iisgi! s H'X' Thursday, July 21, 1983/The Battalion/Page 5 Xjust Movies — This week’s local listings MSC Grove lien: A terror fantasy ^^Bry where terror lurks Bound every corner. This ex- ' Hng movie pits the crew of an industrial space ship Hainst a deadly and terrify ing alien who never stops ■nving as he feeds on the j Hw. Thursday. Rated R. |0n Golden Pond: Henry Fclnda and Katherine Hep- , Brn star in this romantic love fHry of an elderly couple | pending the last years of Bir lives together and cop ing with growing old. Friday/ Saturday. Rated R. \V. Same Time Next Year: ' f Alan Alda and Ellen Burstyn star in this romantic comedy ' 4 >, about a couple who, no matter what, meets every year to see each other. Sunday. Rated R. The Graduate: Dustin Hoffman relates the dilemna ■ graduation as he laces real Rtrld problems and the older i S>man next door. Monday. vRated PG. fhe Sting: The greatest ^Hn of all time is what Robert ^^Jdford and Paul Newman trying to pidl off . Will they it? The answer is this hila- EBms adventure comedy. Rated Pg. Blazing Saddles: Mel Mrorooks is the tomic genius be- ■^^BBlncl this hilarious comedy. mfee e how the west was won (or , by Brendil osn - Wednesday. Rated R. computers and plays war with the Russians for real. PG. 'Twilight Zone: four episode movie “Class” takes a laugh-filled look at two prep-school seniors whose friendship is supremely tested when one of them inadvertantly has an affair with the other one’s mother. Pictured: Jacqueline Bisset, Andrew McCarthy and Rob Lowe (seated). >rn at the I Us be Plitt Cinema I&II&III 846-6714 aws 3D: The latest of the |itvs movies. Just when you thought it was safe to go back into the movie theater they have brought another shark Story — too bad this isn’t the one that got away. R. 1 >r charges oB te campaipiB asked for 1 Kjlass: A funny comedy ab out life of two prep school boys and the adventures they go through. It is just as if Por- xy’s went to prep school. Rated R. of $l,i 100 fine on on of the act attornev lashdance : A film with [ow you know imittee shoiii natter closet e speaker If] ghtly forwair tion he tool! >er Rep. 1 f Lett, said I United Press International The most overworked word in ■n statemeiiiliglish is “set,” which has 58 Lewis said ioun uses, 126 verbal uses and dy influe: 0 as a participial adjective. s associateF eporting ft 1 ! > deciphers d reportin| 1 to get pr 01 ' g future rej little plot and little acting ta lent but some of the most elec trifying dancing and music that has come out of a movie in a long time. This film does for New Music what Saturday Night Fever did for Disco. R. R.ocky Horror Picture Show: What happens when the all-American couple meets a transsexual? Watch this classic cult film and find out. Midnight. R. Manor East 823-8300 The Man From Snowy River: Kirk Douglas stars in this western about a boy sud denly alone in the world who helps a girl struggling with life. In Dolby stereo. PG. R.eturn of the Jedi: The third piece to the exciting Star Wars trilogy. I doubt seriously if there is anyone out there who doesn’t know what this film is about. If you don’t, wake up and smell the coffee. PG. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs: A classic Dis ney animation of the famous tale. For Rated G. people of all fairy ages. Post Oak: 764-0616 Staying Alive: The sequel to Saturday Night Fever. John Travolta stars as a dancer who wins the lead in a broadway musical. The music is still by the Bee Gee’s. Oh Gee. Rated R. Tlhe Survivors: Walter Matthau and Robin Williams star in this new comedy. The humor is more situation than anything else and unfortun ately hides the talents of both of these men to be funny. R. Stoker Ace: Burt Reynolds and Loni Anderson star in this excuse to “act” together. Reynolds is a race car driver and Anderson is the girl after his heart. R. Schulman Six 775-2468 ^A^ar Games: What hap pens when a computer fails to make the distinction of a real war and and a war game to a 14-year-old boy. See what happens as a young computer into tht genius taps le defense This is a length version of the old TV show the Twilight Zone. If you con sider two out of four episodes good enough, then go see this movie. It makes you wonder who is in the Twilight Zone. R. Blue Thunder: Roy Scheider is in this flick about a honest man trying to save the public from the horrors of an overdone riot control helicop ter. The story line is interest ing but the feasibility will leave you lost. R. 'Trading Places: Eddie Murphy and Dan Akroyd star in this humorous “Prince and the Pauper” type story. These two talents come together to make one of the funniest com edies out this summer. Good entertainment. R. Octopussy: The most in teresting thing about this James Bond flick is the title. This particular story follows the James Bond formula and has nothing new and exciting to offer. If you have ever seen a James Bond movie before then you might as well say you have seen this one also. R. Skyway Twin Drive-In 822-3300 dpace Raiders: A sad adventure film which thinks it is a cross between Star Wars and Raiders of the Lost Ark. Rated R. Star Crash : Crash is an accurate term in this film’s ti tle. Rated R. • Tough Enough: A cheap Rocky rip-off. This film is ab out an unemployed worker in the East who turns to boxing to earn his living. Rated R. Psycho II: Norman Bates is back and the Mother’s Day horror continues. This sequel sticks to the original in a com plimentary fashion but you will wonder if you are crazy for paying $4.50 for this movie. R. Former vaudeville star reminisces about career United Press International FREMONT, Mich. — Geral dine Valliere’s scrapbooks and diaries are full of memories of high times, the fame and thrills that came with a career in vaude ville. The pianist, 87, was once the lead performer in an unusual all-woman four-piano act known as “Jerry and the Baby Grands.” She worked with Mil- ton Berle, Burns and Allen, Bob Hope, Bing Crosby — everyone who was anyone back then. But what time gave, time took away. Vaudeville died out and, af ter accompanying Major Bowes’ traveling amateur show for a few years, Valliere returned to this small western Michigan town to care for her mother. “It’s been a pretty lonely life after the excitement of traveling and meeting people in show business,” she admits. “It was tough at first. All I know is music. I can’t even cook yet.” Her rise to vaudeville head liner was the stuff of which movies were made. A small town music teacher, the daughter of a grocer, gets a job in Duluth, Minn., and works in her spare time as a theater pianist. She gains some local fame in 1919 by heading three other pianists in a piano quartet and, after appearing in Chicago, is booked for New York. From there, the sky’s the limit. Long runs at the nation’s top theaters as Jerry and the Baby Grands, the piano quartet that came complete with a troupe of eight dancers and 6V2 tons of equipment. She even headlined a 13- country around-the-world tour that lasted from August 1929 to November 1930. Her quartet played the top halls in England, France, Germany, Australia and South Africa. But the demand for a piano quartet that traveled with 13,000 pounds of gear in tow faded along with vaudeville. After a couple of years with Major Bowes, she returned to Duluth — where a small confec tioner had named a candy bar, the “Jerry Bar,” after her — and then retired to Fremont to care for her mother. “My mother, right up until her last moment in life, said ‘no body ever had a daugher like you,”’ she says. “I came home in 1941 to care for her after my father died. She passed away at 103. “I never married, I never had time,” she says, a bit wistfully. “Oh, I had my chances. My man ager waited for me for 42 years. He died in Florida.” Memories and memorabilia keep Valliere company in the small apartment she calls home. The walls are lined with g hotos of her act; four platinum londe women seated behind huge pianos with dancers strut ting on top. A globe marked with the route and performance dates of her around-the-world tour sits atop a small cabinet jammed to overflowing with scrapbooks, publicity photos and handbills. “I still hear from Milton Berle,” she says. When she shows remorse, it is not over a lost career but bitter ness toward the rigors of age. “I don’t play the piano any more,” she says, rubbing her hands. “It’s arthritis. I haven’t played for two or three years. I just can’t play well enough to suit myself — I always played fancy, not plain.” Actress in soap opera and musical stays busy United Press International NEW YORK — Actress Sheryl Lee Ralph might be just about everyone’s “Dreamgirl” in her “Search for Tomorrow,” but between her two jobs and multi ple career projects, “Social life? Baby, what’s that?” At 26, “not even love” could convince her to get married right now. “I wouldn’t trade this for any thing,” she said while dabbing on her stage makeup in her pink-walled dressing room at Broadway’s Imperial theater. “There is nothing I’d rather do now than work.” Good thing. There’s little time for sleep and even less for going out when you’re a Broadway stage star by night and a television soap opera queen by day. But the “Dreamgirls” star couldn’t resist when she was offered a role on the NBC-TV daytime drama “Search for Tomorrow,” even though she has another six months to go in the hit musical. She’s Deena Jones on Broad way until 11 each night and then two days a week she’s up at 7 a.m. and playing Mac, assistant to a newspaper editor in “Search.” “Oh they’re very different,” she said when asked if it’s diffi cult to keep her parts straight. Since she’s been Deena — a character similar to Diana Ross of the Supremes — for 19 months, the lines come natural ly. Mac, on the other hand, says something new every perform ance. “They send me the script, and I have to memorize the lines in the morning, before I go on,” she said of her two-week-old role. She’s planning to do a concert with Joan Rivers in the late sum mer or early fall in Connecticut, and she recently tried out for a part in a theatrical movie, “Cot ton Club.” She thought the try out went “very well.” Next? A record album — although she considers herself an actress first. “My singing is probably the greatest act of my whole career,” she said. “I’m basically an ac tress. And now, since ‘Dream- girls,’ I’m basically a singer. “When I started in ‘Dream- girls,’ I had a teenie, little voice. Then doing it every night, and listening to other singers in the cast, it just grew. And now I’m an actress-singer.” Ralph, a native of Waterbury, Conn., was in premed at Rutgers University when she switched to drama. At 18 she was in a movie with Sidney Poiter, “A Piece of the Action.” Then there were prime time television parts on such shows as “Wonderwoman,” “Good Times” and “The Jeffersons.” JOIN THE fDID YOU KNOWTi JMESTIi ‘Coming Soon” HITE SALE! From 7/25 to 7/31 White 20# bond copies 8'h x 11 loose sheets 2V2$ kinko's copies ;omodations| tions ■ To ' : ! Delivery Pi Station 201 College Main 846-8721 I I I I I I I I I I You can walk to the SOUPER SALAD within a few minutes for the greatest soups in Texas. You may pick and choose your own salad from the twen-1 ty-six foot salad bar with great condi ments and dressings. 3®- WALK AND SAVE To the Sbisa Basement OPEN Monday through Friday 10:45 a.m.-1:45 p.m. QUALITY FIRST' 1 li I 4 Petal Patch 707 Shopping Village Petal Patch. Too Post Oak Village — Hwy. 30 ( 0: A W"? TEXAS-DOZEN YELLOW ROSES (15 Roses!) JULY'S SPECIAL *19.50 ADD-A-BEAD WHOLESALE CLUB Vz PRICE Until Nov. 30, 1983 Come in and join the Club for $10 fee & a purchase of $39.00. This will enable you to get ail the add-a- beads you’ve wanted at V2 price until Nov. 30, 1983. ;hne JEWEU # 415 University 846-5816 '// I The smax*test move you can make. (next to going to A&M, of course) MSC Summer Dinner Theatre presents AUG 3-6 msc a a n Purchase tickets 24 hours in advance at MSC Box Office. NIGHTS MEALS STUDENTS NON- S TUDENTS We dne9day Refreshments $2.5 0 $3.50 Thu r g da y B’B-Q Dinner $6.50 S7.50 Friday Chicken Dinner $7. 50 $8.50 Saturday Buffet Dinner S 9 SO $10.50