Image
Copyright & Fair-use Agreement
UNLV Special Collections provides copies of materials to facilitate private study, scholarship, or research. Material not in the public domain may be used according to fair use of copyrighted materials as defined by copyright law. Please cite us.
Please note that UNLV may not own the copyright to these materials and cannot provide permission to publish or distribute materials when UNLV is not the copyright holder. The user is solely responsible for determining the copyright status of materials and obtaining permission to use material from the copyright holder and for determining whether any permissions relating to any other rights are necessary for the intended use, and for obtaining all required permissions beyond that allowed by fair use.
Read more about our reproduction and use policy.
I agree.Information
Digital ID
Permalink
More Info
Publisher
Transcription
LAS VEGAS TODAY she throw money at the problem, somehow ex* pecting that ostentatious costuming and grandiose sets will somehow save a lackluster show. How refreshing that Jerry Jackson, creator of the new production ?╟úHitz?╟Ñ at the Hacienda, understands that the real secrets of entertainment success are energy, enthusiasm, creativity and attention to detail. That is not to say that ?╟úHitz?╟Ñ is not without its riches. The flamboyant costuming and vivid sets, together with a cast of nearly 30, give the show a full, rich look. But Jackson gets so much out of the production that you?╟╓d swear this was one of the $30 shows, not the $9.50 bargain ?╟úHitz?╟Ñ really is. For instance, rather than fill the stage with inert, wooden showgirls, vacuous under their rhinestone finery, Jackson choreographs a number in which everyone on stageSdancers, nudes, and stars?╟÷work together in graceful symmetry. Rather than spend thousands on some mechanical marvel of a set, Jackson strings a few colored lights across a stark silhouette suggesting urban Latin America. The enthusiastic calypso singing and dancing of the cast down in front is what carries the day. J ackson?╟÷already well-known to Las Vegas audiences at the director of the ?╟ Tolies Bergere?╟Ñ at the Tropicana?╟÷says the real secret of show business success is tireless attention to detail. ?╟úYou can never say ?╟ It?╟╓s good enough,?╟╓?╟Ñ he says. ?╟úIt?╟╓s either right or its wrong. ?╟ Good enough?╟╓ is wrong.?╟Ñ It is also important that a show have an underlying theme to give it substance and identity, Jackson says. ?╟úI don?╟╓t like to do disjunctive shows, such as opening number, act, Aztec number, act, French number, act, finale. I like to have themes,?╟Ñ he explains. ?╟úThe underneath ideas have to be very, very strong so that its just not all tinsel and glitter on top of nothing.?╟Ñ It would seem the theme of ?╟úHitz?╟Ñ?╟÷a celebration of top 40 music in the 1980s, is an idea who?╟╓s time has come. Coupled with the tradition glitter and feathers of the Las Vegas review, ?╟ ?╟ Hitz?╟Ñ features the upbeat rhythms and rapid-fire pacing of a music video. Indeed, Jackson feels music videos are the modem equivalent of the variety show. ?╟úMTV has replaced variety, and MTV is so faced paced, with so many symbolic images and subliminal things going on that audiences have become accustomed to that,?╟Ñ he says. ?╟úHitz,?╟Ñ too, sets a frenetic pace, with more than 50 songs in less than an hour and a half, including two specialty acts. If, in Jackson?╟╓s words, ?╟úHitz?╟Ñ is ?╟úcurrent, it?╟╓s today, its not like the other shows,?╟Ñ it should nonetheless appeal to audiences too mature to be familiar with Sting or Steve Winwood. ?╟úIt?╟╓s not heavy metal,?╟Ñ Jackson says. ?╟úI know this room attracts an older crowd. 1 hope it will attract more people, but in my shows, I try to make them accessi- ble to all age groups and to different kinds of audiences. ?╟Ñ The show also relies on a lot of comedy to bridge any age gap between music and audience. Popular music and mores are spoofed in a variety of surprising ways. But Jackson need not worry about a generation gap. Anyone can groove to the funny, enthusiastic rendition of ?╟úPink Cadillac?╟Ñ or feel the plaintive emotion behind the softly-sung question: ?╟úWho?╟╓s kissing her now??╟Ñ ?╟úHitz?╟Ñ is a show that preserves the best of the past with an eye toward the future. It?╟╓s what all shows will look like in years to come?╟÷or at least they?╟╓ll try to. By Marc Charisse 6 DECEMBER 1.198B