, r I June 6, 1985 Page B6 Ud r^lose Four Tops: Still maki Levi Stubbs, Abdul "Duke" Fakir, Renaldo It was the i "Obie" Benson and Lawrence Payton have been spent largely together for 31 years, constantly producing songs they had re< of love, happiness and romantic heartbreak in the Records in 1< quintessential Detroit sound/Motown tradition. opening act c No other popularquartet has stayed with original Delia Reese, personnel intact for as long as the legendary Four ty Basie, Bet) Tops. And no other group associated with the - -and~FHp--Wtfc American 60s sound has succeeded in remaining as Levi's cou: fresh, joyful, lively and timely. The Four Tops impressed v* created a special magic which continues to delight naturally smc form with hii ? , , , for several ye Times were hard and the group s first first years w< years were difficult, typified by heavy and Hght moi travel and light money. But the spirit them to stay which has allowed them to stay together was already for more than three decades was already never riddled in place. " lost S1?ht It was also carnated." It audiences from 5 to 50 the world over, and their be confused > reign as the Grand Gentlemen of rock and roll is Since they h far from over. were "reachii The Four Tops have a list of Top 10 hits, many without reali; of them gold records and No. 1 chart-toppers, to legend, becar their credit. These include "Baby I "Need your It was in 1 Loving," "I Can't Help Myself (Sugarpie, and signed b: Honeybunch)," "It's the Same Old Song," Their , first "Reach Out (I'll Be There)," "Bernadette," Loving," an "Walk Away, Rene," "Standing in the Shadows . charts, the F of Love," "Shake Me, Wake Me" and "Still the crown Waters Run Deep." They have recorded 33 Motown's he albums in their illustrious career -- 20 of them for hausting. It v\ Motown. perfection a Levi, Duke, Obie and Lawrence were teen-age songwriting t school friends in their native Detroit when they In additior joined together in a singing group called the Aims. | ^[ogdwgYjsMy_Begt Black actresses ca By JOEY SASSO Syndicated Columnist a w "I was a si Observations in covering the Night Beat: woman with a Diahann Carroll, the haughty Dominique of "Dynasty," declares that she's spent enough money on LSD to buy a five-star hotel. The 49-year-old TV temptress says it was part of drug therapy and analysis she went through for four years in the 1950s. 441 spent enough on it to buy the Savoy," she ______ admitted during an interview at the exclusive London hotel. 44My problem was that I wanted to be a Diahann ? -11 I ' * rionywooa star -- out there were no black stars, Carroll: TV's and I came up against a wall. The drug therapy newest helped me confront and understand myself. And bitch, the irony is that 'Dynasty' may achieve for me what I failed to achieve in the 50s. "For Third World actresses, there was no middle ground," she explains. "You were either a hooker, or the most wonderful mother the world has ever seen. It became nauseating. We could profession," \ never play villains, because the producers were was confused, afraid of being accused of racism." answers and Carroll says that a black actress can now play 'You're crazy the biggest bitch on the block. She can be strong, powerful, demanding and pivotal to the story, in- Top comic stead of waiting for her husband to come home nymen Rfchai i Remembering Marvin Hours before Marvin Gaye died, Stevie Wonder wrote the song "Lighting Up the Candles." The song has since become a tribute to Gaye. Wonder will discuss the song and his reasons for writing it on "Tony Brown's Journal" this Sunday at 6:30 p.m. on Channel 26. I WE/ ing 'Magic' nid-50s, and their early career was I n o in yea./, ana circles, by tne time corded their first single for Chess )56, the Aims were performing as an >r back-up singers with artists such as Brook Benton, Billy Eckstine, County Carter, Redd Foxx, Richard Pryor son. sin, the great Jackie Wilson, was so 'ith their mellow harmonies and >oth style that he invited them to perm on a regular basis, which they did ars. Times were hard and the group's ;re difficult, typified by heavy travel ney. But the spirit which has allowed together for more than three decades in place. They were never greedy, by egotism or impatience and never what they wanted to do most: sing, in 1956 that the Aims became "rein: had been suggested that they might vith the then popular Ames Brothers, ad chosen their name because they tig for the top," they changed it and, zing that they were giving name to a ne the Four Tops. 1963 that they were truly discovered y Berry Gordy for Motown Records, single was "Baby, I Need your d as the song skyrocketed up the our Tops established themselves as princes of Motown. Life during (yday was both exhilarating and exttLs there that their style was honed to nd blended with the spectacular earn of Holland/Dozier/Holland. i to their own records, members of Please see page B8 n now play l hat an exciting day he had. rong, opinionated black American i desire to break new ground in her she said. "When it didn't happen, I and I went into drug therapy to find get some help. People would say, I . You're doing very well as a singer.' Bill Cosby says that fellow funrd Pryor, Redd Foxx and Jonathan v ^jfusical Notes CBS pays US CBS Records has made a $6.5 mill itial payment to USA for Africa, th profit foundation set up to channel to' suffering people in Africa ai United States. The sum represents th pany's net proceeds to date from U.S in March of the Columbia Records "We Are the World." The presei was made by Walter Yetnikoff, pre CBS/Records Group, and Al Teller, tw voiutm anu general managei umbia Records, to event produce Kragen in ceremonies at CBS headqi in New York. CBS Records' arrangement with for Africa calls for future payment sales of the "We Are the World" dings to be made quarterly. CBS R will also analyze net sales figure month against anticipated paymer prior sales by its accounts to det whether additional monthly paymen be made ahead of the quarterly sch< Payments from sales of 4 4We A World" outside the United States i made by CBS Records Internationa timely basis -- at least quarterly. A Records International net proceeds ' , to the foundation's African famine 1 V I UCTS i V Hr ritchy roles on T Winters can make him roll with laughter any time. "In the movie Peters Sellers puts me on the floor/' declared Cosby, who now stars in his own series. He finds Buster Keaton and Charlie Chaplin the funniest of the old-timers, while Sid Caesar and Jackie Gleason get his nod from the early days of television. Cosby says making people laugh is serious business that requires a lot of hard work. "You need to practice, practice and practice to get it best and right," he noted. "Just like Olympic gymnasts or jumpers. Just like a professional ballplayer or boxing champion." He said he tries out raw routines on himself, ' refining and honing them until he's satisfied they're funny. "I think about who my audience is going to be for the material and plan what I'm going to do and say, and how I'm going to move, gesture and mug in order to get the best response out of my audience. Very little you see me do on stage or especially on the TV show is spontaneous, even though it may look that way." ... The curtain of secrecy that surrounds super rock star Prince has been torn aside by a kiss 'n' tell gal pal. Shapely British model Ashe told me that she dated Prince while in Los Angeles. The >A for Africa $6.5 mi lion in- I efforts. fTen ncrcent of U.S. net nror**?H< ic non- W*U be reserved to aid the hungry and th< I funds homeless in this country.) id the Total worldwide sales of "We Are th< e com- World" have passed 7.3 million singles anc 5. sales million albums. The album is just nov* single appearing in many international markets itation On May 3, 4'We Are the World" becam< sident, the first single to be certified multisenior platinum under the new standards set bj r, Col- the Recording Industry Association o1 t Ken America for U.S. sales of more than foui uarters million units. In April, the album was cer tified gold, platinum and multi-platinum, \ USA the ft * time a recording has been certified s from *n &N categories in one month. recor- The song, co-written by Michael Jackson ecords and Lionel Richie, was recorded by 4< s each ' American recording stars Jan. 28 under the it* direction of ftialnrv Jaiim onH ermine the Columbia label March 11. The album, ts may which also features the song "Tears Arc rdule. Not Enough/' recorded by a group ol j-e the Canadian stars under the name of Norwill be them Lights as well as tracks donated by il on a such artists as Bjnce Springsteen and 11 CBS Prince, wasjeleased April 1. will go s-relief Coca-Cola USA and the Coca-Cola Bot IX V . 1 The arts, television, reviews and columns. V ______________? -*?I ^Hr . U >;fjH ^BL_ v Vr ^| ^ * ^Bk V, says Carroll , .... , { two met in a nightclub, she recalled, adding that | she was dressed only in strips of leather tied around her gorgeous body. The sight quickly lured Prince to her side, and he asked Ashe to come to a party with him. Ashe said she turned him down because she didn't want him to get the idea that she was overeager to go with him. Prince then asked her if she'd meet him at his recording studio the next day, and she agreed. The following morning she met him, listened to some of his tapes and then had lunch with him. She recalled being so awed that she couldn't recall what she'd eaten. A few days later Prince took her to the movies to see "Terms of Endearment," and for the first time the two cuddled up together. The day before the stunning model was scheduled to leave for home, th# ennnl* VinH , ...w WilVVIIVl WBlbl They snuggled again, this time in the back seat of his limousine, which she described as being big enough to live in. "He told me how he liked the muscles above his knees being touched, and we had a long cuddle. It was great ..." When Madge Sinclair left her sons and her husband in Jamaica and headed to America in 1968 to seek her fame and fortune, a cousin castigated her Please see page B9 illion for relief fund 5 I tling Co. of New York saluted Francis ? I "Doll" Thomas, the 82-year-old and still 1 artiv* manaopr rtf m WV*? V VI kltv Vf v/i IU" i CUIlUUd i Apollo Theater. The May 4 salute to 1 Thomas was in conjunction with the recent r reopening of the theater. A broadcast of that reopening gala was shown on the NBC ; television network on Sunday, May 19, and was hosted by entertainer and Coca-Cola r spokesman Bfll Cosby. F "Doll Thomas has been a mainstay at the Apollo since it opened in 1933," said Chuck Morrison, director of black con, sumer markets, Coca-Cola USA. "His I dedication and unselfish commitment to the theater and the thousands of enteri ??iUA ?? ?* ? A -f i loiuns wuu nave pcriurmca mere certainly deserves a tribute.'* ; The plaque was presented during an i "A-train" reception, sponsored by Coca> Cola USA, in a midtown Manhattan subi way station in honor of the 30th anniversary of the Apollo Theater. More than 500 guests attended a champange reception in r the specially redecorated mezzanine of the I station, then "took the A train" for the ride uptown and red-carpet walk through the streets of Harlem to the gala reopening. Please see page B9