. THRU SAT By SANDY ADZGERY LONDON (AP) — Bronski Beat, that controversial three-man rock band, dares to be different. to yourself,” said keyboardist Larry Steinbachek, 26, who with Steve Bronski was one of the founding members. “Steven and I started all-woman backup band. “It was impossible for us to function as a band when Jimmy was with us,” said affluent and available for romance.” The commission examined the portrayal of women over age 50 on prime-time entertainment programs in the 1986 spring season and drew these conclusions: It's a philosophy of life for Bronski Beat as musicians them as well as the title of and songwriters. The state- their latest LP, Truth Dare, ments concerning our sexu- Double Dare. ality came out because we Bronski Beat has courted controversy since its incep- tion in 1983 when it announ- ced its members were homo- they'd made until their first sexuals. The personnel lineup ‘ur. has changed, but not the “We had all these people frankness. coming backstage saying, ‘I “Why lie? If you lie to think it’s great you've been your public, then you're lying °° honest about it. It's made SEPTEMBER 27 Holiday Hotel & Casino OCTOBER 4 Holiday Hotel & Casino OCTOBER 11 Circus/Circus or Riverside Hotel OCTOBER 18 Holiday Hotel & Casino OCTOBER 25 Bally Grande NOVEMBER 8 Holiday Hotel & Casino OR RETIRED DISCOUNT OF $10.00 PER PERSON. Oakridge Boys September 19, Sheraton Hotel TOUR INCLUDES: * Deluxe Coach Transpor- tation ® 1 Night Accommodation at the Sheraton © Tour Escort * Best Show Tickets for the Oskridge Boys 10 p.m. Show in the Opera House * Free Glass of Champagne * Baggage Handling * Shopping Anne Murray September 24, Spokane TOUR INCLUDES: * Deluxe Coach Transpor tation * } Night Accommodation at the Rid. th Hotel © Tour Escort * Best Show Tickets ior the Anne Murray Show, Opera House, 8 p.m. © Shopping at Northtown Mall and K Mart * Baggage Handling ——— as West Edmonton Mall October 3 TOUR INCLUDES: * Deluxe Coach Transpor tation * 4 Nights Accommodation (Fantasy- land Hotel © Tickets to Dolphin Show, Edmon- ton City Tour © Guided Tour of West Edmonton Mall © Tour Escort * Baggage Handling * Shop ping Now Available Expo Tour September 19 — 15 Days Sn * gee Sees FYPE be — SETTING wards homosexual issues, they feel the topies are broad enough to appeal to the gen- eral public. Give your newsletters “We're not just singing Cwcning’ ‘bulleting etc. af about gay problems,” said professional oppeoronce.| 25-year-old singer Jon Fos- Cenere-roedy for your! ter. “I think the slow songs on the album can touch any- one’s heart.” CASTLEGAR NEWS 365-7266 A year ago, Bronski Beat TASTE was on the verge of breaking SENSATIONS FOR AUGUST CELEBRATIONS QUITS THE BAND The original singer, Jimmy Somerville, was unable to cope with the success that followed the group's deput LP, The Age of Consent, and left. Somerville was replaced by Foster and has since formed where he sings with an Steinbachek. “He was pulling us in a direction that we didn't want to go.” “He was very much against our doing tours in America, and wanted us to do ‘gay only’ concerts.” “Jimmy thought that being gay should be a political “He didn’t think we should do kids programs which 1 thought would be a great “I mean, three gays on a kids show — that's a big step forward.” ‘The band doesn't appear to have lost any fans by re- placing Somerville. Foster's voice may not reach the high-pitehed squeal of Somer ville's, but the disco-pop Bronski trademark is main tained in the music of Truth Dare, Double Dare, their first LP with Foster singing. In their early days, they were members of the Social ist party, but now say they're disenchanted with all politi cal parties. REJECTS CLASS “I suppose you could say that we are in a capitalistic business, and I'm not against capitalism per se,” said Stein. bachek. “What I'm against is WEST'S TRAVEL Contteger 1217-300 Street. 365-7782 Present... i HOT TUB WEEKEND!! Friday, Aug. 22 & Saturday, Aug. 23 \ = MITE IS FRIDAY! “At the same time, they're wondering why they're out of work, and their city is crumbling down around them.” Bronski Beat has per- formed for numerous chari- ties, including the Piccadilly Trust whit® hetps the needy in London. They've done benefits for striking coal miners, the gay switchboard and the Terence Higgins Trust which dis- penses advice about AIDS. They also built a 16-track studio other bands can use when Bronski Beat isn't re- cording. “To me, that’s taking ac- tion rather than just moaning about the problem,” said Bronski. “It's putting social- ism into practice.” Secret executives. TV's older woman is rich: 26 per cent are millionaires, 68 per cent are middle class and five per cent are working class. In reality, only 0.2 per cent of women over 50 have annual incomes above $75,000; almost 40 per cent survive on less than $5,000 per year. e Older women on TV have great jobs; 75 per cent run multi-million dollar corporations. In reality, less than two per cent of women of any age are corporate e The number of female characters over 50 has tripled since 1975, to 19 characters on 16 shows. Older women make up 20 per cent of all women on television. In reality, 38 per cent of adult women are over 50. ‘© TV's older women are overwhelmingly single, 68 per cent widows and 16 per cent divorced. Only one TV widowed. d married t season. In reality, 53 per cent of women over 50 are married, six per cent are divorced and 32 per cent are ghout the entire spring “TV's older women live in an artificial world that is unrecognizable to the average older woman viewer. She sees characters who experience no obstacles — no age discri: no land. dignity and humor pause, ploy downward mobility,” wrote study author Sally Steen- no or The one bright spot on the television screen for older women is NBC's Golden Girls, which the study said has treated topics such as widowhood and sexuality with Wyeth series revealed American artist Andrew Wyeth did a series of 240 drawings and paintings por- traying a woman named Helga that he kept secret even from his own wife until last year. Wyeth’s wife Betsy only learned of the series last year when her husband, now 69, was ill with the flue, says the September issue of Arts and Antiques magazine. Thinking he might die, Mrs. Wyeth said, he told her of the secret paintings done over a 15-year period. She has since sold them for an undisclosed price. 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