Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

CHICAGO DAILY NEWS: LAST WEEK IN HISTORY

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January in Chicago could hardly be considered a happening time. The freezing cold and snowy skies usually keep Chicagoans in their homes, hunkering down until St. Patrick’s Day.

But when Diana Ross comes to town, suddenly the month heats up.

In January 1977, the acclaimed singer and actress, born on March 26, 1944, took to the stage of the Arie Crown Theater of McCormick Place to dazzle her audience with a 90-minute musical revue proving that she was the queen of entertainm­ent.

At the time of the concert, Ross had been a solo act for seven years following her exit from The Supremes. In addition to a number of hit albums, including several disco ones, she proved to critics that she could hold her own as an actress, scoring an Oscar nomination for “Lady Sings the Blues” and fan adulation for “Mahogany.”

“An Evening with Diana Ross” did not disappoint. It featured an impressive production: “a 32-piece orchestra, three backup singers, a trio of mimes, assorted scaffoldin­g and ladders to hold all these bodies, a battery of light stanchions, 173,000 watts of power for the light and audio equipment, a trunkful of costumes, a cadre of plaincloth­es security guards and enough producers, personal managers, agents, talent representa­tives and publicists to start up a new world’s fair,” Chicago Daily News reviewer Richard Christians­en wrote for the next day’s paper.

Ross stepped on stage in a white sheath gown, flashed her pearly whites at the crowd and sang out, “Here I am!” Christians­en recorded. Moments later, a mime reached behind her and pulled out several yards of white stretch material tucked into her dress, unfurling it so that it fanned out like a motion picture reel.

During the first act, the entertaine­r, now wearing “a slinky sequins-and-silk red pants outfit,” pulled several fans onstage for a disco party as she sang “Love Hangover” from her latest album, the reviewer wrote. The fans apparently became a little too excited, as Ross had to “grab the microphone away from an aspiring amateur singer,” but she managed to send everyone back to their seats with a few generous assurances.

Ross closed out the first act with a “razzle-dazzle routine” that included fast costume changes and favorite pop songs from legendary Black entertaine­rs including Josephine Baker, Bessie Smith and Billie Holiday, whom Ross had portrayed in “Lady Sings the Blues.” The routine proved Ross to be “the heiress apparent of these memorable singers.”

In the second half of the show, the singer returned to her roots, singing those oldiesbut-goodies that made her a star such as “Baby Love” and “Stop in the Name of Love,” followed by a medley from the musical “A Chorus Line.”

The concert closed out as Ross moved “into the audience, while her stern-faced security guards cautiously watched for any overly enthusiast­ic fans, shook hands with a few folks and invited them all to sing along and join hands for a final chorus of ‘Reach Out and Touch,’ ” Christians­en recounted. A standing ovation followed.

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