Nancy Lou Webster of Elgin displays her skills in treenware, the craft of fashioning logs and limbs into tools and utensils. She says her fa ther instilled her love for woodworking in her when she was still in her high chair. Fest offers fun continued from page 1. that this fish is that big.' A commercial photogra pher spoke and said, 'Say, fellow, I'll take a pic ture of that fish, and I'll guarantee that it'll prove how big he is.' This fellow says, 'Well, what'll you charge?' And he says, 'Just fifty dollars.' He says, 'My gosh, man, take it.' So he took the picture, and he said that picture weighed ten pounds." After the groans and chuckles of the crowd set tled down, people egged on the other storytellers. Guich Kooch of Austin told the following tale of a bald-headed bootmaker: "This ranch woman came in to get fitted for some shoes. He said while he was measuring her foot, all at once she just took her skirt and put it up over his head —like that. He said he came out and he was embarrassed and she was embar rassed. She said, 'Oh, Mr. Dunn, I'm awfully sorry. When I looked down there and saw that bald head, I thought my knee was exposed.'" These two tale-masters as well as a host of oth ers are expected again at this year's festival. The Texas Folklife Festival is open Friday and Saturday from noon to 11 p.m., and Sunday from noon to 10 p.m. The $5 adult tickets and the $1 children (6-12) tickets let you stay all day and cover all entertainment. □ Ed Bell of Luling creates another Texas tall tale for the crowds at the Texas Folklife Festival. Bell and other master storytellers perpetuate Texas heritage through their yams of daring ex ploits and amusing folklore. Belouis Some's hot video watered down for MTV By RICHARD DE ATLEY Associated Press LOS ANGELES — British musi cian Neville Belouis Some spent three luckless years trying to make it in the music business as a solo artist. So he used his imagi nation, launched a career, and now has them jumping in dance clubs on both sides of the Atlantic to his spicy "Imagination" video. "How did I get a recording con tract? I borrowed an awful lot of money, hired a band, dyed my hair white and called myself Be louis Some," says the singer, who refuses to divulge his real name. Though his debut album, "Some People," entered the bot tom of the charts in June and hasn't managed to climb very high, he was the opening act in the month-long tour this summer for Frankie Goes to Hollywood. And he had his audiences danc ing in the aisles at his recent Bea con Theater concert in New York. The sizzling "Imagination" vi deo is what's making Some a hot item these days. There are two versions. The one shown in clubs has frontal nudity and erotic fore play between a man and woman. The sexy stuff is dumped for the version shown on MTV ; dance scenes are used instead. "I never tried to have a video banned from MTV — I think that's a stupid way to do things," says Some, who anticipated that his vi deo wouldn't be acceptable for cable TV and had a tamer version made from the start. "But if you don # 't put good imag ery in the song, the song won't work," he says. "Imagination" is about a British man's encounter with an ex tremely self-indulgent American woman. The chorus says: "Imagi nation is all I want from you." Some, a 26-year-old Londoner, was educated in British public schools, which'are the equivalent of private schools in the United States. Rather than go on to col lege, he decided to pursue a ca reer in music, writing songs and playing his guitar. However, he had a problem from the start. He insisted that he was a solo act.- No one vyanted to book solo artists; clubs just wanted bands. "So finally I said, 'All right, I'll play your game ... if that's what you want, I'll do it,"' he recalls. Some hired a band to work with v . him. Among those selected was a •male model chosen because of his good looks. Some taught him how to play 12 songs on the elec tric bass. Neville is his real first name. But Belouis Some is a concoction designed to attract attention. "It's a stage name. There's no particular reason for it. I just wanted something completely free, without associations," says Some who also refuses to discuss his parents and his background. Some says that his biggest mu sical influences in his teen-age years were David Bowie and Roxy Music. □ Car time travels Associated Press Steven Spielberg's movie, "Back To The Future," features a silver De Lorean sports car souped up with an "atomic reactor" so it can speed through time instead of space. It took three De Lorean cars and $150,000, according to an article in Popular Mechanics, for George Lu cas' Industrial Light and Magic Co. to produce the time machine Spiel berg's Amblin Entertainment wanted for the movie. In the film, the car is the crowning' achievement of a scientist who had previously toyed with a gadget to read thoughts. It allows teenager Marty McFly, played by Michael J. Fox, to blast back to 1955 to meet his parents as teenagers. He gets stuck in time and struggles to get "back to the future." Meanwhile, he invents such things as rock 'n' roll which he passes along to Chuck Berry. ' Co-producer Bob Gale and direc tor Robert Zemeckis considered va rious time machine ideas. "In the earlier draft," Gale said, "we had a time machine that wasn't mobile, just a lot of stuff in the labo ratory that took up a whole room." They discarded that idea, as well as a special effect similar to the "transporter" in "Star Trek," before they hit on the idea of a car as excit ing and kinetic. They wanted some thing futuristic but without the slick look of TV's "Knight Rider" car. "It was important to create the illu sion that the car moved fast and was dangerous," Zemeckis said, "but it had to have some eccentricity about it." The first blueprints showed a fan ciful nuclear reactor at the rear, a "temporal flux capacitor" to handle its energy and propel the car through the years, digital readouts in the cockpit, and coils, wires and tubes everywhere. The moviemakers found three used De Loreans through the classi fied ads and bought them for $50,000. Final cost, after production designer Larry Pauli souped up the cars, was $150,000. Pauli also was responsible for the mind-reading "brainwave analy zer," described as looking like some thing geodesic dome inventor Buckminster'Fuller would have built if he had been a hat designer. Pauli got the idea from a 1950s magazine article about "this incredible strange-looking machine" to detect blood clots in the brain. Vehicle construction coordinator Michael Scheffe, who has shopped at industrial surplus stores for "some low, low, low budget" science fiction features, added: "I think a good deal of the surplus stores sales are to people making science fiction movies, since the prices seem to have escalated in re cent years. The customers are a mix of guys in business suits, Caltech physicists building little home pro jects, real crackpots and shoppers for the movies." When all the "time machine" spe cial effects were loaded onto the De Loreans, the pneumatically assisted gull-wing doors developed a ten dency to droop in chilly weather. They had to be warmed with porta ble hair dryers. The car's engine was left untouched. "You could drive this to the 7- Eleven if you wanted to," special ef fects expert Kevin Pike said — or, added Popular Mechanics, to the lo cal malt shop for a 10-cent coke with the doo-wop crowd. □