Video: Bette Midler – Art or Bust Concert (1983) + Photos



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Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

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Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

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Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

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Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

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Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

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Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art Or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust

Slider image
Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust

Slider image

Bette Midler

in Art or Bust


Awards & Nominations


CableACE Awards 1985

Performance in a Music Special
Nominated
Bette Midler


Directing a Music Special
Nominated
Thomas Schlamme
Home Box Office (HBO)


Music Special
Nominated
Peter Kauff (producer)
Robert B. Meyrowitz (producer)
Home Box Office (HBO)

Bette Midler – Art or Bust

Review: NYT
CONCERT: BETTE MIDLER PERFORMS AT MUSIC HALL
By Stephen Holden
March 9, 1983


Mister D: This was my favorite review of the De Tour concert, because Stephen Holden always seemed to go hard on Bette Midler, not because he didn’t like her, but because he did. He had always pointed out things about cleaning up her off key notes, showing a little more restraint in the emotions department to where the emotion matched what the song was trying to convey. Even though I thought she was perfect from the beginning, I did notice on this tour that she had really, really worked on her vocals and they seemed more powerful than ever and there was the slightest toning down to her theatrics, but it gave her more focus, So I was really pleased to read what he had to say/

BETTE MIDLER has always tried for the nearly impossible onstage: the creation of a show-business personality who could embrace the worlds of vaudeville, legitimate theater and rock all in a single evening. Miss Midler has long possessed the theatrical resources for the task, for her sensibility contains a multitude of full-fledged characters, from sad-eyed waifs to her scintillating bawdy alter ego, The Divine Miss M.

The only uncertain element in Miss Midler’s arsenal has been her singing voice. An expressive cabaret interpreter, Miss Midler nevertheless frequently floundered when she tackled rock. Even in ”The Rose,” the size of her voice didn’t match the emotional dimensions of her Janis Joplin-like role, and in climactic moments, the singer resorted to frayed desperate shouting.

It was a happy surprise, therefore, when Bette Midler unveiled a newly fortified rock singing voice at Monday’s special preview performance of her Radio City Music Hall show, whose sold-out run ends Monday. Not only did Miss Midler stay consistently on pitch, she interpreted demanding rock ballads like ”Stay With Me” with an impressive dynamic control and sustained long phrases that never gave way to amusical histrionics.

”Stay With Me” was one of several remarkable vocal performances in which the singer’s technique matched her emotional involvement. The Leon Russell-Bonnie Bramlett ballad ”Superstar,” which Miss Midler used to sing from the viewpoint of star-struck groupie, was reconceived as the sensual obsession of a disappointed older woman. Peter Gabriel’s apocalyptic rock ballad, ”Here Comes the Flood,” received a strong, whiskey-voiced interpretation that culminated chillingly, with the singer winding her blouse over her head like a shroud. And Miss Midler’s punchy rendition of the Rolling Stones’ ”Beast of Burden” transformed a flippant pledge of male loyalty into a reflection on the amorous difficulties facing a female rock star.

The strength of Miss Midler’s singing threw her comedy routines into brilliant relief. In one number, she and her backup trio, the Harlettes, performed an uproarious ”disco review” as mermaids in wheelchairs. Miss Midler’s patter had its usual quotient of cuttingly candid remarks and smutty jokes, but her delivery didn’t evince the same desperate desire to amuse that sometimes characterized her work in the past. Even her riskiest material was delivered with a new air of dignity. This firm sense of emotional control gave the evening a shape and purpose that her earlier revues have lacked. For the first time on a New York stage, Miss Midler’s vaudeville and rock aspirations coincided happily and with total confidence.

Share A little Divinity

One thought on “Video: Bette Midler – Art or Bust Concert (1983) + Photos

  1. DETOUR was magic. The ART OR BUST special was shameless. Way over half the concert was cut out. And it was obvious to me a fifth grader dying to see her new show…I’ve made this point over and over again…

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